What is the meaning of PHONE. Phrases containing PHONE
See meanings and uses of PHONE!PHONE
PHONE
PHONE
PHONE
PHONE
PHONE
Acronyms & AI meanings
Fussball Klub Pirmasens
Research on High Pressure Science and Technology
Digital Imagery Exploitation Production System
Baltimore City Health Department
Will Young Promo Crew
Central Plasma Sheet
American Association for Neo Latin Studies
Ontario Association of International Educators
Panti Forest Reserve
Bhawani Dayal Arya College
PHONE
PHONE
PHONE
n.
One who advocates a phonetic spelling.
v. t.
To represent by phonetic signs.
n.
One versed in phonetics; a phonologist.
n.
The doctrine or science of sounds; especially those of the human voice; phonology.
n.
The science which treats of vocal sounds.
n.
One versed in phonetics; a phonetist.
a.
Of or pertaining to the voice, or its use.
n.
See Phonetics.
a.
A sacred character; a character in picture writing, as of the ancient Egyptians, Mexicans, etc. Specifically, in the plural, the picture writing of the ancient Egyptian priests. It is made up of three, or, as some say, four classes of characters: first, the hieroglyphic proper, or figurative, in which the representation of the object conveys the idea of the object itself; second, the ideographic, consisting of symbols representing ideas, not sounds, as an ostrich feather is a symbol of truth; third, the phonetic, consisting of symbols employed as syllables of a word, or as letters of the alphabet, having a certain sound, as a hawk represented the vowel a.
n.
The art of representing vocal sounds by signs and written characters.
adv.
In a phonetic manner.
n.
A sound produced by an explosive impulse of the breath; (Phonetics) one of consonants p, b, t, d, k, g, which are sounded with a sort of explosive power of voice. [See Guide to Pronunciation, Ã 155-7, 184.]
a.
Customary; ordinary; -- applied to the usual English spelling, in distinction from strictly phonetic methods.
n.
The science or doctrine of the elementary sounds uttered by the human voice in speech, including the various distinctions, modifications, and combinations of tones; phonetics. Also, a treatise on sounds.
n.
A system of phonetic spelling based upon the present values of English letters, but invariably using one symbol to represent one sound only.
n.
A phonetic symbol; a letter.
n.
An instrument for studying the motions of sounding bodies by optical means. It consists of a tube across the end of which is stretched a film of soap solution thin enough to give colored bands, the form and position of which are affected by sonorous vibrations.
n.
A method of phonetic printing of the English language, as devised by Mr. Pitman, in which nearly all the ordinary letters and many new forms are employed in order to indicate each elementary sound by a separate character.
a.
Representing sounds; as, phonetic characters; -- opposed to ideographic; as, a phonetic notation.
n.
The act, art, or process of representing sounds by phonetic signs.
PHONE
PHONE