- Similar term to visual for audio? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Visual: relating to the sense of sight seeing | Auditory: relating to the sense of hearing Video : relating to light or the recording thereof | Audio : relating to sound or the recording thereof Photo- : produced by light | Phono- Sono- : produced by sound or voice
- What is the difference, if any, between art, the arts, and Art?
art [mass noun] the expression or application of human creative skill and imagination, typically in a visual form such as painting or sculpture, producing works to be appreciated primarily for their beauty or emotional power (the arts) the various branches of creative activity, such as painting, music, literature, and dance
- word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
As adjectives, graphic and graphical are equivalent Graphic is also a noun, as in a visual graphic, whereas graphical is only an adjective However, there are phrases where graphic is conventionally used, other phrases where graphical is the norm Therefore, it's important to choose the correct word for a given situation For example: graphic
- sense verbs - a word like visual, auditory, except for touch . . .
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- Single name to cover drawing, painting, sketching etc
The fine or applied visual arts and associated techniques involving the application of lines and strokes to a two-dimensional surface The fine or applied visual arts and associated techniques in which images are produced from blocks, plates, or type, as in engraving and lithography Also called graphics
- Word for a single picture which can be interpreted in two different . . .
Ambiguous images or reversible figures are visual forms which exploit graphical similarities and other properties of visual system interpretation between two or more distinct image forms These are famous for inducing the phenomenon of multistable perception
- What is the effect called when one looks at a bright light, and the . . .
No, visual burn does exist, but is something different Sometimes called 'navigator's eyeball', it refers to a condition where constantly looking at a bright light, (such as the sun through a sextant) has left a patch of the eyeball permanently impaired
- grammaticality - When is it correct to use the -wise suffix . . .
One of the problems with the particular example user interface-wise is that while it needs to be parsed as (user interface)-wise, the most immediate parsing would probably be user (interface-wise), since hyphens typically bind tighter than spaces
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