Noise

  • 51noise — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. uproar, hubbub, din, racket, clamor, pandemonium; crash, rattle, clatter. See loudness, sound. Ant., silence, quiet. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A sound] Syn. sound, sonance, something heard, something… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 52noise — noun 1》 a sound, especially one that is loud, unpleasant, or disturbing.     ↘continuous or repeated loud, confused sounds. 2》 (noises) conventional remarks expressing some emotion or purpose: the government made tough noises about defending… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 53noise — /nɔɪz / (say noyz) noun 1. sound, especially of a loud, harsh, or confused kind: deafening noises. 2. a sound of any kind. 3. loud shouting, outcry, or clamour. 4. Physics a superposition of signals of random frequencies which have no harmony and …

  • 54noise — 1. Unwanted sound, particularly complex sound that lacks a musical quality because the various frequencies of which it is composed are not whole or partial number multiples (harmonics) of each other. 2. Unwanted additions to a signal not arising… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 55NOISE — acronym. The adversaries and enemies of Microsoft: Netscape, Oracle, IBM, Sun, and Everyone else. Example Citation: Rather than attacking Microsoft where it s strongest its lawyers NOISE should focus its efforts where Microsoft is weakest: the… …

    New words

  • 56noise — bernoise brunoise carthaginoise champenoise chinoise cochinchinoise danoise dauphinoise finnoise génoise noise sournoise …

    Dictionnaire des rimes

  • 57noise — See line noise …

    Dictionary of telecommunications

  • 58noise — tread noise …

    Mechanics glossary

  • 59noise — verbiage that is stupid, nonsensical, or just plain undesirable What s this noise from Pete saying he can t drive me to Tahoe? …

    Dictionary of american slang

  • 60noise — verbiage that is stupid, nonsensical, or just plain undesirable What s this noise from Pete saying he can t drive me to Tahoe? …

    Dictionary of american slang