timbre
Advance product Quality Planning . this is one of the standard Quality procedure followed in Automative field.
I think its the sound that your lips make when you smack them together??? thats what it was defined as on the movie "love happens" --- The noise your lips make when they smack together, yes.
The word cheep is defined in the Merriam-Webster dictionary as "to utter faint shrill sounds". The secondary definition is "to utter a single word or sound".
phonitics: the study of speech sounds it's deals with the phisycal nature of speech sounds and not with their relations to other speech sounds in particular languages
Using both sight and sound. Example: we saw an audiovisual movie.
timbre
timbre
Timbre
The sound quality of musical instruments results from blending a fundamental tone with its overtones :) +++ The type, shape and materials of the instrument control the basic waveform and the overtones hence timbre (the individual sound).
Timbre of the sound. It is related to the frequency of the fundamental frequency and a combination of overtones.
Yes. The first overtone is one octave above the first note, The next overtone is a fifth above that. The volume of each overtone creates the timbre of the sound. Is it a flute that has evenly decreasing sound overtones or is it an oboe with different volumes of overtones?
A sound that's produced by a single wave at a constant frequency and with no overtones is a pure tone or a sinusoidial wave.
An overtone is a natural resonance or vibration frequency of a system. Systems described by overtones are often sound systems, for example, blown pipes or plucked strings. If such a system is excited, a number of sound frequencies may be produced, including a fundamental tone of given frequency. An integer multiple of the fundamental frequency is called a harmonic. The second overtone is not the second harmonic. (See related link "Calculations of Harmonics and Overtones from Fundamental Frequency")
The relative strengths of the overtones in a given sound or pitch determine its quality. For example, if the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th overtones have relative strengths of 50%, 20%, 10%, and 5%, compared to the fundamental, the mixture of all those tones will blend to produce a single tone (which we hear at the fundamental pitch) with a particular quality that is markedly different from from the same fundamental tone whose 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th overtones have relative strengths of, say, 32%, 78%, 12%, and 29% Consider this analogy: Given two gallons of white paint, we add to the 1st gallon 1 cup of red, 1 cup of green, and 1 cup of blue paint. To the 2nd gallon we add 1/4 cup of red, 2 cups of green, and 1/8 cup of blue. Mix each gallon thoroughly, and the blend results in a different overall color for each gallon, due to the different amounts of red, green, and blue in each gallon. In this analogy, the gallons of white are equivalent to the fundamental tone, and the reds, greens, and blues, are equivalent to the overtones.
A pleasing sound is what our brain perceives an instruments as "Balanced". Sound is made up of many different frequencies (from 20hz to ~25khz is what we can hear) and made with a fundamental (root), Harmonics (Multiples of root), overtones (Not in the multiples of root), and finally formants (curve of harmonics to create a type of pitch like our voice). And the right combination of all these factors contribute to what you percieve as a "Pleasing sound". But not all people like the same music ;]
2. overtones
sound quality