What
it is to Listen or
what listening
means? Is it
Lending
In Sincerely and Totally
one’s Ears Nicely or Letting In Sounds
To Enter the ears as any Noise
or Lively,
Intensely, Soulfully Thoughtfully Entertain only Nice things or Lovingly Internalizing Savouring Thoroughly and
Engulfing Nice thoughts or Leaving
Inner self to Sail beyond Thoughts Emotions and the Nexus of
any senses or Lingering In Silent
Trance and be Engulfed in Neutral
state or Learning the Importance of Silence Through Enlightened Nonplussed state of being or Letting
the Intellect to Sieve Through Enormous sounds
and select Nice ones.
I have found that the
word Listen like the word Love has acquired a huge carapace of connotations
according to different contexts and has graduated from Lucid Initial auditory
or Sound Tracing Ears followed by
Nutation [ nodding the head] it has Lend Itself Seemlessly into Thought
provoking Enquiries into Noumenon [object
or event that is known (if at all) without the use of the senses]
So,
naturally I was thrilled and tempted to Learn
more, Inquire further, Search in detail, Track its connotations, Enlist
its metamorphosis and Net in its
many manifestations. In short I meandered through the many paths of the
connotations of the word Listen like a river.
Let me take you all into that wonderful journey.
When I read and
researched through a vast literature available on the subject I was
consternated to find a wide range of meanings to the word to listen or
listening, both denotations and connotations starting from passive hearing to
probing auscultation to plain lending of ears to intentional attention to
active process of learning to aesthetically appreciating silence in solitude [
it may sound ironical] to making enlightened observation, it referred to many
more unexpected and unthinkable things covering an entire spectrum starting
from puerile and passive hearing to profoundest philosophical truths. So it
does include all the things that I have tried to describe in the first
paragraph as acronym of the word listen so that the multiple
connotations that this word ‘Listen’ has acquired
remain etched in memory which can be used as smart and swift reference tool to
define it as per the context in which it is used.
Probably
my observations or research like many other researches may not be in reality
anything new but then the fact is as Andre Gide says, “Everything has been said before, but since nobody listens
we have to keep going back and beginning all over again.”
The Great Tamil saint Tiruvalluvar has
devoted one whole chapter consisting of 10 couplets on the
IMPORTANCE OF LISTENING. Wherein
he indicates that listening is the
greatest wealth.
Parker
J. Palmer says, “Before I can tell my life what I want to do with it, I must listen to my life telling me who I am”.
Before
moving further I take Rachel Louise Carson’s advice , “The discipline of the
writer is to learn to be still and listen to what his
subject has to tell him”.
So inevitably I will be
filling up this write up with many quotes from many great souls which explain
better the multiple meanings of the word
Listen through
the prism of their writings and talks.
As Montaigne says, “ I
quote others only the better to express myself”.
Incidentally
the words “listen” and “silent” are anagrams i.e. spelled
with the same letters. Listening to silence
amid sounds, hidden meaning amidst words, calmness amid turbulent emotions,
bringing in quietness to the constantly chattering mind is the hallmark of
intense concentration, keen observation, greater understanding and better
meditation. This is perhaps what Charles C.Finn means when he says,
“I
tell you everything that is really nothing, and nothing of what is everything,
do not be fooled by what I am saying. Please listen
carefully and try to hear what I am not saying”. Dennie Ford too says, “Remember all
the answers you need are inside of you. You only have to become
quiet enough to hear them”.
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat hits the bull’s eye when he
writes, “We begin our lives listening to the many
sounds surrounding us in the womb. When we are dying, the last faculty to
shut down is usually hearing. In between, there is so much to see that we
seldom take the time to cultivate the art of listening.
Listening uses other practices:
attention, being present, openness. It is holy work, involving in the
inventive phrase of W.A. Mathieu, a Sufi musician, "making an altar out of
our ears."
Neale Donald Walsch too says, “Listen to
your feelings. Listen to your Highest Thoughts. Listen to your experience. Whenever any one of these differ
from what you’ve been told by your teachers, or read in your books, forget the
words. Words are the least reliable purveyor of Truth”.
This
is not only useful in understanding the esoteric and conceptual meanings of
many ancient scriptures and highly enlightened philosophies but also very
useful our interactions in day to life with increasing instances of
communications happening with hidden agenda, ulterior motives, lurking
suspicions, diplomatic twiddling etc
Nancy Kerrigan writes, “Doubt yourself and you doubt
everything you see. Judge yourself and you see judges everywhere. But if you listen to the sound of your own voice, you can rise above
doubt and judgment. And you can see forever.”
Listening is not a passive skill but rather a method of deeply
witnessing each other and ourselves with total conscious awareness. That’s why Leo
Buscaglia includes it in the
following list “Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a
kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or
the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life
around.”
Katherine Hannigan says very succinctly “There's more than one way to tell each other
things, and there's more than one way to listen, too.”
Alice Duer Miller observes, “People love to talk but hate to listen. Listening is not
merely not talking, though even that is beyond most of our powers; it means
taking a vigorous, human interest in what is being told us. You can listen like a blank wall or like a splendid auditorium where
every sound comes back fuller and richer.”
Bryant McGill says, “One of the most sincere forms of respect is actually listening to what another has to say.”
Paulo Coelho writes, “Listen
to your heart. It knows all things, because it came from the Soul of the World,
and it will one day return there”.
David Steindl-Rast in his work ‘A Listening Heart’
writes "Eyes see only light, ears hear only sound, but a listening heart perceives meaning."
We are created with one mouth and two ears so the intention
of creation has been very clear that we must listen
more and talk less.
Yet if we pay attention to civil discourse these days, we
find that people are so busy shouting at one another it is hard to figure out
what anyone is saying. There are many zealots among us and although we can
respect the passions and enthusiasms, we are saddened by the inability to listen to others. From talk shows to television news there is
a surfeit of chatter along with a rampant fear of silence.
Complete listening is not
lending your ears yet simultaneously letting your mind form opinions,
judgements, images and comparisons.
Evette Carter writes, “I said what I wanted to say. You heard what
you wanted to hear.”
That’s why Margie Warrell
advises, “Communication is defined not by what is being said but by what
is being heard. For this reason, it is vital that you gain a good appreciation
of how other people will listen—interpret,
process, and assign meaning— to what you have to say before you can influence
them effectively.”
The very
act of listening starts with some intention or
motivation based on our own prejudices and preferences. As Criss Jami puts it
differently as, “It's not
at all hard to understand a person; it's only hard to listen without bias.”
It is
because we always feel or at least our ego prefers to follow this instruction ‘Give, but don't allow yourself to be used. Love, but don't allow your heart to
be abused. Trust, but don't be naive. Listen to others, but
don't lose your own voice.’
Dominick A. Barbara, writes in The Art Of Listening, “Because of their inner rigidities, fears and anxieties, these listeners dread the mutual exchange of ideas and beliefs. They listen only to what they feel they should be attentive to, blotting out larger areas of wariness and thus avoiding the basic truth involved in issues an situations. They are constantly suspicious and cautious about other people’s reactions and set up emotional filters which disturb effective listening. Because of their hypersensitivity to criticism and rebuff, they are constantly on their guard and on the defensive. They listen with prejudiced opinions, preconceived notions, condemnations and cynical attitudes. They fear facing or listening to the truth about themselves and as a result their hearing becomes colored with absolute judgments, "black and white" evaluations and distorted emotional reactions”.
J.Krishnamurthy says, “If we try to
listen we find
it extraordinarily difficult, because we are always projecting our opinions and
ideas, our prejudices, our background, our inclinations, our impulses; when
they dominate, we hardly listen
at all to what is being said.... One listens and therefore learns, only in a state
of silence, in which this whole background is in abeyance, is quite; then, it
seems to me, it is possible to communicate”. Here
it is most appropriate to read what J.Krishnamurthy says about The Art of Listening http://www.buddhasangha.com/krishnamurti/jiddu_krishnamurti_listening.htm
But it would be ideal if it were like what M. Scott Peck
mentions, “An essential part of true listening is the
discipline of bracketing, the temporary giving up or setting aside of one's own
prejudices, frames of reference and desires so as to experience as far as
possible the speaker's world from the inside, step in inside his or her shoes.
This unification of speaker and listener is actually an extension and
enlargement of ourselves, and new knowledge is always gained from this.
Moreover, since true listening involves
bracketing, a setting aside of the self, it also temporarily involves a total
acceptance of the other. Sensing this acceptance, the speaker will feel less
and less vulnerable and more and more inclined to open up the inner recesses of
his or her mind to the listener. As this happens, speaker and listener begin to
appreciate each other more and more, and the duet dance of love is begun again”.
Sue
Patton Thoele says, “Deep
listening is miraculous for both listener and
speaker. When someone receives us with open-hearted, non-judging, intensely
interested listening, our spirits expand.”
Many times, what people need is not a
brilliant mind that speaks but a special heart that listens.
We must learn to Speak in such a way that others love to listen to us. Listen in such a way that others love to speak to us.
All relationships get
better when we practice the art of proper listening
along with proper communication. Of these two while all of know the importance
of proper communication we rarely realize the importance of listening. Listening plays a
very vital role in all relationship is established through the following
writings
Carl Rogers, psychologist observes, "Man’s
inability to communicate is a result of his failure to listen
effectively, skilfully, and with understanding to another person."
J. Isham says,“Listening is an
attitude of the heart, a genuine desire to be with another which both attracts
and heals”.
Dale
Carnegie too, writes in ‘How to Win Friends
and Influence People’
“The
chronic kicker, even the most violent critic, will frequently soften and be
subdued in the presence of a patient, sympathetic listener—
a listener who will be silent while the irate
fault-finder dilates like a king cobra and spews the poison out of his system.”
Emma Thompson writes, “Indeed -- judicious, consistent parenting is a dream
of mine. No judgments, learning space and listening carefully are my goals”.
Ralph Nichols says, “The most basic of all human needs is the need to understand and be understood. The best way to understand people is to listen to them.”
Elizabeth Debold writes, “Listening means awareness, openness to learning something
new about another person. Interrupting, even for clarification, can seem to be
rude, but listening with the intent to learn is an approach to a different type
of conversation”.
Paul Tillich goes a step further than the rest and says, “The
first duty of love is to listen.” If it were so, then what
happens to all the romantic poems and novels? Love is both a creative silence
and /or a creative outpouring.
It
is this type of listening
that Jiddu Krishnamurti mentions
, “So when you are listening to
somebody, completely, attentively, then you are listening
not only to the words, but also to the feeling of what is being conveyed, to
the whole of it, not part of it.”
Paul Tillich says, “All things and all people, so to speak, call on us
with small or loud voices. They want us to listen.
They want us to understand their intrinsic claims, their justice of
being. But we can give it to them only through the love that listens”.
|
Shel Silverstein says,
“Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a
creative force. The friends who listen to us are the
ones we move toward. When we are listened to, it creates us, makes us unfold
and expand.”
Vonicle
Smith, in A Handbook Of Communication
Skills, edited By Owen Hargie writes,
“Receptiveness
is a deliberate action, consciously performed with the intention of relating in
some way to the other.”
Avieh
Concepcion writes, “To love me, is to know me. To know me, is to learn me. To learn me,
is to listen to me. To listen
to me, is to care for me. To care for me, says it all”.
Brian Muldoon while writing about The power of listening says, "Of all the tools available
to us in dealing with conflict, none is more important than attentive,
intentional listening. Listening
helps reduce resistance and opens our thinking to creative solutions. Listening not only clarifies the message but changes both
the messenger and the listener. Listening makes it possible
for both sides to have a change of heart."
Catherine de Hueck Doherty writes, “With the gift of listening
comes the gift of healing”.
Ceanne Derohan mentions, “When you
really listen to yourself, you can heal yourself.”
Shakti Gawain writes, “Our bodies
communicate to us clearly and specifically, if we are willing to listen to them”.
Brenda Ueland writes, “Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a creative
force...When we are listened to, it creates us, makes us unfold and expand.
Ideas actually begin to grow within us and come to life...When we listen to people there is an alternating current, and this
recharges us so that we never get tired of each other...and it is this little
creative fountain inside us that begins to spring and cast up new thoughts and
unexpected laughter and wisdom. ...Well, it is when people really listen to us,
with quiet fascinated attention, that the little fountain begins to work again,
to accelerate in the most surprising way..”
David Bohm says, “When you listen
to somebody else, whether you like it or not, what they say becomes part of
you.”
Oriah Mountain Dreamer writes, “I want to remind us all that the world is listening, all the time. How we are ripples out from us into the world and affect others. We have a responsibility – an ability to respond – to the world. Finding our particular way of living this responsibility, of offering who we are to the world, is why we are here. We are called because the world needs us to embody the meaning in our lives. God needs us awake. The world we live in is a co-creation, a manifestation of individual consciousness woven into a collective dream. How we are with each other as individuals, as groups, as nations and as tribes, is what shapes that dream”.
Jared Sparks observes,
“When you talk, you repeat what you already know; when you listen, you often learn something.”
Ernest Hemingway’s famous lines, “I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen”.
Wilson Mizner rightly remarks, “A good listener is not only popular everywhere, but after a while
he knows something”.
Among the most influential operating factors during communication are the filtering agents of senders and receivers. Similar to filters used with a camera lens, filtering agents allows the passage or blockage or coloring of other elements. Consider how professional photographers use filters designed to let in some rays of light while screening out other rays that may ruin or distort a picture. While a filter is in use, it becomes a part of the camera and affects the final outcomes of the picture. Camera filters are changed to get desired results. Similar to a camera lens, filter agents communication with others. Filtering agents such as past work experiences, educational training, opinions, emotions, attitudes, feelings, and language abilities influences how you send and receive messages. Understanding your personal filtering agents puts you in a position to maximize your communication and listening success.
Effective listeners remember that "words have no meaning - people have meaning." The assignment of meaning to a term is an internal process; meaning comes from inside us. And although our experiences, knowledge and attitudes differ, we often misinterpret each other’s messages while under the illusion that a common understanding has been achieved.”
While talking about Meditation Osho says “The art
of meditation Is the art of listening With
your total being” and "If one can learn how to listen rightly, one has learned the deepest secret of
meditation."
Osho also says,"And listening to sounds will be very helpful. Not to any sound
in particular, because that becomes a concentration. Mm? this noise of the
train... the traffic, some dog starts barking... an airplane passes by; all
have to be accepted. Not that you have to concentrate on any sound – listen to all sounds from everywhere. You have just to be
alert, listening, with no choice. That will help you immensely and that will
become your meditation."
Something more or less similar was
involved in the creation of Musique Concrète where in all sorts of sounds were
recorded and music created out of it and
the structure of the compositions
was not restricted to the normal musical rules of melody, harmony, rhythm, metre and so on.
In 1942 the French composer and theoretician Pierre Schaeffer, began his
exploration of radiophony when he joined Jacques Copeau and his pupils in the
foundation of the Studio d'Essai de
la Radiodiffusion
Nationale.
Reading through Osho’s Don't Bite My Finger, Look Where I'm
Pointing, you come across again, "Start listening
to sounds, let music be your meditation. Listen to the sounds,
all kinds of sounds. They are all divine – even the market noise, even the
sounds that are created in the traffic. This airplane, that train, all sounds
have to be listened to so attentively and silently and lovingly... as if you are
listening to music. And you will be surprised:
you can transform all sounds into music; they are music. All that is needed is
our attitude: if we are resistant, the sound becomes noise; if we are
receptive, loving, the sound becomes music. The same thing can be noise to
somebody and to somebody else, music. If you have not heard Indian classical
music it will be just noise. If you love it and you have sympathy for it, it is
just out of this world, it is of the beyond. People in the East who are not acquainted
with the Western music think this is just crazy noise. Whenever you don't fall
in tune with something it becomes noise; when you fall in tune with it, when
you start vibrating with it, when there is a harmony between you and it, it
becomes music. And great is the joy when you can convert all sounds into music.
Then your whole life starts becoming a rhythm."
While
lawyers suffer from verbal diarrhoea all judges know the greater importance of
listening so it is no wonder Chief Justice John Marshall
said, “To listen well is as
powerful a means of communication and influence as to talk well”.
Art gets enhanced
through listening and learning as Madeleine L’Engle
says “When the work takes over, then the artist is
enabled to get out of the way, not to interfere. When the work takes over, then
the artist listens.”
Listening looks easy, but it's
not simple. Every head is a world. — Cuban Proverb
If
speaking is silver, then listening is gold. —
Turkish Proverb
To
listen well, is as powerful a means of
influence as to talk well, and is as essential to all true conversation. -
Chinese Proverb
Who
speaks, sows; Who listens, reaps. —
Argentine Proverb
The spoken word belongs half to him who speaks, and
half to him who listens.
- French Proverb
- French Proverb
Glen
Rifkin - New York Times reports, "June Rokoff, Senior VP for Software
Development at Lotus credits her success in turning around the company's
position in the software industry to building a team that listens:
she made listening the culture of her team."
Larry King on
listening, "I remind myself every morning: Nothing I say this day
will teach me anything. So if I'm going to learn, I must do it by listening."
Allison Para Bastien
writes, “Listening is noting what, when and how
something is being said. Listening is
distinguishing what is not being said from what is silence. Listening is not acting like you’re in a hurry, even if you
are. Listening is eye contact, a hand placed gently
upon an arm. Sometimes, listening is taking
careful notes in the person’s own words. Listening involves
suspension of judgment. It is neither analyzing nor racking your brain for
labels, diagnoses, or remedies before the person is done relating her symptoms.
Listening, like labor assisting, creates a
safe space where whatever needs to happen or be said can come.”
To sum up Oliver Wendell Holmes express it squarly, “It is
the province of knowledge to speak And it is the privilege of wisdom to listen.”
So do D.J. Kaufman, “Wisdom is the reward for a lifetime of listening ... when you'd have preferred to talk.”
Robert Louis Stevenson says,
“All speech, written or spoken, is a dead language, until it finds a willing
and prepared listener”.
M. Bradley defines, “An intelligent person is someone who listens with understanding”.
M. Bradley defines, “An intelligent person is someone who listens with understanding”.
Wilferd A.
Peterson while writing on Creative Listening writes,
"One
of the most important habits of a creative thinker is to be a good listener. Stand guard at the ear-gateway to your mind,
heart, and spirit.
Listen to the good. Tune your ears to love, hope, and courage. Tune out gossip and resentment.
Listen to the beautiful. Listen to the music of the masters. Listen to the symphony of nature--the hum of the wind in the treetops, bird songs, thundering surf. . .
Listen critically. Mentally challenge assertions, ideas, and philosophies. Seek the truth with an open mind.
Listen with patience. Do not hurry the other person. Show them the courtesy of listening to what they have to say, no matter how much you may disagree. You may learn something.
Listen with your heart. Practice empathy when you listen. Put yourself in the other person's shoes.
Listen for growth. Be an inquisitive listener. Ask questions. Everyone has something to say which will help you to grow.
Listen creatively. Listen for ideas or the germs of ideas. Listen for hints or clues that may spark creative projects.
Listen to yourself. Listen to your deepest yearnings, your highest aspirations, and your noblest impulses. Listen to the better person within you.
Listen with depth. Be still and listen. Listen with the ear of intuition to the inspiration of the Infinite."
Listen to the good. Tune your ears to love, hope, and courage. Tune out gossip and resentment.
Listen to the beautiful. Listen to the music of the masters. Listen to the symphony of nature--the hum of the wind in the treetops, bird songs, thundering surf. . .
Listen critically. Mentally challenge assertions, ideas, and philosophies. Seek the truth with an open mind.
Listen with patience. Do not hurry the other person. Show them the courtesy of listening to what they have to say, no matter how much you may disagree. You may learn something.
Listen with your heart. Practice empathy when you listen. Put yourself in the other person's shoes.
Listen for growth. Be an inquisitive listener. Ask questions. Everyone has something to say which will help you to grow.
Listen creatively. Listen for ideas or the germs of ideas. Listen for hints or clues that may spark creative projects.
Listen to yourself. Listen to your deepest yearnings, your highest aspirations, and your noblest impulses. Listen to the better person within you.
Listen with depth. Be still and listen. Listen with the ear of intuition to the inspiration of the Infinite."
Read
to know more about real listening
and
listen to these talks to know more about real listening
No
wonder that Ambrose Bierce defines Heaven in his Devil’s Dictionary as “a place where the wicked cease from troubling
you with talk of their personal affairs, and the good listen
with attention while you expound your own.”
Those who are
interested in knowing in depth the entire gamut of evolutionary biology of the sense of hearing the hidden melodies in the universe may
refer to this link in my blog where I have copied the two chapters from the
excellent book THE SEVEN MYSTERIES OF LIFE
by the great author GUY MURCHIE http://contentwriteups.blogspot.in/2013/01/hearing-and-melodies-from-excellent.html
Linguistically however
the word listen denotes mostly to the
hearing sense or sensation produced by
the auditory nerves. Even here there are
many words to describe listening very specific contexts or ways or intentions or methods of
listening. Besides since it involves perceiving a wide range of different sound
waves there are many words to describe different sounds, noises, voices etc in
all spheres from those produced by things, to animals to human beings. So
listening and its connected areas throw up a large number of vocabulary
especially different types of sounds, noises, voices etc that we listen to.
Let us glean through
some of them
1] listen secretly to a
conversation between others without their knowledge is TO EAVESDROP
2] listen closely is TO
HEARKEN
3] listening through
a stethoscope is To AUSCULTATE
4] merely allowing and
registering all sounds without any
intentional listening is TO HEAR
5] to hear with
intention and attention is TO LISTEN
6] pleasant sound to
listen to is EUPHONY
7] sound across a wide
range of frequencies, capable of blocking out other noises is WHITE NOISE
8] sound quality
produced by over tones rather than volume and pitch is TIMBRE
9]sound regulating
device in a microphone or loud speaker is BAFFLE
10] sound system of a
particular language i s PHONOLOGY
11] sound that is ugly
and jarring is CACOPHONY,DISSONANCE etc
12] sound that is harsh
or hoarse is RAUCOUS
13] sounding of the
final consonant which normally silent
but when the next word begins with a vowel especially in French language
is called LIAISON
14] sound reproduction
effect as it coming from all sides is known as SURROUND SOUND
15] sounding or
pronouncing of the letter ‘R’ after vowels as in CARD as per spelling as done
in Irish style is called as RHOTACISM
16] sounding pleasant
and melodious is DULCET
17] sound that is rich
or impressively loud is SONOROUS or RESONANT
18] sounds of prolonged
vibration is REVERBERATIONS
19] alteration or
insertion of soundtrack of a film is to DUB
20] sound change in
pitch as the source of the sound approaches or moves away from the listener is
known as DOPPLER EFFECT
21] change in the sound of a consonant because of the influence of another
consonant is ASSIMILATION
22] change in the vowel
sound of a verb as in sing, sang and sung is known as ABLAUT , GRADATION
23] change in the vowel
sound of a verb due to the influence of nearby vowel is UMLAUT, MUTATION
24] dampen or deaden a
sound is to MUFFLE or MUTE
25] distinct sound as
in sharply played musical notes STACCATO
26] fall in sound level
at the end of a sentence is CADENCE
27] harmonious burst
of musical sound DIAPASON
28] gradual decrease in
volume of sound in music is DIMINUENDO OR DECRESCENDO
29] gradual increase in
volume is CRESCENDO
31]insertion of an
extra sound into a word to make its pronunciation easier is EPENTHESIS
32]letter or symbol
that can represent more than one sound is POLYPHONE
33]cutting off of the
sound at the beginning of a word as with
squire from esquire is APHAERESIS OR APHESIS
34] cutting off of the
sound at the end of a word is APOCOPE
35] cutting off of the
sound at the middle of a word is SYNCOPE OR SYNCOPATION
36] cutting off of the
sound of whole syllable at the middle of a word as in deteriate instead of deteriorate is HAPLOLOGY
37] pronunciation of
‘r’ sound as ‘l’ as the Chinese do is
LALLATION
38] adjective for sound
or hearing , something relating to sound or hearing is ACOUSTIC
39] adjective for
speech sound is PHONETICS
40] relating to speed
of sound is SONIC
41] repeated occurrence
of the sound or letter at the start of
words is writing or speech is
ALLITERATION
42]sensation of colour
evoked by sound is SYNAESTHESIA
43] speech sound
identified as significant in a given language serving to distinguish one word
from another is PHONEME
44] sound which is
highly breath as sound of letter ‘h’ in English- ASPIRATE
46] Speech sound
produced in the throat GUTTURAL
47] Speech sound as the
‘i’ sound in ‘side’ in which vowel changes in quality during syllable is
DIPHTHONG
48] Speech sound as
‘ch’ ‘j’ etc produced by a sudden release of breath is to AFFRICATE
49] Speech sound as ‘d’
‘t’ produced with tip of the tongue behind upper teeth is ALVEOLAR
50] Speech sound as ‘F’
‘Z’ formed by partially blocking the
flow of breath is FRICATIVE or SPIRANT
51] Speech sound as ‘K’
formed with back of the tongue near soft palate is VELAR
52] Speech sound as ‘m’
‘p’ involving use of lips is LABIAL
53] study of speech
sounds or pronunciation is PHONETICS OR
PHONOLOGY
54] unintended
switching of sounds of two or more words is SPOONERISM
55] apparatus to detect
sound waves under water is ASDIC, ECHO SOUNDER
or SONAR
56] unit for measuring
loudness of sound is DECIBEL
57] words in which
sound echos meaning as in ‘kaka’ is ONOMATOPOEIA
58] sound of boiling
water is to POPPLE
59]series of sounds or
babble of voices is CLAMOUR or HUBBUB
61] wheezing sound made
by congested breathing is STRIDOR,RHONCHUS
62] light tinkling
sounds as of key sor small bells JANGLE,TINTINNABULATION
63] loud ,repated
clanging noise CLANGOUR
64] loud echoing noise REVERBERATION
65] murmuring noise as
of light wind through trees SUSURRATION
66] murmuring noise of
rippling water PURL
67] rustling noise of
silk FROU –FROU
68] shrill or clear
noise clarion
69] shrill chirping
noise of crickets STRIDULATION
70] slapping noise SKELP
71] wailing or
lamenting noise KEENING, ULULATION
72] blarring sound-
JARRING, RAUCOUS
73] noisy insistent and
protesting sound BLUSTERING
74] noisy and lively in
an excited or unruly way RUMBUSTIOUS, BOISTEROUS
76] noisy disturbace or
uproar- RUCKUS,RUMPUS
77] noisy merry making
or celebration ROISTERING , REVELRY
78] noisy mock serenade
to a newly-wed couple CHARIVARI
79] noisy or showy
display meant to impress RAZZLE –DAZZLE, RAZZMATAZZ
80] noisy place or
scene of uproar or disorder is BEDLAM OR BABEL
81]loud or noisy voice
STENTORIAN
82] place of noisy confusion and utter chaos
PANDEMONIUM,MAYHEM
83] screech noisily
especially in an argument CATERWAUL
84] voice production
giving the impression that the sounds originates elsewhere-VENTRILOQUISM
85] voice training
through singing doh-re-mi SOLFEGGIO,SOLMISATION
86] adjust pitch or tone of one’s voice is to MODULATE, INFLECT
87] deep or full
throated loud voice BOOMING,OROTUND,RESONANT
88] high pitched and
shrill voice REEDY
89] hoarse , deep and
emotional voice –HUSKY
91] unpleasantly loud
voice-STRIDENT,STENTORIAN
92] smooth, soft and
sweet voice-MELLIFLUOUS
93] voice that has a
rhythmical and springy flow – LILTING
94] very loud sound
–EAR SPLITTING
95] giving out a sound- SONOROUS
96] succession of light
tapping sounds- PATTERING
97] prolonged and
mournful cry of dogs-HOWLING
98] additional sound at
end of word=PARAGOGY
99] producing loud
sound- PLANGENT
100] high-pitched and
piercing sound- SHRILL
101] ringing sound-
TINNIENT
102] sharp and grating
sound – CREAKY
103] sharp,shrill
sound- SQUEAKY
104] producing
shrill,grating sound- STRIDULATORY
106] unpleasantly
discordant sound- SQUAWKY
107] whispering sound-
SUSURROUS
108] sound low and
hoarse- CROAKY
109] hissing sound as
frying/burning- SIZZLING
110] sound of hissing
esp when passing fast through air- WHIZZING
111] sound produced
from percussion instrument- MEMBRANOPHONIC
112] sound of rapid
succession of light beats/taps as of rain/footsteps etc= PITTER-PATTERY
113] sound that is
trilled as 'r'- HIRRIENT
114] uteering of some
sound in pain/grief- GROANING
115] addition of a sound/syllable at the beginning of a word-
PROTHETIC
116] rapid succession
of sharp sounds- RATTLING
117] noise produced
while frying- FRIZZLING
118] noisy- VOCIFEROUS,
STREPITOUS, BOISTEROUS
119] noisy and
disorderly condition- LARRIKIN
121] wild noisy rites-
CORYBANTIC
122] reveling noisily-
ROISTEROUS
123] artificial high
pitched male voice- FALSETTO
124] loud and clear
voice- LAMPROPHONIC
125] voice producing
two sounds of different pitch simultaneously= DIPLOPHONIC
126] nasal voice-
TWANGY
127] voice that is
soft- MALACOPHONOUS
All the above referred
words you can find in my reverse dictionary of adjectives at
For a list of sounds
made by different animals you get the list here
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