twang - significado y definición. Qué es twang
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Qué (quién) es twang - definición

SINGING TECHNIQUE
Twangy

twang         
Twangy
n.
1) a nasal twang
2) (misc.) to speak with a twang
twang         
Twangy
1) A very disturbing cowboy genre item.
That guy is so grossly twang.
2) Someone who is really high strung.
Matt, quit being a twang. The vase just fell over.
twang         
Twangy
(twangs, twanging, twanged)
1.
If you twang something such as a tight string or elastic band, or if it twangs, it makes a fairly loud, ringing sound because it has been pulled and then released.
...people who sat at the back of class and twanged an elastic band...
The song is a fiery mix of twanging guitar with relentless drumming...
The fiddle began to twang.
VERB: V n, V-ing, V
Twang is also a noun.
Something gave a loud discordant twang...
N-COUNT; SOUND
2.
A twang is a quality in someone's way of speaking in which sound seems to be coming through the nose.
...her broad Australian twang.
N-COUNT: usu sing

Wikipedia

Twang

Twang is an onomatopoeia originally used to describe the sound of a vibrating bow string after the arrow is released. By extension it applies to the similar vibration produced when the string of a musical instrument is plucked, and similar sounds. The term came to be applied to a nasal vocal resonation, and was historically used to describe "a disagreeable resonance". Later, however, the term came to be more broadly associated with regional dialects, to the extent that in some locations, "a twang is a desirable commodity".

Specific uses of the term include:

  • A particular sharp vibrating sound characteristic of some electric guitars.
  • A high frequency singing sound especially affected by country singers. It allows for a higher vocal reach than would be possible using the standard guttural technique and can be used as an alternative to falsetto singing. Willie Nelson almost always sings with a twang voice.
Ejemplos de uso de twang
1. Elisabeth and James speak with a mid–Atlantic twang.
2. Despite a strong south–east London twang, she had a very Yorkshire way with words.
3. "I‘m Liz, and I‘m from the United States," she said, with a Southern twang.
4. Is it a country album trying to be reggae, or reggae with a country twang?
5. From the tables outside a cafe comes the unmistakeable, nasal twang of estuary English.