单词 | acoustic |
释义 | acousticadj.n. A. adj. 1. a. Designating the sense or the organs of hearing; of or relating to the sense of hearing; auditory.Recorded earliest in acoustic nerve n. at Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > [adjective] > relating to hearing auditory1578 auditive1611 acroamatic1632 acoustic1635 audituala1652 acousticonc1660 auditorial1859 audile1897 1635 J. Swan Speculum Mundi ix. §2. 498 Although the eares be two, yet a man can heare but one sound at once, because his acoustick nerves (like to the optick nerves) meet both in one. 1677 F. Bampfield All in One 36 There is a natural, spiritual measure of words in respect of the metrical stile..which would afford a very useful Musical Art, were it more according to the Word, wherein the refined discerning of the Acoustick sense, or Hearing faculty, would raise this Science to higher Honour. 1831 Lancet 12 Mar. 777/2 The acoustic sense was greatly impaired. 1854 R. Owen Struct. Skeleton & Teeth in Orr's Circle Sci.: Org. Nature I. 194 The acoustic capsule remains in great part cartilaginous. 1867 Under one Roof 14 Mrs Clevedon's ears, though exquisitely shaped, were very sharp in the acoustic sense. 1903 A. S. Packard Text-bk. Entomol. 291 The rods..may be regarded as specially characteristic of the acoustic organs of insects. 1954 M. U. Purkiss & C. A. Fox tr. S. Ramón y Cajal Neuron Theory iv. 36 It would be interesting to study comparatively the terminal apparatus of various mammals having differences in size and acoustic keenness. 2002 Sci. Amer. July 42/1 Visual systems with a fovea are the most familiar, but auditory systems can have an acoustic fovea as well, as has been elegantly demonstrated..in mustached bats. b. That aids or improves hearing. ΚΠ 1743 tr. L. Heister Gen. Syst. Surg. I. ii. 435 An acoustic Instrument [L. instrumentum acusticum] so small, as to be concealed under one's Wig. 1770 Monthly Rev. Dec. 436 He procured a variety of acoustic tubes from Amsterdam, in order to afford some relief to those who wanted to speak with him. 1797 Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 592/1 We must also observe, that no acoustic trumpet can separate those sounds to which we listen from others that are made in the same direction. 1819 Repository of Arts 8 245/1 Mr. Curtis..has lately published a second and enlarged edition of his work..; accompanied by a plate of newly invented acoustic instruments, descriptive of the French, German, and Spanish artificial ears for assisting hearing. 1880 Med. Counselor 3 51 So varied and numerous have been the published reports of the various acoustic aids and in many instances so extravagant the claims made for them, that it may be a not wholly unprofitable task to describe the more permanent ones. 1918 J. Roussy & J. Lhermitte in A. Keogh Med. & Surg. Therapy II. iv. v. 808 When it occurs, however, it is extremely serious; acoustic remedies have no influence on it. 1979 Jrnl. Otolaryngol. 8 16/1 This need is partially met by acoustic trumpets or unconventional hearing aids. 2. Relating to, involving, or of the nature of sound. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > science of sound > [adjective] acoustic1640 acoustical1803 phonic1823 magneto-acoustic1903 audio1960 1640 G. Watts tr. F. Bacon Of Advancem. Learning iii. i. 135 This hath place..in Acoustique Art [L. Acoustica]; for the Instrument of hearing is like to the straits and winding within a Cave. 1773 Scots Mag. Feb. 83/2 The acoustic deception, that experience or habit which misleads a person who has seldom heard the ventriloquist. 1822 T. Webster Imison's Elem. Sci. & Art (new ed.) I. 230 A very useful contrivance, called acoustic or speaking tubes, which are now fixed up in houses for the purpose of speaking from one story to another. 1871 J. Tyndall Fragm. Sci. (ed. 6) I. x. 331 There we had the acoustic opacity of the air. 1909 Pop. Mech. Aug. 137/1 The great hall of the Trocadero..has now as fine acoustic properties as any auditorium in the world. 1950 Audio Engin. Sept. 33/2 No acoustic fog veils the ensemble, and each instrument stands out with clarity. 2002 P. Herring Biol. Deep Ocean i. 13 There are still problems because the reflected acoustic signal is not necessarily related to the size of the organism. 3. Of an instrument or mechanism: operated by sound; operating by means of sound.See also acoustic microscope n., acoustic mine n. at Compounds. ΚΠ 1858 Jrnl. Soc. Arts 23 Apr. 357/2 Mr. Varley..gave a description of an instrument exhibited by him, termed the acoustic telegraph. 1872 Amer. Jrnl. Sci. 103 425 On the acoustic bellows fix an organ pipe, and place opposite its mouth a Helmholtz resonator responding to its note. 1947 J. G. Crowther & R. Whiddington Sci. at War iv. 178 Another..success was gained against the acoustic homing torpedo. 1968 N.Y. Times 26 June 70 Each client will get a portable teletype and a thing called an ‘acoustic data coupler’ that allows the teletype to send messages to a computer over any old telephone. 1984 A. C. Duxbury & A. Duxbury Introd. World's Oceans iii. 82 Computer-controlled navigation using acoustic beacons on the seafloor. 2004 R. Kurson Shadow Divers Epil. 324 Acoustic torpedoes were more advanced, homing in on the sound of an enemy ship's propellers. 4. Of a device or material: designed to reduce noise; sound-absorbent. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > inaudibility > sound-proofing or conditioning > [adjective] sound-proof1884 acoustic1924 acoustical1926 sound-proofed1932 sound-tight1932 sound-insulated1933 sound-conditioned1947 the world > matter > physics > science of sound > sound-waves > [adjective] > that insulates acoustic1924 insulating1927 insulative1945 1924 Sci. Amer. Sept. 165/1 Professor Sabine invented an acoustic tile that is many times as absorbent as the usual masonry surfaces. 1960 House & Garden Aug. 46/3 Acoustic board..1s. 3d. sq. ft. 1961 Listener 31 Aug. 310/2 We all know what a difference absorbent acoustic tiles on a ceiling..make to the restful character and quality of a public space. 1985 Today's Computers Feb. 22/3 Printers can be noisy beasts, and boxes are available heavily lined with sound damping material to cut down the possible racket. These are called acoustic shells. 1994 Architect's Jrnl. 19 Jan. 43/1 The end walls are constructed in dense masonry rendered at high level with acoustic plaster. 5. a. Of, relating to, or designating gramophone recordings made using sound waves collected in a horn to drive a cutting stylus, rather than a microphone and electrical signals.This method of recording was superseded in the 1920s by electrical recording (see electrical recording n. at electrical adj. and n. Compounds, electric record n. at electric adj. and n. Compounds 1b). ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > recording or reproducing sound or visual material > sound recording and reproduction > [adjective] > recorded by specific system taped1892 phonographed1897 acoustic1926 acoustical1926 stereophonic1927 monaural1931 multitracked1931 binaural1933 multitrack1935 tape-recorded1951 telediphoned1952 stereo1954 multi-taped1955 monophonic1958 pretaped1958 mono1960 audiotaped1962 multichannel1962 quarter-track1962 Dolby1966 quadraphonic1968 tetraphonic1969 periphonic1970 quad1970 quadrasonic1970 Dolbyized1971 QS1972 Dolbyed1973 premix1977 quadro1977 1926 La Crosse (Wisconsin) Tribune & Leader-Press 16 Nov. 17/1 (advt.) Closing out acoustic recordings. New lot special for dollar day only. 1945 J. Rowe & T. Watson Junkshoppers' Discography 2 Except for the M.C.B.B. and ‘Hottentot’ items, Aco are all pre-electric (acoustic) recordings. 1976 Daily Rev. (Hayward, Calif.) 13 July 8/2 If you are interested in acoustic gramophone records made before 1925 or so, you might be able to date them by the type of label on them. 1986 D. Hamilton in A. Blyth Song on Rec. (2006) I. 22 The legions of low-voiced men are led by Feodor Chaliapin. In his 1921 acoustic version..the rhythm is often free. 2002 A. Morreau Emanuel Feuermann xvii. 294 All recordings before 1927 used the acoustic process, while those made in or after 1927 used the electrical method with microphones. b. Of a gramophone or (in later use) a musical instrument: producing sound by mechanical rather than electrical means; not using inbuilt electrical amplification. Hence: of, characterized by, or designating music produced in this way or with such instruments. See also acoustic guitar n. at Compounds. Opposed to electric adj. 3b. Cf. unplugged adj. 2b. ΘΚΠ society > communication > record > recording or reproducing sound or visual material > sound recording and reproduction > sound recording or reproducing equipment > [adjective] > record-playing equipment phonographical1846 phonographic1878 gramophonic1905 hornless1909 acoustical1931 discographic1931 acoustic1932 discographical1944 multi-play1949 wind-up1962 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > [adjective] > other attributes rural1592 unstringed1597 unstrung1598 keyed1761 fingerable1818 keyless1830 omnitonic1861 solo1862 sewing machine1874 unplayed1875 original1899 electrified1938 melodic1938 analogue1976 acoustic1978 1932 G. Wilson Gramophones viii. 43 Ultimately the radio-gramophone..will hold the field to the virtual exclusion of either acoustic gramophone or straight radio-receiver. 1943 Gramophone June 19/2 (heading) Acoustic and electrical reproduction. 1951 E. Sackville-West & D. Shawe-Taylor Rec. Guide 718 LPs cannot be played at all on an acoustic gramophone. 1969 Melody Maker 6 Dec. 37/1 Wanted..bass guitar, flute, hand-drums, for acoustic group. 1978 Gramophone Jan. 1321/3 Two of my favourite musicians are involved: the tenor saxophonist Teddy Edwards..and Cedar Walton (he is heard on both electric and acoustic pianos). 1986 Billboard 18 Oct. 33/2 He is scheduled to perform several songs from his new acoustic album. 1990 Compact Disc 7 Aug. 59/3 Just when you thought fusion and other synthetic sounds had forever relegated acoustic jazz..to history. 1995 N. Hornby High Fidelity (1996) xix. 226 ‘We could have done an acoustic set.’‘Oh, right. Kraftwerk unplugged. That'd be nice.’ 2008 Wire Feb. 60/2 It's a relief to return to acoustic bass on Bishop's ‘Rewind’, the nearest track to a ballad. B. n. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > audiology or audiometry > [noun] > aids to defective hearing trunk1546 otacousticon1615 otacoustic1617 ear-spectacle1626 sarbacane1644 acoustic1659 acousticon1660 hearing-trumpet1725 ear trumpet1731 trumpet1774 otophone1839 auricle1864 audiphone1880 osteophone1892 microphonograph1897 hearing aid1922 deaf-aid1934 the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines for specific purpose > preparations for treating specific parts > [noun] > for the ears acoustic1659 1659 H. More Immortality of Soul iii. iv. 368 For the same principle may enable them to shape themselves Organs for the receiving of Sounds, of greater art and excellency then the most accurate Acoustick we read of, or can excogitate. 1704 J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I Acousticks, Medicines or instruments which help the hearing. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iii. vi. 83 Administer to each of them Lenatives, Aperitives, Abstersives,..Acousticks, as their several cases required. 2. The acoustic characteristics or ambience of some sound. Also: = acoustics n. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > audibility > [noun] > acoustic properties acoustic1952 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > [noun] > sound > acoustic qualities of a sound or place acoustics1835 acoustic1952 1952 Times 29 Jan. 7/4 A compensating feature of a dry acoustic is present in the long-playing record. 1965 Listener 10 June 876/2 Two voices stop and after a gap start again in the same acoustic. 1981 I. McEwan Comfort of Strangers iv. 44 Far behind them they heard the children, their voices distorted by an acoustic which suggested a room of vast proportions. 2000 Opera Now Jan. 104/2 The theatre's wonderful acoustic ensures the merest whisper on stage flickers past you. 3. = acoustic guitar n. at Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > guitar or lute type > [noun] > guitar > other guitars slidec1608 samisen1616 angelique1660 angelot1678 angel lutea1708 strim-stramc1730 sitar1777 balalaika1788 ramkie1805 sancho1817 sanxian1839 bass guitar1855 gimbri1876 cuatro1904 electric guitar1933 requinto1937 tamburitza1941 tiple1942 dobro1952 acoustic guitar1953 acoustical guitar1957 bottleneck guitar1961 acoustic1962 slide guitar1968 1962 Press-Courier (Oxnard, Calif.) 29 Nov. 24/2 (advt.) Closing out Guitar department. New and used guitars & amps. Electric, Spanish, Steel & Acoustics. 1982 Texas Monthly Aug. 40/2 A sincere folksinger strummed his acoustic and delivered a profound message of universal truth and/or sorrow. 2008 A. Lurie Latent Powers of Dylan Fontaine ii. 17 Soon I hear Headbone warming up on drums, Moser plucking the bass, and Nick strumming his acoustic while loosening up his vocal cords. Compounds acoustic guitar n. a guitar of the traditional kind, having a hollow body in which the vibrations of the strings resonate to produce sound; a guitar which does not require electrical amplification; cf. electric guitar n. at electric adj. and n. Compounds 1b. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > guitar or lute type > [noun] > guitar > other guitars slidec1608 samisen1616 angelique1660 angelot1678 angel lutea1708 strim-stramc1730 sitar1777 balalaika1788 ramkie1805 sancho1817 sanxian1839 bass guitar1855 gimbri1876 cuatro1904 electric guitar1933 requinto1937 tamburitza1941 tiple1942 dobro1952 acoustic guitar1953 acoustical guitar1957 bottleneck guitar1961 acoustic1962 slide guitar1968 1953 Gramophone Sept. 109/1 The Trio Los Panchos, whose subdued close-harmony singing with acoustic guitars comes as a refreshing change to an ear thoroughly sickened by buzzy electronic instruments and harsh nasal voices of such as the late Hank Williams. 1988 D. A. Willson REMF Diary 84 He did some fancy guitar picking. He played only an acoustic guitar. 2008 S. Armitage Gig (2009) 262 Acoustic guitars exaggerate all your inadequacies, especially guitars with tight, cheese-wire strings. acoustic guitarist n. a person who plays the acoustic guitar. ΚΠ 1961 G. E. Lambert Johnny Dodds ii. 60 Teddy Bunn..was an acoustic guitarist and a good if sophisticated blues-player. 1989 C. S. Murray Crosstown Traffic v. 124 Christian's electric guitar enabled him to hold a note for far longer than an acoustic guitarist. 2007 T. Pothier When Wolf Howls viii. 43 Tonight it was an acoustic guitarist with whom Nathaniel was friendly because he had been coming to Mateo's for several years now. acoustic hood n. a sound-absorbent cover, usually used to reduce the noise from a machine or appliance. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > inaudibility > sound-proofing or conditioning > [noun] > noise-reducing devices baffle1928 acoustic hood1940 1940 Marine Engineer 63 102/3 Each of the diesel-generator sets is completely housed within a Burgess acoustic hood. 1985 Pract. Computing Aug. 92/2 You do not need to buy an acoustic hood as the laser printer is inherently quieter. 2003 A. King & W. Knight Uninterrupted Power Supplies 111 The sound pressure level..can be reduced by introducing sound absorbent material within the room or by providing an acoustic hood. acoustic microscope n. (a) a phonograph with respect to its power of producing clearly audible sounds from only small variations in a surface (rare); (b) a microscope which uses reflected sound waves to produce an image of the magnified object. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > optical instruments > magnification or magnifying instruments > [noun] > microscope > other microscopes lucernal microscope1743 gas microscope1833 oxyhydrogen microscope1839 binocular1871 orthostereoscope1892 pseudostereoscope1892 ultramicroscope1906 acoustic microscope1910 hodoscope1915 optical microscope1928 light microscope1934 comparison microscope1940 phase microscope1946 stereomicroscope1962 1910 Amer. Homes & Gardens Dec. p. iv/2 The commission has greatly enlarged the field of work of the phonograph, and has made of the instrument an indispensable inventory of acoustic science. In this respect the phonograph serves as an ‘acoustic microscope’, so to speak, for small sections of the records on the plate are magnified a thousandfold, and so form an invaluable comparative material for the theory of the formation of sound and speech and noises. 1966 Microwave Res. Feb. 9 We have been using these analytical methods to investigate focussing of acoustic beams. Possible applications are for an acoustic microscope, which could have higher resolution than a conventional light instrument, and for a very high intensity acoustic probe. 2004 Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101 15912/1 The transducer of the phase-sensitive acoustic microscope..converts the signal reflected from the sample to an electromagnetic signal. acoustic mine n. an underwater mine designed to be activated by sound waves, esp. those produced by a vessel's propellers. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > hostilities at sea > naval weapons and equipment > [noun] > mine undermine1682 American turtle1775 torpedo1776 submarine1846 mine1862 pole torpedo1877 ground-torpedo1878 spar torpedo1878 countermine1880 acoustic mine1923 magnetic mine1939 limpet1942 pressure mine1943 oyster1945 1923 North Sea Mine Barrage in Amer. Naval Planning Section London (U.S. Office Naval Intelligence. Hist. Sect. Publ. No. 7) 5 The introduction of the ‘Acoustic mine’ may, and we hope will, give us an instrument which will enable us to absolutely deny large areas to submarines unless they accept the probability of almost certain destruction. 1941 C. Graves Life Line 23 Acoustic mines have been dealt with by our mine-sweepers for months. 2001 Big Issue 5 Mar. 7/1 Weapons in the form of rifles, helicopter-mounted long range guns and air-dropped acoustic mines. acoustic nerve n. Anatomy the vestibulocochlear nerve. ΚΠ 1635Acoustick nerves [see sense A. 1a]. 1737 M. Clare Motion of Fluids (ed. 2) 342 When the Organ itself is by Age enfeebled and decayed, that is, when the acoustic as well as other Nerves have lost their delicacy. 1878 M. Foster Text Bk. Physiol. (ed. 2) iii. i. 392 The olfactory, optic and acoustic nerves are purely sensory nerves. 2009 New Yorker 9 Feb. 44/3 Glutamate, a neurotransmitter, is inappropriately processed in the cochlea, which causes abnormal impulses from the acoustic nerve. acoustic phonetic adj. of or relating to acoustic phonetics. ΚΠ 1928 Jrnl. Psychical Res. 24 365 Mattiesen..is speaking of cases where the ‘communicators’ are misunderstood in an ‘acoustic-phonetic’ sense by the controls. 1960 Amer. Speech 35 230 An acoustic-phonetic study of internal open juncture. 2006 Oceanic Linguistics 45 41 This study has used acoustic phonetic measures of duration and pitch on careful speech data to investigate the phonology of definitive accent in Tongan. acoustic phonetics n. the branch of phonetics concerned with the physical properties of the sound waves of speech. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > study of speech sound > [noun] > phonology and branches tonology1874 accentology1881 acoustic phonetics1914 tonetics1921 phonology1924 morphonology1933 morphophonology1934 phonemics1934 psychophonetics1934 phonematics1936 physiophonetics1936 speech physiology1936 morphophonemics1938 kenematics1939 phonematology1949 speech recognition1953 phonotactics1956 paralinguistics1958 morphophonics1962 Trageremics1963 phonematics1964 kenetics1969 1911 Encycl. Brit. XXI. 458/2 Phonetics is the science of speech-sounds. But sounds may be considered from two opposite points of view—the organic and the acoustic.] 1914 Music Monitor & World Jan. 141/1 Without a comparative study of organic and acoustic phonetics the production of vowels and consonants in speech is largely by imitation or guesswork. 1933 L. Bloomfield Lang. v. 75 The phonetician can study either the sound-producing movements of the speaker (physiological phonetics) or the resulting sound-waves (physical or acoustic phonetics). 2005 J. I. Hualde Sounds of Spanish i. 12 Study the physical characteristics of the sound waves of the different consonants and vowels used in the languages of the world. This is the realm of acoustic phonetics. acoustic shock n. damage to nerves caused by sound waves; spec. damage to hearing resulting from sudden excessive noise in the earphone of a telephone; an instance of this; (also) the noise itself. ΚΠ 1894 Pharmaceut. Era 1 Aug. 101/1 The verdict, therefore, was made up and recorded as ‘death from acoustic shock of the nerve centres’. 1918 Amer. Inst. Electr. Engineers 37 511 Hazard to employees and to telephone using public... Acoustic shock. 1934 Pop. Sci. Monthly Oct. 115/2 It is not desirable to put the receiver tightly against the ear, as the lightning discharges very often produce an effect known as acoustic shock which may impair the hearing of the user. 1993 Gloss. Electrotechnical, Power Terms (B.S.I.) iii. ii. 61 An acoustic shock usually results from the occurrence, in abnormal circumstances, of short-lived high voltages at the terminals of a telephone set. 2006 Observer 19 Nov. i. 20/1 More than 1,000 people working in call centres across Britain are thought to have suffered the effects of acoustic shock. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < adj.n.1635 |
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