- Similar term to visual for audio? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
I'm looking for a term for audio in form of the word visual Visual is defined as of or relating to the sense of sight What could you call the sense of hearing? Also, what do you call this form
- sense verbs - a word like visual, auditory, except for touch . . .
a word like "visual", "auditory", except for touch Ask Question Asked 14 years, 11 months ago Modified 8 years, 6 months ago
- single word requests - Adjective for Visual Cacophony - English . . .
2 You asked for a single word, but your own "visual cacophony" hits the nail squarely on the head I can visualise that dischordant mess immediately!
- What is the meaning of “mantle” in this sentence?
In a visual novel written in American English, I have found the following passage, as a character is describing the contents of his room, which is themed around car racing (emphasis is mine): Damo
- Vision is to visually, as hearing is to what? [duplicate]
Possible Duplicate: Pertaining to the Senses Hello If I want to say my project has great graphics, I say it is visually stunning Now, what would I say, following a similar format to that, if
- titles - A word like visual but for music and sounds - English . . .
I'm writing a design document for a certain software project, and am wondering about what to title the section discussing the style of visuals, music, and sound effects However, I'm lacking a word
- Like onomatopoeia, but visual - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The word phenomime can be used for words that act like onomatopoeia (also known as phonomimes) for non-auditory sensory stimuli (the other four senses) They are quite common in Japanese, which also has psychomimes (words that act like onomatopoeia for emotions, thought processes, states of mind) Phonomimes use word sounds to represent auditory stimuli, such as a bark, a meow, or a honk
- single word requests - Visualized equivalent adjective for audio . . .
Funny - I had the same thought, typed "the audible eqivalent of visualize" and came across this page Remarkable to know others are having the same obscure thoughts as you - gotta love google!! I vote for "audiolize" It's the easiest to say, the most mellifluous (like that word) I'm a guitarist and was looking for a word to describe what i do when improvising - sometimes it's a visual
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