The sound made by the vibration of vocal folds modified by the resonance of the vocal tract.
Sinònims
Examples for "voice"
Examples for "voice"
1Talk to the public information officer. Abrams' voice belied his tough talk.
2Nothing happened: 'there was no voice, no answer, no attention given them.'
3It's a controversial idea: allowing children a voice in public policy decisions.
4Mr Nally has also given a voice to the victims of crime.
5Raising his right hand he said in a clear and commanding voice:
1Results showed that a population of motor neurons specifically fire during vocalization.
2Most clinical events were brief and confined to vocalization or limb movements.
3Speech may be called the prose, and song the poetry of vocalization.
4His vocalization was unexceptionably pure, and his style was manly and noble.
5I was greeted with joyous clapping, singing, and ululating, the great African vocalization.
1All but one patient had improved swallowing and phonation after the procedure.
2Impairment in phonation is especially severe in patients with respiratory dysfunction.
3The voluntary control of phonation is a crucial achievement in the evolution of speech.
4At phonation the bands are drawn toward each other, meeting just as it commences.
5There was increase in fundamental frequency, maximum phonation time and self-reference voice-related quality of life.
1It's one of the clearest cases of where a vocalisation comes from.
2These behaviours all require her to control her vocalisation and breathing.
3Mr. Direck felt they were going back, back, in spite of all this vocalisation.
4Pathetically cheerful that pum, pum, hopelessly cheerful indeed against the dirge of the air, a dirge accentuated by sporadic vocalisation.
5Even after only a few minutes' vocalisation on this subject a deadly infection seems to creep into the air-theinfection of priggishness.
1The aged pianist had often listened to her vocalism with enraptured gaze, and she believed he, too, was her slave.
2In this city Emma lived for four years, during most of which time she received instruction in vocalism from the venerable Professor Perkins.
3Emile, for his part, was equally interested in her exploits in vocalism, which he found as extraordinary and unexpected as everything else about her.
4Squabbling believably, Chen and Chiu have the body language and shorthand vocalisms of genuine siblings.
5Vocalism, measure, concentration, determination, and the divine power to speak words;
1You merely need to set up communications between myself and another vox.
2He has touched the vox humana stop of the crowd; it fairly roars.
3A quick vox pop suggests he's not alone in that view.
4The vox humana of a Hammond organ sobbed among the clouds.
5She always spoke in a hushed vox tremulo, and never played any rough games.
6Last week, I conducted a rudimentary vox pop of Celtic fans all over Glasgow.
7Ah, the perils of getting vox pops live on television.
8In the third place, he has learned much by what is called the vox viva.
9The rumblings of vox populi were hard to interpret.
10Then surely, if ever, vox populi is vox coeli.
11Have you declared me to be a fake to the whole of Hollow World, vox?
12I've actually gotten on quite well with Balmore, Pol-789's vox, as a result of arranging meetings.
13Without spending a dime, your vox POP pal has been added as a new RocketTalk member.
14I want you to contact Pol-789's vox.
15She never learned how to seize a demon's vox like you did that day in your bathroom.
16While thus controverting the so- called vox Dei (are not popular opinions generally popular prejudices?)