| 单词 | sounding | 
| 释义 | soundingn.1 1.   a.  The fact of emitting or giving out a sound or sounds, or the power of doing this; the sound produced or given out by something, esp. a bell or trumpet. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > 			[noun]		 > sound > fact, faculty, or quality of sounding sounding1398 sonancea1616 sonation1656 α.  β. c1440    Promptorium Parvulorum 466/1  				Soundynge, sonatus.a1475    Bk. Curtasye 		(Sloane 1986)	 l. 69 in  Babees Bk. 		(2002)	  i. 301  				Ne suppe not with grete sowndynge.1483    Cath. Angl. 350/1  				A Sowndynge, sonoritas.1530    J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 273/1  				Soundyng, sonnerie.c1595    Capt. Wyatt in  G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies 		(1899)	 46  				The cause that made thease people flie from us..was the soundinge of our trumpetts.1660    J. Playford Brief Introd. Skill Musick 		(ed. 3)	 72  				A beginner..shall by this way use only one Sounding, viz., an Unison.a1684    J. Evelyn Diary anno 1645 		(1955)	 II. 467  				The fillings up..'twixt the Walls were of urnes & earthen potts for the better sounding.1706    A. Bedford Temple Musick ix. 196  				The Trumpets sounded their Soundings.1799    Instr. & Regulations Cavalry 		(ed. 3)	 373  				These soundings are exactly the same as those of the trumpet.1821    J. Clare Village Minstrel II. 104  				The rustic's ear at leisure dwells On the soft soundings of his village bells.1882    C. Rossetti Poems 		(1904)	 262/2  				The irresponsive sounding of the sea.figurative.a1711    T. Ken Christophil in  Wks. 		(1721)	 I. 504  				For thou Omniscient art, To know the Wants and Soundings of my Heart.1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(Bodl.)	 		(1495)	  xvi. xxxvi  				Bras accordeþ moste to trumpes and taboures for sownynge and longe duringe þerof. a1425						 (c1395)						    Bible 		(Wycliffite, L.V.)	 		(Royal)	 		(1850)	 Exod.  xix. 16  				The sownyng of a clarioun made noise ful greetli. a1450						 (c1410)						    H. Lovelich Hist. Holy Grail lv. l. 292  				That was the Noyse Of here Sownenge. 1482    Monk of Evesham lvii. 110  				As al the bellys yn the worlde or what sumeuer ys of sownyng had be rongyn to gedyr at onys. 1541    T. Elyot Image of Gouernance xxii. f. 41v  				Harpes, lutes, organes softe in sownynge. 1557    Earl of Surrey et al.  Songes & Sonettes sig. Bb.i  				A blast so hye, That made an eckow in the ayer and sowning through the sky.  b.  With adverbs, as again, on. ΚΠ c1440    Promptorium Parvulorum 466/2  				Soundynge a-ȝene (or rebowndynge), resonatus, reboacio. 1560    Bible 		(Geneva)	 Ezek. vii. 7  				The sounding againe of the mountaines. 1578    H. Lyte tr.  R. Dodoens Niewe Herball 172  				The braying or sounding againe of the Asse. 1852    tr.  J. J. Seidel Organ & its Constr. 45  				The so-called howling or sounding-on of certain pipes when their respective keys are not pressed down.  2.   a.  Vocal utterance or pronunciation; resonant or sonorous quality of this. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > 			[noun]		 > utterance of vocal sound soundinga1387 utterancec1456 prelationa1525 elocution1623 vocification?1632 articulation1677 voicing1822 vocalization1828 voicing1831 phonation1842 phonesis1856 a1387    J. Trevisa tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(St. John's Cambr.)	 		(1869)	 II. 163  				For men of þe est wiþ men of þe west..acordeþ more in sownynge of speche. 1398    J. Trevisa tr.  Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum 		(1495)	  v. xxi. 128  				It faryth in children that they spylle and hurte many letters and maye not haue sownyng. c1400    Mandeville's Trav. 		(1839)	 xiv. 152  				The Langage of that Contree is more gret in sownynge, than it is in other parties beȝonde the See. 1599    R. Percyvall  & J. Minsheu Spanish Gram. 6  				G..hath two maner of soundings according to the vowels which follow it.  b.  Black English. Playing the dozens (play v. 13i). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > other specific games > 			[noun]		 > others sitisota1400 papsea1450 half-bowl1477 pluck at the crow1523 white and black1555 running game1581 blow-pointa1586 hot cocklesa1586 one penny1585 cockelty bread1595 pouch1600 venter-point1600 hinch-pinch1603 hardhead1606 poor and rich1621 rowland-hoe1622 hubbub1634 handicap?a1653 owl1653 ostomachy1656 prelledsa1660 quarter-spellsa1660 yert-point1659 bob-her1702 score1710 parson has lost his cloak1712 drop (also throw) (the) handkerchief1754 French Fox1759 goal1765 warpling o' the green1768 start1788 kiss-in-the-ring1801 steal-clothes1809 steal-coat1816 petits paquets1821 bocce1828 graces1831 Jack-in-the-box1836 hot hand1849 sparrow-mumbling1852 Aunt Sally1858 gossip1880 Tambaroora1882 spoof1884 fishpond1892 nim1901 diabolo1906 Kim's game1908 beaver1910 treasure-hunt1913 roll-down1915 rock scissors paper1927 scissors cut paper1927 scissors game1927 the dozens1928 toad in the hole1930 game1932 scissors paper stone1932 Roshambo1936 Marco Polo1938 scavenger hunt1940 skish1940 rock paper scissors1947 to play chicken1949 sounding1962 joning1970 arcade game1978 1962    R. D. Abrahams in  Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 75 209  				The dozens are commonly called ‘playing’ or ‘sounding’. 1965    R. D. Abrahams in  Jrnl. Amer. Folklore 78 343  				Sounding, especially Mother-Sounding, demonstrates the second place given to the mother-son bond in comparison to the primary place assigned the clique. 1972    W. Labov Lang. in Inner City p. xviii  				The setting was essentially that of a party..with card games, eating and drinking, singing and sounding. 1974    H. L. Foster Ribbin', Jivin', & Playin' Dozens v. 183  				In Pottsville, Pennsylvania, the term is sounding... In a Brooklyn, New York, secondary school the terms ranking and sounding are still used.  3.  The (or an) act of causing a trumpet, bell, etc., to sound; the blowing of a bugle or trumpet, esp. as a signal. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > playing instruments > 			[noun]		 glewinga1300 playc1325 sounding1523 playing1535 instrumentation1818 society > communication > indication > signalling > audible signalling > signalling with other sounding instruments > 			[noun]		 > signalling on bugle or trumpet sounding1523 1523    Ld. Berners tr.  J. Froissart Cronycles I. xviii. 8 b  				Euery man was warned to be redy at the fyrst soundyng of the trumpette. 1529    in  C. Innes Registrum Episcopatus Aberdonensis 		(1845)	 I. 396  				Be conuocatioun of our said communitie be þe swndyng of þe bell usit in þis part. 1616    B. Jonson Poëtaster 		(rev. ed.)	 Induct., in  Wks. I. 275  				After the second sounding. 1811    Gen. Regulations & Orders Army 281  				Whether perfect in the different Soundings of the Trumpet, and in the Beats of the Drum. 1879    Scribner's Monthly 19 518/2  				Only at the sounding of the second bell did Louisiana escape..to prepare for dinner. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > sounds heard in body > 			[noun]		 > ringing, etc., in the ears ringinga1398 tinklinga1398 sibilusc1400 sounding1600 singing1605 bombus1753 tympanophony1899 zinging1921 1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault Maison Rustique  i. xii. 61  				Against the noise and sounding of the eare.  5.  The action of examining by percussion; spec. auscultation; an instance of this. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > diagnosis or prognosis > examination > 			[noun]		 > auscultation auscultation1833 sounding1883 society > occupation and work > industry > mining > 			[noun]		 > other specific mining processes > in coal-mining outstroke1747 holing1841 coal-cutting1842 patio1845 sumping1849 bottoming1856 salting1856 patio process1862 spragging1865 yardage1877 booming1880 brushing1883 filling1883 sounding1883 yard-work1883 blanketing1884 goafing1888 freezing process1889 power loading1901 bashing1905 rock dusting1915 mucking1918 solid stowing1929 stone-dusting1930 roof bolting1949 rock bolting1955 1883    W. S. Gresley Gloss. Terms Coal Mining 230  				Sounding, knocking on the roof, etc., to ascertain if it is sound or safe to work under. 1898    New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon  				Sounding, the operation of examining the chest; auscultation. 1900    E. Wallace Writ in Barracks 72  				Didn't mind the Doctor's soundin's. Compounds C1.    sounding-bar,  sounding-machine,  sounding-rod,  sounding-string. ΚΠ 1847    R. B. Todd  & W. Bowman Physiol. Anat. II. 97  				Müller..could by means of a sounding-rod..ascertain the relative intensity of the sonorous vibrations. 1853    J. F. W. Herschel Pop. Lect. Sci. 		(1873)	 vii. §58. 275  				The vibrations which reach the ear from a sounding-string. 1881    W. E. Dickson Pract. Organ-building v. 64  				A long screw..biting well in one of the sounding-bars.  C2.     sounding bow  n. = sound-bow n. at sound n.3 Compounds 2a. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > bell > 			[noun]		 > other parts yokeOE stirrup1341 cod1379 bell-string1464 frame1474 stock1474 ear1484 poop1507 bell-wheel1529 skirt1555 guarder1583 imp1595 tab1607 jennet1615 pluck1637 bell-rope1638 cagea1640 cannon1668 stilt1672 canon1688 crown1688 sound-bow1688 belfry1753 furniture1756 sounding bow1756 earlet1833 brima1849 busk-board1851 headstock1851 sally hole1851 slider1871 mushroom head1872 sally beam1872 pit1874 tolling-lever1874 sally-pin1879 sally-pulley1901 sally-wheel1901 1756    Dict. Arts & Sci. at Bell  				The parts of a Bell are (1) The sounding bow, or the inferior circle, which terminates it, growing thinner and thinner.   sounding-box  n. = sound-box n. at sound n.3 Compounds 2a ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > lute- or viol-type parts > 			[noun]		 > hollow part sounding-box1875 sound-body1876 sound-box1876 1875    W. D. Whitney Life & Growth of Lang. iv. 59  				Above the vibrating reed-apparatus is set, after the fashion of a sounding-box, the cavity of the pharynx.   sounding-post  n. = sound-post n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > lute- or viol-type parts > 			[noun]		 > other parts rib1578 rose1597 sound-hole1611 sound-post1688 purfle1706 bass-bar1833 purfling1833 sounding-post1838 corner1888 bout1889 1838    Penny Mag. 30 June 246/2  				This peg is called the sounding post..of the violin. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2021). soundingn.2 1.   a.  The action or process of sounding or ascertaining the depth of water by means of the line and lead or (now usually) by means of echo; an instance of this. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > other nautical operations > 			[noun]		 > sounding depth sounding1336 echo-sounding1923 1336   [implied in:   Accts. Exchequer King's Remembrancer 19/31 m. 4  				In .j. petra cordis de canabo..pro vno soundynglyne inde faciendo. (at sounding-line n.)]. 1337–9    in  B. Sandahl Middle Eng. Sea Terms 		(1982)	 III. 119  				De ij.s.iij.d. pro cordis emptis..per vices Anglice Lyne pro soundings et toppeline pro eadem. 1485   [implied in: 1485  in  M. Oppenheim Naval Accts. & Inventories Henry VII 		(1896)	 51  				Leede lynes, j; Sounding leeds, j. (at sounding-lead n.)]. 1631    G. Markham Countrey Contentm. 		(ed. 4)	  i. xi. 76  				That in the sounding of Lakes or Riuers, he may know how many foot or inches each..contayneth. 1699    W. Dampier Voy. & Descr.  ii. ii. 50  				Taking your Sounding from Beef-Island shore. 1704    J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I. (at cited word)  				When the Seamen try the Depth of the Water with a Line and Plummet, they call it Sounding. 1769    W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine (at cited word)  				Sounding with the hand-lead..is generally performed by a man who stands in the main-chains to windward. 1860    M. F. Maury Physical Geogr. Sea 		(ed. 8)	 4  				Nor have any reliable soundings yet been made in water over five miles deep. 1880    19th Cent. No. 38. 594  				At each of the observing stations a sounding was taken for the determination of the exact depth. 1966    McGraw-Hill Encycl. Sci. & Technol. 		(rev. ed.)	 XIII. 216/1  				Since about the middle of the 1920s, virtually all deep-sea soundings have been made by echo sounding.  b.  figurative. Investigation. Also with out.  to take soundings, to try to find out quietly how matters stand. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > investigation, inspection > 			[noun]		 inspection1390 search1415 probationc1422 ensearchingc1430 surview1432 enserchise1436 overseeingc1449 sight1452 hearkeninga1483 discuting1483 ensearcha1509 inquiry1512 upsightc1515 perusing1556 perpending1558 overlooking1565 interview1567 trial1575 peruse1578 visitation1583 perspective?a1586 overviewing1590 looking over1599 sounding1599 perusal1604 supervise1604 disquisition1605 expiscation1605 prospect1625 ravellinga1626 disquiry1628 disquisitive1660 perpendment1667 inspecting1788 sleuthing1900 casing1928 the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > interrogation > extract information			[verb (intransitive)]		 > by sounding out to feel (also take, taste, try) the pulse (also pulses) ofa1400 fish1570 to take soundings1856 the mind > attention and judgement > enquiry > interrogation > 			[noun]		 > sounding out sound1584 fishing expedition1961 sounding1969 1599    W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet  i. i. 147  				To himselfe so secret and so close, So farre from sounding and discouerie, As is the bud bit with an enuious  worme.       View more context for this quotation 1856    C. J. Lever Martins of Cro' Martin 217  				Old Dan bears you no malice, I'd lay fifty pounds on it! But, if you like, I'll just step in and take soundings. 1898    Westm. Gaz. 9 Nov. 4/1  				The Liverymen afterwards decide the selection. Soundings may have been taken beforehand. 1969    Daily Tel. 11 Nov. 21/4  				The secret sounding-out by Plessey and BSR was an effort to clear the hurdle before breathing a word, but a share jump precipitated events.  c.  transferred. The determination of any physical property at a depth in the sea or at a height in the atmosphere; an instance of this. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > 			[noun]		 > of physical property sounding1875 1875    Proc. Royal Soc. 1874–5 23 249  				Temperature-soundings were taken on the 28th of September and on the 3rd of October, at depths of 2800 and 1420 fathoms respectively. 1947    Sci. Progress XXXV. 88  				These soundings have also shown exceedingly dry layers..to exist from time to time in the troposphere. 1955    E. Burgess Frontier to Space iii. 24  				The use of the rocket for altitude sounding is by no means a new idea. 1974    Physics Bull. Jan. 11/3  				Further instrumental developments are bound to follow and it may be that balloon and rocket soundings of the atmosphere will soon become obsolete.  d.  Archaeology. A trial boring made on a site to gain preliminary information. Cf. sondage n. ΘΚΠ the world > time > relative time > the past > history or knowledge about the past > 			[noun]		 > archaeology > archaeological expedition or excavation > tests bosing1953 sounding1957 1957    K. M. Kenyon Digging up Jericho 170  				Our excavation at the highest point on the central ridge..was only a restricted sounding. 1967    Amer. Anthropologist 69 401/2  				At Chagar Bazar, Huwaish (at which only a seven-day sounding was carried out), and in the rest of Mesopotamia ‘religious responsibilities rested with the local secular chiefs’.  2.  A place or position at sea where it is possible to reach the bottom with the ordinary deep-sea lead (see quot. 1867 at sense  2a). Chiefly plural.  a.  In prepositional phrases, as  in or into, off (the) soundings.The form sowdyng of the earliest examples also occurs in 1495 under sounding-lead n. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > region of sea or ocean > 			[noun]		 > depth of water > place where soundings can be taken sounding14.. soundings1570 singular. plural.1626    J. Smith Accidence Young Sea-men 18  				A shallow water, deepe water, soundings, fadome by the marke.1694    Narbrough's Acct. Several Late Voy. 18  				The Sea-Water is changed whiter than the usual colour, whence I conjecture, I must be in Soundings.1748    B. Robins  & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson  iii. vi. 347  				We..frequently brought to, to try if we were in soundings.1790    R. Beatson Naval & Mil. Mem. I. 174  				At this time a French squadron was cruizing in the soundings.1840    F. Marryat Poor Jack xxii. 160  				We were soon out of soundings, and well into the Bay of Biscay.1867    W. H. Smyth  & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. (at cited word)  				To be in soundings..is limited in common parlance to parts not far from the shore, and where the depth is about 80 or 100 fathoms.14..    in  J. Gairdner Sailing Direct. 		(1889)	 21  				And ye gesse you ij. parties ovir the see..ye must north and by est till ye come into Sowdyng. 14..    in  J. Gairdner Sailing Direct. 		(1889)	 21  				Than go north till ye come into sowdyng of woyse [= ooze].  b.  In other uses.  to strike soundings (see quot. 1863). ΚΠ 1701    W. Penn in  Mem. Hist. Soc. Pennsylvania 		(1870)	 IX. 69  				We were but twenty-six days from land to soundings. 1748    B. Robins  & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson  i. vi. 59  				We had soundings which continued all along the coast of Patagonia. 1802    Schomberg Naval Chronol. 1 132  				He..sailed with the rest for England. On the 23d of October the admiral struck soundings in 90 fathoms. 1840    F. Marryat Poor Jack xxvi. 181  				A large homeward-bound Indiaman, which had just struck soundings. 1863    A. Young Naut. Dict. 		(ed. 2)	 359  				To strike soundings, is to find bottom with the deep-sea-lead on coming in from sea. A vessel is then in soundings.  c.  spec. with the. Such places in the mouth of the English Channel. ? Obsolete. ΚΠ 1666    London Gaz. No. 39/1  				A little off the Soundings she met with ill weather. 1693    N. Luttrell Diary in  Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs 		(1857)	 III. 51  				Alymer, after seen the Streights fleet past the soundings, goes on some other design. 1723    D. Defoe Hist. Col. Jack 		(ed. 2)	 225  				We had tollerable Weather..till we came into the Soundings, so they call the Mouth of the British Channel. 1897    Laughton in  Dict. National Biogr. LII. 160/2  				On 22 Oct. the fleet came into the soundings.]			  d.  U.S. (See quot. 1804) rare. ΚΠ 1804    C. B. Brown tr.  C. F. de Volney View Soil & Climate U.S.A. 174  				On each side, it forms eddies or counter-currents, which, aided by the depositions of the rivers, forms the muddy stratum or deposit, termed soundings.  3.  plural. The depths of water in the sea, esp. along the coast, in a harbour, road, etc., or (rarely) in a river, ascertained by sounding (sense  1); also, the entries in a logbook, etc., giving these, together with particulars relating to the nature of the bottom. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > region of sea or ocean > 			[noun]		 > depth of water assay1436 soundings1570 society > travel > travel by water > other nautical operations > 			[noun]		 > sounding depth > depths found by soundings1570 the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > region of sea or ocean > 			[noun]		 > depth of water > place where soundings can be taken sounding14.. soundings1570 the world > the earth > water > sea or ocean > region of sea or ocean > 			[noun]		 > depth of water > place where soundings can be taken > specifically in English Channel soundings1570 1570    J. Dee in  H. Billingsley tr.  Euclid Elements Geom. Math. Præf. sig. aiiijv  				The Soundinges..ought the Hydrographer..to haue certainly knowen. c1595    Capt. Wyatt in  G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies 		(1899)	 38  				I must confess that the Captaine did not make anie publike declaracion how hee founde the sowndings. 1661    E. Hickeringill 		(title)	  				Jamaica Viewed, with all the Ports, Harbours, and their several Soundings. 1748    B. Robins  & R. Walter Voy. round World by Anson  ii. viii. 216  				A plan of the road..where the soundings are laid down. 1774    M. Mackenzie Treat. Maritim Surv. 79  				The Survey of the Coast..and the Soundings near it. 1841    B. Hall Patchwork II. i. 4  				The leadsman..singing out the soundings to the anxious pilot. 1869    H. F. Tozer Res. Highlands of Turkey II. 341  				From the state of the soundings at the present day,..the river in Strabo's time must have entered the sea [etc.].  4.  Surgery. The action of examining with a sound or probe. Also attributive, as  †sounding-iron. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > diagnosis or prognosis > examination > 			[noun]		 > by physical means > with a probe probation?a1425 sounding1598 1598    A. M. tr.  J. Guillemeau Frenche Chirurg. 13/1  				The soundinge Iron..is verye conveniente to sound and serche for bullettes in a wounde. 1695    W. W. Novum Lumen Chirurgicum Extinctum 36  				He will not allow Sounding by Probe. 1809    S. Cooper Dict. Pract. Surg. 568  				Sounding, the operation of introducing the foregoing instrument [sc. sound]. Compounds C1.   attributive, chiefly in sense  1, as  sounding-machine,  sounding-plumb,  sounding-plummet,  sounding-pole,  sounding-rod,  sounding-ship,  sounding-twine.Also  sounding-apparatus,  sounding-bottle, etc. (1875– in E. H. Knight  Pract. Dict. Mech. and later dictionaries). ΚΠ 1555    R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde  iii. vi. f. 121  				He coulde at no tyme touche the grounde with his soundynge plummet. 1575    G. Gascoigne Posies in  Wks. 		(1907)	 I. 355  				(The sounding plumbe) in haste poste hast must raunge, To trye the depth and goodnesse of our gate. 1611    R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues  				Sonde, a Mariners sounding plummet. 1776    G. Semple Treat. Building in Water 18  				A sounding Rod..marked out in Feet and Inches painted. 1832    Darwin in  Life & Lett. 		(1887)	 I. 232  				It is quite a new thing for a ‘sounding ship’ to beat a regular man-of-war. 1838    Civil Engineer & Architect's Jrnl. 1 148/2  				A sounding-rod of iron..was dropped into it, which rebounding several feet, proved that the solid rock had been reached. 1846    A. Young Naut. Dict. 289  				Massey's Patent Sounding-Machine is an instrument which ascertains the depth of water, and registers it by means of an index. 1846    A. Young Naut. Dict. 289  				Sounding rod, a slight bar of iron marked with a scale of feet and inches, used to ascertain the depth of water that may happen to be in a vessel's hold. 1856    E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. II. vi. 71  				A five-sinnet line of Maury's sounding-twine. 1875    ‘M. Twain’ in  Atlantic Monthly May 569/1  				You can go and get the sounding-pole. 1894    Times 18 Sept. 10/4  				Sir William Thomson's sounding machine was on the vessel aft, but witness used the deep sea lead. 1975    Islander 		(Victoria, Brit. Columbia)	 23 Feb. 13/2  				Tying themselves together like mountain climbers, sounding poles in hand, they forded the river.  C2.     sounding balloon  n. = ballon-sonde n. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > study or science of weather > meteorological instruments > 			[noun]		 > carrier for or with instruments > balloon ballon-sonde1898 sounding balloon1937 weather balloon1940 rawinsonde1946 1902    Encycl. Brit. XXX. 708/2  				As these ascensions are made with great velocity, and therefore as nearly vertical as possible, they are called ‘soundings’, because of their analogy to the mariner's usage at sea, and the balloon is called a ‘sounding balloon’.]			 1937    C. G. Philp Stratosphere & Rocket Flight v. 33  				By the aid of ‘sounding’ balloons..data has been obtained of the earth's atmosphere at a height of over 23 miles. 1965    R. A. Craig Upper Atmosphere ii. 17  				Sounding balloons are most commonly made of neoprene and inflated with helium or hydrogen.   sounding rocket  n. a rocket designed to carry scientific instruments into the upper atmosphere in order to make measurements during its flight. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > spacecraft > rocket > 			[noun]		 > for taking scientific measurements rocketsonde1946 sounding rocket1947 probe1953 the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > study or science of weather > meteorological instruments > 			[noun]		 > carrier for or with instruments > rocket rocketsonde1946 sounding rocket1947 1947    Amer. Jrnl. Physics 15 139/1 		(caption)	  				The WAC Corporal sounding rocket, which reached 43 mi altitude. 1962    F. I. Ordway  et al.  Basic Astronautics iv. 121  				Data obtained from the sounding rockets were correlated with readings from the Explorer 4 artificial satellite. 1978    J. M. Pasachoff  & M. L. Kutner University Astron. xxviii. 710 		(caption)	  				The ultraviolet spectrum of 3C 273, taken with a 40-cm telescope, the largest ever flown on a sounding rocket. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † soundingn.3 Obsolete.  1.  Swooning, fainting. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > unconsciousness > 			[noun]		 > fainting or swooning swimeOE swowingc1000 swooningc1290 swoonc1330 soundingc1380 swelteringc1440 sweltingc1460 swalming1487 swounding1570 syncopization1598 fainting1601 lipothymy1603 defection1615 dereliction1647 swebbing1668 swound1880 greyout1942 c1380    Sir Ferumbras 		(1879)	 l. 1134  				Wan þe Amyral haþ iherd þe kyng in sowenyng gan he falle; Ac wan he awok of his soȝnyng loude he gan to calle. a1500						 (?a1400)						    Sir Torrent of Portyngale 		(1887)	 l. 1400  				Thries in sownyng fell she thare. 1547    A. Borde Breuiary of Helthe  i. f. lxxxvii  				There be many soden sicknesses, as the pestylence,..the palsey, and soundynge. 1583    P. Barrough Methode of Phisicke  ii. xiv. 75  				If sounding be caused through pain, you must diligentlie enquire the cause. 1620    T. Venner Via Recta vi. 107  				A water of singular efficacie against sowning.  2.  A swoon; a fainting-fit. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > unconsciousness > 			[noun]		 > fainting or swooning > a faint or swoon swimeOE swooningc1290 swowa1325 swooningc1330 swoon1390 soundc1400 trancec1405 sweamc1415 swoundc1440 sweltingc1460 swarf1488 dwalm?a1513 sounding ecstasy?1565 sounding1580 pasme1591 death1596 lipothymy1603 deliquium1620 delique1645 fainting fit1714 drow1727 faint-fit1795 faint1808 blacking out1930 blackout1934 greyout1942 pass-out1946 1580    J. Frampton tr.  N. Monardes Bk. Medicines agaynst Venome in  Ioyfull Newes 		(new ed.)	 f. 119v  				The bone of the hart..is of great vertue against venom and soundings of the harte. 1595    T. Lodge Fig for Momus G 4  				It causeth sownings, passions of the hart. a1657    J. Balfour Hist. Wks. 		(1824)	 II. 104  				Falling into maney soundinges and paines, and violent fluxes of the belley. c1670    A. Wood Life 		(1891)	 I. 388  				Yet he could hardly keep himself from a second sowning.  3.  attributive, as  sounding ecstasy,  sounding fit,  sounding trance.Frequently in the 17th century. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > unconsciousness > 			[noun]		 > fainting or swooning > a faint or swoon swimeOE swooningc1290 swowa1325 swooningc1330 swoon1390 soundc1400 trancec1405 sweamc1415 swoundc1440 sweltingc1460 swarf1488 dwalm?a1513 sounding ecstasy?1565 sounding1580 pasme1591 death1596 lipothymy1603 deliquium1620 delique1645 fainting fit1714 drow1727 faint-fit1795 faint1808 blacking out1930 blackout1934 greyout1942 pass-out1946 ?1565    Lady Hungerford in  H. Hall Society in Elizabethan Age 		(1886)	 253  				Your man..founde me in suche sounding fitts and wekenys. 1582    T. Watson Ἑκατομπαθία: Passionate Cent. Loue xi  				Sone after into howe sorrowfull a dumpe, or sounden [sic] extasie he fell. 1632    W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x. 467  				I fell twice in a sounding trance. 1681    H. More Plain Expos. Daniel 78  				A sounding fit that took him at the hearing the voice of the Angel. 1720    D. Manley Power of Love  i. 49  				An immediate Suffocation..might be improved into an appearance of sounding Fits. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online December 2021). soundingadj.1 1.   a.  Having a sound; causing, emitting, producing, a sound or sounds, esp. of a loud character; resonant, sonorous; reverberant.Frequently in 18th cent. poetry. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > 			[adjective]		 > sounding soundingc1374 sweyinga1400 unquiet1539 sonorific1683 sonoriferous1693 soniferous1710 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > resonance or sonority > 			[adjective]		 loudc897 shillOE brightOE shillinga1225 soundingc1374 ringingc1400 sonore?c1400 resoundingc1425 sonousc1429 resoundable?c1500 soundish1530 high-sounding1560 singing1565 resonant1572 trolling1581 rumbelow1582 sonorous1611 canorous1646 remugient1660 retentive1728 fullish1770 pealing1794 resonating1845 plangent1858 resonatory1880 timbrous1929 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > 			[adjective]		 > sounding soundingc1374 c1374    G. Chaucer tr.  Boethius De Consol. Philos. 		(1868)	  i. pr. ii. 8  				Þe causes whennes þe sounyng wyndes moeuen and bisien þe smoþe water of þe see. c1400						 (?c1380)						    Pearl l. 883  				Þat nwe songe þay songen ful cler, In sounande notez a gentyl carpe. 1483    Cath. Angl. 350/1  				Sowndynge, argutus, sonorus. 1526    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 1 Cor. xiii. 1  				I were even as soundynge brasse. 1560    Bible 		(Geneva)	 2 Chron. xiii. 12  				And beholde, this God is with vs,..& his Priests with the sounding trumpets. 1594    C. Marlowe  & T. Nashe Dido  i. 1  				Both barking Scilla, and the sounding Rocks. a1637    B. Jonson Eng. Gram.  i. iii, in  Wks. 		(1640)	 III  				When it [sc. the letter v] leadeth a sounding Vowell. 1697    J. Dryden tr.  Virgil Pastorals  v, in  tr.  Virgil Wks. 24  				Murm'ring Billows on the sounding Shore. 1723    J. Clarke tr.  Rohault's Syst. Nat. Philos. I.  i. ii. 7  				Mankind..are apt to think, that the Sound..is in the Air, or in the sounding Body as they call it. 1798    W. Wordsworth Lines Tintern Abbey in  W. Wordsworth  & S. T. Coleridge Lyrical Ballads 206  				The sounding cataract Haunted me like a passion. 1825    T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. I. 319  				As the sounding horn foretels the coming mail. 1883    R. L. Stevenson Treasure Island  v. xxvii. 220  				He went in with a sounding plunge.  b.  Preceded by an adjective or adverb, as clear, deep, loud sounding, etc. ΚΠ c1325    Prose Ps. cl. 5  				Herieþ hym in cymbals wele sounand. 1486    Bk. St. Albans d iij  				Looke also that thay be sonowre and well sowndyng and shil. ?a1535    To City of London 		(Vitellius)	 in  J. Small Poems W. Dunbar 		(1893)	 II. 277  				Blith be thy churches, wele sownyng be thy bellis. 1560    Bible 		(Geneva)	 Psalms cl. 5  				Praise ye him with high sounding cymbals. 1585    T. Washington tr.  N. de Nicolay Nauigations Turkie  iii. xv. 99 b  				Cimbals of..cleare sounding mettall. 1592    Arden of Feversham  iii. iii. 16  				With that he blew an euill sounding horne. 1606    W. Smith Black-smith 33  				With the loude sounding trumpet to rouze and araise them. 1693    J. Dryden Disc. conc. Satire in  J. Dryden et al.  tr.  Juvenal Satires p. liii  				He was forc'd to crowd his Verse with ill sounding Monosyllables. 1782    W. Cowper Hope in  Poems 169  				Beneath well-sounding Greek I slur a name a poet must not speak. 1801    Lusignan IV. 28  				The shores of the deep sounding main. 1845    R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 35  				The names of the animals are always fine-sounding. 1882    E. A. Floyer Unexplored Baluchistan 75  				The Divine formulas of Islam are merely fine hearty-sounding words to swear in. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > 			[adjective]		 > sounding > sounding like sounding1563 1563    J. Foxe Actes & Monuments 559/1  				The booke..is nother English, Laten, Greke, nor Hebrue, nor Douche, but somewhat soundinge to oure English.  d.   sounding sand  n. = singing sand n. at singing adj. Compounds. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > stone > stony material > 			[noun]		 > sand > types of sea-sandc1220 black sand1536 gold sand1578 quicksand1641 iron sand1681 crag1735 Bude sand1808 musical sand1858 sounding sand1884 singing sand1897 squeaking sand1966 1884    Proc. 32nd Meeting Amer. Assoc. Advancem. Sci. 251  				The sounding sand is near the surface only, at the depth of one or two feet the acoustic properties disappear. 1897    G. P. Merrill Treat. Rocks  ii. ii. 143  				On certain Hawaiian beaches, such sands [sc. shell sands] give out a distinct note..when walked over, or even when shaken in a closed vessel, and are popularly known as sounding, or singing, sands. 1976    Nature 5 Feb. 368/2  				Hardly surprisingly in view of their weird effects, sounding sands are incorporated into folklore and legends going back at least 1,500 years.  2.   a.  Of language, names, titles, etc.: Having a full, rich, or imposing sound; high-sounding, pompous, bombastic, etc. Also transferred of writers. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > ornateness > 			[adjective]		 > lofty or grandiloquent magnificenta1460 statelya1525 magnifical1533 tragical1533 lofty1565 tragic1566 sublime1586 over-high1587 magnific1589 heroic1590 buskina1593 grandiloquous1593 full-mouthed1594 high-pitched1594 buskined1595 full-mouth1595 high-borne1596 altisonant1612 Roman1619 high-sounding1624 transcendent1631 magniloquent1640 loud1651 altiloquent1656 grandiloquent1656 largiloquent1656 altisonous1661 tall1670 elevate1673 grandisonous1674 sounding1683 exalted1684 grandisonant1684 grandific1727 magniloquous1727 orotund1799 superb1825 spread eagle1839 grandiose1840 magnisonanta1843 togated1868 elevated1875 mandarin1959 1683    W. Soames tr.  N. Boileau-Despréaux Art of Poetry i. 11  				Keep to your Subject close, in all you say; Nor for a sounding Sentence ever stray. 1693    J. Dryden Disc. conc. Satire in  J. Dryden et al.  tr.  Juvenal Satires p. liii  				We make our Authour at least appear in a Poetique Dress. We have actually made him more Sounding, and more Elegant, than he was before in English. 1711    J. Addison Spectator No. 26. ¶1  				Several Persons mentioned in the Battles of Heroic Poems, who have sounding Names given them. 1775    S. Johnson Taxation no Tyranny 11  				Before they quit the comforts of a warm home for the sounding some~thing which they think better. 1805    N. Nicholls in  Corr. Gray & Nicholls 		(1843)	 36  				Milton, who, he said, in parts of his poem, rolls on in sounding words that have but little meaning. 1855    T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. xix. 321  				There was a society..which assumed the sounding name of the Royal Academies Company. 1888    J. Bryce Amer. Commonw. II. lxxii. 594  				The orator has been apt to evade them or to deal in sounding commonplaces.  b.  Of persons: Loudly demonstrative. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > behaviour > affected behaviour or affectation > 			[adjective]		 > theatrical or exaggerated (of person) > loudly demonstrative sounding1828 1828    E. Bulwer-Lytton Pelham III. ix. 134  				The disinterested kindness and delicacy..contrasted so deeply with the hollowness of friends more sounding, alike in their profession and their creeds. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † soundingadj.2 Obsolete. rare.   That swoons; swooning. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > unconsciousness > 			[adjective]		 > fainting or in a swoon swownc1000 deadc1369 swoonc1450 swounding1570 deficient1608 tranced1608 sounding1621 swooning1646 fainted1847 to go out like a light1909 1621    R. Burton Anat. Melancholy  ii. iii. iii. 400  				For all their Physitians and medicines inforcing Nature, a souning wife, families complaints, friends teares,..he..goes to hell with a guilty conscience. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online June 2021). <  | 
	
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