voice | a means or agency by which something is expressed or communicated, the voice of the law, the Times is not the voice of New York, conservatism has many voices |
distribution channel channel | a way of selling a company's product either directly or via distributors, possible distribution channels are wholesalers or small retailers or retail chains or direct mailers or your own stores |
channel catfish channel cat Ictalurus punctatus | freshwater food fish common throughout central United States |
blue catfish blue cat blue channel catfish blue channel cat | a large catfish of the Mississippi valley |
red drum channel bass redfish Sciaenops ocellatus | large edible fish found off coast of United States from Massachusetts to Mexico |
channel | a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through, the fields were crossed with irrigation channels, gutters carried off the rainwater into a series of channels under the street |
channel television channel TV channel | a television station and its programs, a satellite TV channel, surfing through the channels, they offer more than one hundred channels |
chunnel Channel Tunnel | the railroad tunnel between France and England under the English Channel |
voice | the distinctive quality or pitch or condition of a person's speech, A shrill voice sounded behind us |
head register head voice head tone | the higher ranges of the voice in speaking or singing, the vibrations of sung notes are felt in the head |
chest register chest voice chest tone | the lower ranges of the voice in speaking or singing |
voice | the ability to speak, he lost his voice |
duct epithelial duct canal channel | a bodily passage or tube lined with epithelial cells and conveying a secretion or other substance, the tear duct was obstructed, the alimentary canal, poison is released through a channel in the snake's fangs |
larynx voice box | a cartilaginous structure at the top of the trachea, contains elastic vocal cords that are the source of the vocal tone in speech |
channel transmission channel | a path over which electrical signals can pass, a channel is typically what you rent from a telephone company |
channel communication channel line | (often plural) a means of communication or access, it must go through official channels, lines of communication were set up between the two firms |
back channel | an alternative to the regular channels of communication that is used when agreements must be made secretly (especially in diplomacy or government), they negotiated via a back channel |
channels | official routes of communication, you have to go through channels |
voice mail voicemail | a computerized system for answering and routing telephone calls, telephone messages can be recorded and stored and relayed |
singing voice | the musical quality of the voice while singing |
bass bass voice basso | the lowest adult male singing voice |
baritone baritone voice | the second lowest adult male singing voice |
tenor tenor voice | the adult male singing voice above baritone |
part voice | the melody carried by a particular voice or instrument in polyphonic music, he tried to sing the tenor part |
voice part | a part written for a singer |
articulation voice | expressing in coherent verbal form, the articulation of my feelings, I gave voice to my feelings |
tone tone of voice | the quality of a person's voice, he began in a conversational tone, he spoke in a nervous tone of voice |
speech speech communication spoken communication spoken language language voice communication oral communication | (language) communication by word of mouth, his speech was garbled, he uttered harsh language, he recorded the spoken language of the streets |
voice vocalization vocalisation vocalism phonation vox | the sound made by the vibration of vocal folds modified by the resonance of the vocal tract, a singer takes good care of his voice, the giraffe cannot make any vocalizations |
voice | something suggestive of speech in being a medium of expression, the wee small voice of conscience, the voice of experience, he said his voices told him to do it |
voice over | the voice on an unseen commentator in a film of television program |
voice | a sound suggestive of a vocal utterance, the noisy voice of the waterfall, the incessant voices of the artillery |
Channel Islands National Park | a national park in California featuring sea birds and marine life |
Channel Island | any of a group of British islands in the English Channel off the northern coast of France |
wee small voice small voice voice of conscience | an inner voice that judges your behavior |
Bristol Channel | an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean between southern Wales and southwestern England |
channel | a deep and relatively narrow body of water (as in a river or a harbor or a strait linking two larger bodies) that allows the best passage for vessels, the ship went aground in the channel |
English Channel | an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that forms a channel between France and Britain |
Mozambique Channel | an arm of the Indian Ocean between Madagascar and southeastern Africa |
North Channel | a strait between Northern Ireland and Scotland that connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Irish Sea |
spokesperson interpreter representative voice | an advocate who represents someone else's policy or purpose, the meeting was attended by spokespersons for all the major organs of government |
voice | (metonymy) a singer, he wanted to hear trained voices sing it |
voice | (linguistics) the grammatical relation (active or passive) of the grammatical subject of a verb to the action that the verb denotes |
active voice active | the voice used to indicate that the grammatical subject of the verb is performing the action or causing the happening denoted by the verb, `The boy threw the ball' uses the active voice |
passive voice passive | the voice used to indicate that the grammatical subject of the verb is the recipient (not the source) of the action denoted by the verb, `The ball was thrown by the boy' uses the passive voice, `The ball was thrown' is an abbreviated passive |
groove channel | a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e.g. a groove in a phonograph record) |
channel capacity | the maximum data rate that can be attained over a given channel |
surf channel-surf | switch channels, on television |
voice | give voice to, He voiced his concern |
voice sound vocalize vocalise | utter with vibrating vocal chords |