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TREMOR |
Vibration |
|
THEMOR |
Involuntary vibration |
|
OSCILLATION |
Vibration of waves |
|
VIBRATIUNCLE |
A small vibration. |
|
|
PULSE |
Regular beat or vibration |
|
JAR |
A regular vibration, as of a pendulum. |
|
AFTERSHOCK |
Dessert with white wine causes follow-up vibration down below |
|
VIBRATE |
To affect with vibratory motion; to set in vibration. |
|
|
DIADROM |
A complete course or vibration; time of vibration, as of a
pendulum. |
|
VIBRATILITY |
The quality or state of being vibratile; disposition
to vibration or oscillation. |
|
LIFT |
That portion of the vibration of a balance during which the
impulse is given. |
|
WOLF |
In bowed instruments, a harshness due to defective vibration
in certain notes of the scale. |
|
FLUTTER |
The act of fluttering; quick and irregular motion;
vibration; as, the flutter of a fan. |
|
VIBRATORY |
Consisting in, or causing, vibration, or oscillation;
vibrating; as, a vibratory motion; a vibratory power. |
|
QUAVER |
A shake, or rapid and tremulous vibration, of the voice, or
of an instrument of music. |
|
STAUROSCOPE |
An optical instrument used in determining the position
of the planes of light-vibration in sections of crystals. |
|
BRACER |
A covering to protect the arm of the bowman from the
vibration of the string; also, a brassart. |
|
AGRAFFE |
A hook, eyelet, or other device by which a piano wire is
so held as to limit the vibration. |
|
HARMONICON |
A small, flat, wind instrument of music, in which the
notes are produced by the vibration of free metallic reeds. |
|
UNDULATION |
The act of undulating; a waving motion or vibration;
as, the undulations of a fluid, of water, or of air; the undulations of
sound. |
|
HARMONIPHON |
An obsolete wind instrument with a keyboard, in which
the sound, which resembled the oboe, was produced by the vibration of
thin metallic plates, acted upon by blowing through a tube. |
|
REED |
One of the thin pieces of metal, the vibration of which
produce the tones of a melodeon, accordeon, harmonium, or seraphine;
also attached to certain sets or registers of pipes in an organ. |
|
SOUND |
The occasion of sound; the impulse or vibration which would
occasion sound to a percipient if present with unimpaired; hence, the
theory of vib... |
|
WHISPER |
... heard
only by one near at hand; to utter words without sonant breath; to talk
without that vibration in the larynx which gives sonorous, or voc... |
|
WAVE |
A vibration propagated from particle to particle through a
body or elastic medium, as in the transmission of sound; an assemblage
of vibrating ... |