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Sonority   Listen
Sonority

noun
1.
Having the character of a loud deep sound; the quality of being resonant.  Synonyms: plangency, resonance, reverberance, ringing, sonorousness, vibrancy.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Sonority" Quotes from Famous Books



... he said, "dreamed a poem in India. It has never been written down, but I still can remember every line of it. Listen." The poem, which was full of vague Oriental imagery, was perfectly intelligible, and throbbed with a certain sonority like that of distant gongs; but no sane man would have written it in his waking moments. In that fact lay its charm. The author's voice, naturally low and musical, acquired new tones as he recited it, giving to it the qualities of an incantation; and round us, ...
— Memoirs of Life and Literature • W. H. Mallock

... a lofty and spacious apartment done completely in hard-woods; its panelled walls and ceiling rang with a magnificent sonority as the two pairs of feet moved across the ...
— With the Procession • Henry B. Fuller

... work... This is not the day..." cried a loud voice from within, made louder by the sonority of the ...
— Tartarin On The Alps • Alphonse Daudet

... which they are involved must correspond, and their relationship should remain unimpaired. Turner's "Carthage" is nature transposed and wonderfully modified. Some of the passages of light and shade there—those of the balustrade—are fugues, and there his art is allied to Bach in sonority and beautiful combination. Turner knew that a branch hung across the sun looked at separately was black, but he painted it light to maintain the equipoise of atmosphere. In the novel the characters are the voice, the deeds are the orchestra. But the English novelist ...
— Confessions of a Young Man • George Moore

... introduction, so I mentally named him Mr. Crabapple. He was short and stout, had a round wizened face freckled to the fuscous tint of a russedon apple, and was endowed with a voice which had all the husky sonority of a greengrocer's. He was beardless and sandy-haired, and one of those persons whose age is a puzzle to define; he might have been anything between fifteen and five-and-thirty. As he talked of Harrow as if he had left it but yesterday, I was disposed to set him down as a queer public-school ...
— Romantic Spain - A Record of Personal Experiences (Vol. II) • John Augustus O'Shea

... darkness, enormous, without sonority. Feeble currents of air, passing on our faces, gave us a feeling of being in the open air on a night more black than any known night had been before. One's voice lost itself in there without resonance, as if on a plain; the smoke of our blaze ...
— Romance • Joseph Conrad and F.M. Hueffer

... element of suspense, was such as in fact to surprise him. He could scarce have said what the effect resembled; the abrupt cessation, the positive prohibition, of music perhaps, more than anything else, in some place all adjusted and all accustomed to sonority and to attention. If he could at any rate have conceived lifting the veil from his image at some moment of the past (what had he done, after all, if not lift it to her?) so to do this to-day, to talk to ...
— The Beast in the Jungle • Henry James

... slowly coming into more and more perfect harmony, uniting upon the single note, breaking again into countless changing tones, only to yield once more to the single A, caught, dropped during an instant's pause, then caught again and held in long-drawn, jubilant sonority. ...
— The Dominant Strain • Anna Chapin Ray



Words linked to "Sonority" :   quality, tone, timber, sonorous, timbre



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