What's the difference between reverb and reverberation?

Reverb


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To echo.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) An assumption has been made that the major effect of trifluoperazine and haloperidol consists in an increase in the reverberative activity of the brain.
  • (2) The interaction of several membrane oscillators without the participation of the pacemaker autogenerator may lead to the authorhythmic reverberative (extracellular) activity.
  • (3) A jangly, reverb-laden old piano and Peter Buck's 12-string guitar made this music sound ancient, somehow; Mike Mills' sad, descending bassline in the chorus only deepened its melancholy.
  • (4) Several experimental studies were done to explain the reverbating echoes.
  • (5) I put the recorder inside and hit it: a kind of springy reverb sound.
  • (6) Costanzo watches once to rehearse, positions his two microphones to approximate the distance and reverb needed, and then does it for real, eyes locked on the screen.
  • (7) The words are hard to make out in the reverb-drenched murk.
  • (8) There's a sensuality to the vocal which is the result of me finally having the mic to myself and simply revelling in the experience – all that lovely reverb, all that lovely low vibrato; God, I was enjoying myself!
  • (9) In the hands of Laibach, it becomes epic: a magnificent, reverb-drenched alternative carol.
  • (10) Electric guitar with the reverb amped up, pounding drums, a moody rolling synth line, and fake trumpets interspersed throughout – could anything be more papal?
  • (11) Sometimes it is possible to reveal correlation between the duration of dominating interdischarge intervals and the extremes in the recovery of excitability of neuronal pools, which indirectly indicates putative reverberative origin of impulse cyclic phenomenon.
  • (12) He was a big fan of the Eventide Harmonizer , an effects-processor used to add delays and reverb.
  • (13) The photos come from a program called Altiverb, developed by people who record sounds in different spaces and then calculate the reverb acting on those sounds.
  • (14) This summer, as part of Imogen Heap 's Reverb festival at the Roundhouse, Ryan will attempt to represent the synaesthetic experience with the London Contemporary Orchestra and visual artists Quayola & Sinigaglia, with the duo's images reacting live to Ryan's soundtrack.
  • (15) C. the focus acts also on the thalamo-cortical reverbation circle and gradually "teaches" it epileptic discharges which sometimes can be followed on the EEG, although this stage is still in the latent period, i.e.
  • (16) The reverb pattern – what happens to noise as it moves through space to our ears – is known as the delta.
  • (17) Cults are not typical top 20 fare – the duo are best known for Go Outside , a lo-fi, reverb-heavy song released last year.
  • (18) Or rather freemium: the app is a free download, but some of its effects – Hi-Lo, Echo, Roll, Loop, BeatSkip and Reverb – are sold as in-app purchases for £1.49 each, or £6.99 for all six.

Reverberation


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of reverberating; especially, the act of reflecting light or heat, or reechoing sound; as, the reverberation of rays from a mirror; the reverberation of rays from a mirror; the reverberation of voices; the reverberation of heat or flame in a furnace.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The reverberation times were 2.1 and 1.6 s. In quiet conditions at normal speech level (60 dBA), the perception was better without earmuffs than with them.
  • (2) In addition, several cells showed unusual firing patterns, such as delayed responses and reverberating afterdischarges.
  • (3) The proposed physical process by which the metaorganization principle is implemented is based on oscillatory reverberation.
  • (4) The fact, that following the cooling or ablation of the auditory cortex the rhythmic afterdischarge to sound clicks as well as spontaneous spindle bursts keep arising in the medial geniculate body without changing their patterns, militates also against the possibility of thalamocortical reverberation.
  • (5) In situations with reverberation and less background noise the difference is less marked.
  • (6) For the reverberant condition, the sentences were played through a room with a reverberation time of 1.2 s. The CVC syllables were removed from the sentences and presented in pairs to ten subjects with audiometrically normal hearing, who judged the similarity of the syllable pairs separately for the nonreverberant and reverberant conditions.
  • (7) The fossil fuel resistance, like the fossil fuel industry, is protean and sprawling – and each win reverberates for decades to come, because that’s how long pipelines and coal mines are built to last.
  • (8) There are reverberating circuits between the fundus caudati and the medial groups of the nigra characterized by their small cells, between the putamen and the postero-lateral cell groups of the nigra, between the caudatum and the rostral cell groups of the nigra, presumably with the specialization that the lateral caudatum is in two-way connection with the rostro-lateral cell groups of the nigra as is the medial caudatum with the rostro-medial cell group.
  • (9) Speech recognition was assessed under three levels of room reverberation, each in quiet and noise, for subjects with varying amounts of sensorineural hearing impairment.
  • (10) Fears the closing of Toyota and Holden plans could trigger recessions in Victoria and South Australia have reverberated through the states as the two car manufacturers announced they will be pulling out in 2017.
  • (11) A constant shadow with closely spaced high level reverberation echoes is strongly suggestive of a metallic foreign body.
  • (12) Analyzing these characteristics as well as the positional relationships of reverberation artifacts in the porta hepatis and gallbladder fossa should enable one to suspect the post-cholecystectomy state and differentiate from an abnormal gas collection.
  • (13) It is proposed that rehabilitative audiological assessments include evaluation of an individual's ability to cope with reverberation and noise.
  • (14) The stimuli were degraded by reverberation or speech-spectrum noise.
  • (15) It also changed life in Manus entirely, reverberating through culture, imagination, infrastructure and economy.
  • (16) These simulated a quiet living room, a classroom, and social events in two settings with different reverberation characteristics.
  • (17) Our letter, organised by the Jewish Council for Racial Equality , also refers to a disturbing historical echo still reverberating today.
  • (18) Now that America and China are so intertwined as to be essentially one country – a fact you can’t forget here in San Francisco, where everyone is coding apps for phones made in Shenzhen – Ai’s mashup of the two nations’ oppressed minorities reverberates as a call for reckoning beyond national borders.
  • (19) It was one of those panicky quick decisions that has long-term reverberations that aren’t necessarily what you want.” Darling and Alexander were adamant that, for all their fears, they made the right decision on the currency.
  • (20) On the whole, talkers maintained their relative intelligibility across the four environments, although there was one exception which suggested that some voices may be particularly susceptible to degradation due to reverberation.

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