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- nounsound (noun) · sounds (plural noun) · musical sound (noun) · musical sounds (plural noun)
- vibrations that travel through the air or another medium and can be heard when they reach a person's or animal's ear:"light travels faster than sound"
- sound produced by continuous and regular vibrations, as opposed to noise.
- music, speech, and sound effects when recorded, used to accompany a film or video production, or broadcast:"a sound studio"
verbsound (verb) · sounds (third person present) · sounded (past tense) · sounded (past participle) · sounding (present participle)- convey a specified impression when heard:"he sounded worried"
- (of something or someone that has been described to one) convey a specified impression:"it sounds as though you really do believe that" · "the house sounds lovely"Similar:appear to belook to belook likeseem to behave the appearance/air of beinggive/create the impression of beingstrike someone as beinggive every indication of beinggive/create the impression thatstrike someone thatgive every indication that
OriginMiddle English soun, from Anglo-Norman French soun (noun), suner (verb), from Latin sonus. The form with -d was established in the 16th century.adjectivesound (adjective) · sounder (comparative adjective) · soundest (superlative adjective)adverbsound (adverb)- soundly:"he was sound asleep"
OriginMiddle English: from Old English gesund, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch gezond and German gesund.verbsound (verb) · sounds (third person present) · sounded (past tense) · sounded (past participle) · sounding (present participle)- (especially of a whale) dive down steeply to a great depth:"he sounded, arching his back steeply and raising his rubbery flukes in the air"
nounsound (noun) · sounds (plural noun)- a long surgical probe, typically with a curved, blunt end.
Originlate Middle English: from Old French sonder, based on Latin sub- ‘below’ + unda ‘wave’.nounsound (noun) · sounds (plural noun) · the Sound (noun)OriginMiddle English: from Old Norse sund ‘swimming, strait’; related to swim. Explore further
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