ses renk

listen to the pronunciation of ses renk
التركية - الإنجليزية
timbre
the quality of a tone, as distinguished from intensity and pitch
Tone color It's the quality of sound that make one instrument or voice sound different from another For example, a flute has a different timbre than a clarinet
Tone or sound quality
The crest on a coat of arms
See Tone, and Partial tones, under Partial
The quality of a sound determined by its partial structure, that is the relative frequencies and amplitudes of the various sinewaves which collectively make up that particular sound It is more or less synonymous with "tone" It is this quality which allows you to distinguish between a flute and an oboe playing the same pitch at the same volume
See 1st Timber
The perceived tonal quality of a sound based on the pitch and the relative mix of fundamental and harmonic frequencies; the perceptual counterpart of spectrum
(tim'-ber) [French ] The crest which in an achievement is shown on the top of a helmet
the characteristic sound of an instrument
(music) the distinctive property of a complex sound (a voice or noise or musical sound); "the timbre of her soprano was rich and lovely"; "the muffled tones of the broken bell summoned them to meet"
The quality given to a sound by its overtones
The quality of a sound related to its harmonic structure Timbre is what gives a voice or instrument its sonic signature -- why a trumpet and a saxophone sound different when they play the same note
That attribute of auditory sensation by which a listener discriminates between two sounds of similar loudness and pitch, but of different tonal quality Timbre depends primarily upon the spectrum of the stimulus, but it also depends upon the waveform, the sound pressure, the frequency location of the spectrum, and the temporal characteristics of the stimulus
The specific aural fingerprint or signature of an instrument or voice made up of a unique palette of overtones or harmonics In loudspeakers, the reproduction of correct timbre is a combined function of direct sound and early and reverberant reflections
A sound's tone color, which is a function of its harmonic content
The overall effect or quality of a bell's sound
How an instrument sounds The technical definition has to do with how an instrument amplifies the overtones of a note Intuitively, it's that distinct sound that makes a piano a piano and not an oboe If someone played a note on a piano, You would know, without looking, that a piano had been played, and not some other instrument
The timbre of someone's voice or of a musical instrument is the particular quality of sound that it has. His voice had a deep timbre The timbre of the violin is far richer than that of the mouth organ. the quality of the sound made by a particular instrument or voice (, from tympanon; TIMPANI). Quality of sound that distinguishes one instrument, voice, or other sound source from another. Timbre largely results from a characteristic combination of overtones produced by different instruments. This distinctive combination (which usually varies across the range of pitches) is what principally permits a listener to distinguish a clarinet from a flute, an alto from a tenor, or even a Stradivarius violin from a Guarneri violin, when both are sounding the same pitch. One element of timbre results from the differing methods of producing the sounds (blowing, bowing, striking, etc.), especially audible at the moment a note begins
{i} tone of voice, quality of sound
tatlı (ses/renk)
mellow
ses renk
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