- 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
- How do I call a word for audible equivalent of visualize?
I recall this term being used at conferences like ACM Siggraph as the audio counterpart to visual rendering of data (which includes the animation data used in games and movies
- 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
- single word requests - Adjective for Visual Cacophony - English . . .
What is an adjective that describes something very visually crowded or busy? Cacophonous is perfect, but it describes sound
- meaning - Are the words snarky and smarmy a form of visual . . .
I found these two common English words (snarky and smarmy) that seem like forms of a literary device However, unlike onamatopoeia, the comparison is not made with sound, but rather it is more from
- Is there a visual equivalent of the word overhear?
The verb oversee does not have a normal meaning of the visual equivalent of "overhear" In common usage it means to supervise, manage, or monitor - and only that The roughly equivalent terms could be "spotted" - or "spied" if it were deliberate However in most contexts the simple "saw" will be understood to mean the equivalent of "overheard"
- etymology - Why arent optical illusions called visual illusions . . .
In light of what we know about optical illusions, a better expression might be "visual illusion " I say this because Optics is the study of the properties and phenomenon of light, and isn't really related to the study of our eyes and our visual system, so somewhere along the line, "visual illusion" became used more
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