Euphonic in a sentence as an adjective

I think "eighteen six fifty" is more euphonic than "eighteen sixty five". A 2170 is 70mm long

> However there is a technical reason why these devices do sound different, and that is that they all impart euphonic distortion. Bass sounds "bigger."

However there is a technical reason why these devices do sound different, and that is that they all impart euphonic distortion. Bass sounds "bigger."

It's not "euphonic distortion", as the pseudo-scientists claim. Rather, it's that the warm amp is actually distorting less where it actually matters.

Ayler's great compositions are great in part because they're such simple, euphonic Circle-of-Fifths things, like folk music or gospel. To jazz nerds, Ayler is difficult.

Basically I wrote code to generate plausibly euphonic words and check to see if they are registered. One particular high scorer was already registered but unused so I tried to buy it.

Ponáhľaj sa pomaly" is perfectly euphonic to the Slovak ear, while "hurry slowly" seems clumsy somehow. We need to make it more sophisticated somehow, like "make slow haste", or "slow haste makes faster" or whatever.

Sanskrit has additional complication 'Sandhi' - euphonic combination [1]. There are many rules which are used to combine words depending on the ending sound of the first word and the beginning sound of the second.

Well, there's nothing wrong playing with tubes and seasoning your listening experience with various euphonic distortions. Ultimately, it's all about enjoying your sound!

I was about to lament that English lacks a short, euphonic, idiomatic word for "US-icans" / US citizens & residents / culturally US people / estadounidenses. But then I remembered we do have such a word.

Past that there are certain non-linear things that happen in analog that are particularly euphonic and hard to reproduce digitally. For example I've got pretty much every plugin compressor ever made, but nothing can take the place of my UA/RE175 compressor, because it's delightfully nonlinear and chaotic and valve-y.

Quote Examples using Euphonic

Also, novelty is almost always euphonic when it isn't overtly bad. This fact is often neglected. You hear something you didn't hear before and your brain immediately tells you that it sounds better, even if it doesn't actually represent higher fidelity. Actually making an objective judgement requires a careersworth of experience, or a test lab and the skills to use it. For example: you were listening to vinyl, which is covered in delicious noise and warm harmonic distortion, and is mastered differently. Highly euphonic, very novel if youve only ever heard the CD version before, but definitely not higher fidelity.

Anonymous

Euphonic definitions

adjective

of or relating to or characterized by euphony

See also: euphonical