phonograph - définition. Qu'est-ce que phonograph
Diclib.com
Dictionnaire ChatGPT
Entrez un mot ou une phrase dans n'importe quelle langue 👆
Langue:

Traduction et analyse de mots par intelligence artificielle ChatGPT

Sur cette page, vous pouvez obtenir une analyse détaillée d'un mot ou d'une phrase, réalisée à l'aide de la meilleure technologie d'intelligence artificielle à ce jour:

  • comment le mot est utilisé
  • fréquence d'utilisation
  • il est utilisé plus souvent dans le discours oral ou écrit
  • options de traduction de mots
  • exemples d'utilisation (plusieurs phrases avec traduction)
  • étymologie

Qu'est-ce (qui) est phonograph - définition


phonograph         
(phonographs)
A phonograph is a record player. (AM; also BRIT OLD-FASHIONED)
N-COUNT
phonograph         
¦ noun
1. Brit. an early form of gramophone able to record and reproduce sound.
2. N. Amer. a record player.
Derivatives
phonographic adjective
Phonograph         
·noun A character or symbol used to represent a sound, ·esp. one used in phonography.
II. Phonograph ·noun An instrument for the mechanical registration and reproduction of audible sounds, as articulate speech, ·etc. It consists of a rotating cylinder or disk covered with some material easily indented, as tinfoil, wax, paraffin, ·etc., above which is a thin plate carrying a stylus. As the plate vibrates under the influence of a sound, the stylus makes minute indentations or undulations in the soft material, and these, when the cylinder or disk is again turned, set the plate in vibration, and reproduce the sound.

Wikipédia

Phonograph
Exemples du corpus de texte pour phonograph
1. Edison famously recited Mary had a Little Lamb into his phonograph.
2. In 1'08, a Russian businessman began selling unlicensed music "out the backdoor" of his phonograph cylinder plant.
3. Once, sets of one–sided 78rpm phonograph discs were kept together in big books, like photographs in an album.
4. In 1'27, the Columbia Phonograph Broadcasting System (later CBS) made its on–air debut with a basic network of 16 radio stations.
5. The men in Esquire‘s 1'44 jazz book, though, were as near as the phonograph sitting in parlors in Iowa, in Colorado.