Too many poets, reading aloud, ignore their own linebreaks or chew consonants like gristle or drop into inaudibility at the ends of lines. |
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If you were warned for inaudibility on Wednesday and still couldn't be heard on Thursday, you'd be sacked on Friday. |
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One of the few things that has slipped, however, is the diction, with too many words now vanishing into inaudibility. |
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The Release parameter specifies how long it should take for the sounds to drop from the sustain level to inaudibility. |
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There is the inaudible sound as OM, from inaudibility to audibility, from the voice of silence to the voice of speech. |
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Down, down, first to a mumble, then to a whisper, then to complete inaudibility. |
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The volume of sound ranges from near inaudibility in dulcianas, to medium intensity in salicionals, to unbelievably loud in theater organ solo strings. |
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The sound didn't fade into inaudibility as it had done the first time. |
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We marked this location and measured the distance from the point of inaudibility to the observer which provided the DTDs for each stand type. |
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As the movement progresses, the music rises in register, building to its striking apex, then fades to inaudibility. |
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A POINT of order was called by Labour over the inaudibility of fast-talking Liberal Democrat councillor Greg Stone at Newcastle City Council. |
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We can listen to the inaudibility of dreams, musings, silenced and held-back words, reflections furnishing secret gardens and un-confessed thoughts. |
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Some individuals have overlooked the fact that at such low pitch their voices fade to inaudibility at the ends of sentences, or scrape down to vocal fry. |
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Amid the silence, the dead calm of the noble breast, Tennyson's pensive imagination felt Hallam's absence most painfully in the inaudibility of his voice. |
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The revision of essays showed boys were subject to inaudibility more than girls, even when the error extent came least, there was significant difference. |
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