voicing


Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
voice/vɔɪs/
noun
  • 1 the sound produced in a person's larynx and uttered through the mouth, as speech or song.

    ■ the ability to speak or sing.

    ■ vocal condition for singing or speaking: the soprano is in good voice.

  • 2 an opinion or attitude, or a means or agency by which it is expressed: a dissenting voice.
  • 3 Music the range of pitch or type of tone with which a person sings, such as soprano or tenor.

    ■ a vocal part in a composition.

    ■ a constituent part in a fugue.

    ■ each of the notes or sounds able to be produced simultaneously by a musical instrument, especially an electronic one.

  • 4 Phonetics sound uttered with resonance of the vocal cords (used in the pronunciation of vowels and certain consonants).
  • 5 Grammar a form or set of forms of a verb showing the relation of the subject to the action: the passive voice.
verb
  • 1 express in words.
  • 2 (usu. as adj. voiced) Phonetics utter (a speech sound) with resonance of the vocal cords.
  • 3 Music regulate the tone quality of (organ pipes).
– derivatives
-voiced adjective,
voiceful adjective (literary),
voicer noun.
– origin ME: from OFr. vois, from L. vox, voc-.
'voicing' also found in these Oxford entries:

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