harmonically

listen to the pronunciation of harmonically
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
ahenli olarak
armonik
harmonic
{s} uyumlu
harmonic
{s} ahenkli
harmonic
harmoniye ait
harmonic
harmonically z
harmonic
{s} müz. armonik, armoniye ait
harmonic
esas sese katılan ikinci dizidenharmonical harmoniyle ilgili
harmonic
{i} harmonik ses
harmonic
{s} armonik

Tom armonikayı notasız çalar. - Tom plays the harmonica by ear.

Tom bir lise tarih öğretmeni ve bir blues grubunda bir yarı zamanlı armonika çalar. - Tom is a high school history teacher and a part-time harmonica player in a blues band.

harmonic
{i} akım armonikleri
harmonic
{s} harmonik
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
In a harmonic manner
harmoniously; in agreement
In respect to harmony, as distinguished from melody; as, a passage harmonically correct
In an harmonical manner; harmoniously
with respect to harmony; "harmonically interesting piece
In harmonical progression
harmonically bound
Of an input-output pair, to incur a proper subset of constraint violations of a different input-output pair
harmonic
Pleasant to hear; harmonious; melodious
harmonic
Pertaining to harmony
harmonic
Attribute of many mathematical entities that only in few cases are obviously related
harmonic
a component frequency of the signal of a wave that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency
harmonic
{a} musical, accordant
harmonic
An exact integer multiple of a fundamental frequency or tone
harmonic
A musical note produced by a number of vibrations which is a multiple of the number producing some other; an overtone
harmonic
Harmonic means composed, played, or sung using two or more notes which sound right and pleasing together. relating to the way notes are played or sung together to give a pleasing sound
harmonic
A sinusoidal quantity having a frequency that is an integral multiple (´2, ´3, etc ) of a fundamental (´1) frequency
harmonic
a tone that is a component of a complex sound relating to vibrations that occur as a result of vibrations in a nearby body; "sympathetic vibration"
harmonic
A single frequency component of a sound Also called "overtone," or "partial " The timbre, or tone color, of a sound may be characterized by its harmonic content A 100 Hz sound that is high in harmonic content (for example, a sawtooth wave) will have harmonics at 200 Hz, 300 Hz, 400 Hz, etc
harmonic
of or relating to harmony as distinct from melody and rhythm; "subtleties of harmonic change and tonality"- Ralph Hill of or relating to the branch of acoustics that studies the composition of musical sounds; "the sound of the resonating cavity cannot be the only determinant of the harmonic response
harmonic
{i} overtone, secondary tone which is higher than the primary or fundamental tone (Music)
harmonic
involving or characterized by harmony
harmonic
a sine wave component of a complex sound whose frequency is a whole number multiple of the fundamental frequency
harmonic
A frequency that is a multiple of the fundamental See also Distortion and Non-Linearity
harmonic
Having relations or properties bearing some resemblance to those of musical consonances; said of certain numbers, ratios, proportions, points, lines, motions, and the like
harmonic
A sinusoidal component of a periodic wave or quantity having a frequency that is an integral multiple of the fundamental frequency For example, a component which is twice the fundamental frequency is called the second harmonic (the fundamental is the first harmonic, which is frequently misunderstood)
harmonic
a tone that is a component of a complex sound
harmonic
an electrical frequency that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency; for example, if 60 Hz is the fundamental freqency, then 120 Hz is the second harmonic and 180 Hz is the third harmonic; some electronic devices, such as ballasts or power supplies, can cause harmonic distortion, directly affecting power quality
harmonic
relating to vibrations that occur as a result of vibrations in a nearby body; "sympathetic vibration"
harmonic
Harmonic is the full multiple of a base frequency
harmonic
After the fundamental, which is the lowest frequency and the one that determines the pitch, the first harmonic is the octave with a ratio of 2: 1 Next is the fifth, with a ratio of 3: 2 The harmonics eventually produce all the notes of the natural scale In music, the first harmonic is the octave In physics, the first harmonic is the fundamental
harmonic
A sinusoidal component of an AC voltage that is a multiple of the fundamental waveform frequency
harmonic
Equally spaced in frequency; a component whose frequency is an integer multiple of the fundamental
harmonic
Relating to harmony, as melodic relates to melody; harmonious; esp
harmonic
A component of a complex tone, whose frequency is an integral multiple of the fundamental frequency of the complex The third harmonic is at the frequency 3f, where f is the fundamental frequency
harmonic
relating to the accessory sounds or overtones which accompany the predominant and apparent single tone of any string or sonorous body
harmonic
A sinusoidal component of a waveform that is a whole multiple of the fundamental frequency An oscillation that is an integral sub-multiple of the fundamental is called a sub-harmonic
harmonic
(1) A special case of partial normally occurring in "musical" sounds, in which the frequency of the partial has a simple mathematical relationship to other partials Generally they are all integer multiples of a particular fundamental frequency See also Inharmonic (2) of or pertaining to musical harmony (the juxtaposition of one note with another or others)
harmonic
Found at known distances from the base or fundamental frequency of a sound the harmonics add complexity, subtlety and timbre to a note Different instruments add harmonics in different ways Back
harmonic
{s} melodious, consonant, compatible; of or relating to musical harmony
harmonic
Frequency component at a frequency that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency
harmonic
A frequency that is a whole-number multiple of the fundamental frequency For example, if the fundamental frequency of a sound is 440 Hz, the first two harmonics are 880 Hz and 1,320 Hz (1 32 kHz) See overtone; also see inharmonic
harmonic
Sinusoidal component of an arc voltage that is a multiple of the fundamental wave frequency
harmonic
Integer multiples of the fundamental frequency of interest commonly produced by a non-linear amplifier
harmonic
of or relating to harmony as distinct from melody and rhythm; "subtleties of harmonic change and tonality"- Ralph Hill
harmonic
Concordant; musical; consonant; as, harmonic sounds
harmonic
of or relating to the branch of acoustics that studies the composition of musical sounds; "the sound of the resonating cavity cannot be the only determinant of the harmonic response"
harmonic
a frequency that is an integer multiple (often two times) of the intended fundamental frequency
harmonic
= A sinusoidal (pure-tone) component whose frequency is a whole-number multiple of the fundamental frequency of the wave If a component has a frequency twice that of the fundamental it is called the second harmonic, etc
harmonic
Frequencies other than the fundamental basic frequency of a receptive wave When the waveform of the fundamental departs from a sine wave, harmonics are introduced at integer multiples of the fundamental frequency
harmonic
A frequency that is a whole-number multiple of the fundamental frequency For example, if the fundamental frequency of a sound is 440Hz, then the first two harmonics are 880Hz and 1,320Hz (1 32kHz) See overtone
harmonic
A tone whose frequency is an integer times the frequency of the fundamental (lowest) tone Every note played on a musical instrument consists of a fundamental tone plus many harmonics
harmonic
A sinusoidal wave having a frequency that is an integral multiple of a fundamental frequency For example, a complex wave whose frequency is twice that of the fundamental frequency is called the second harmonic Harmonics in a power system cause distortion of the normal sinusoidal voltage waveform
harmonic
a tone that is a component of a complex sound relating to vibrations that occur as a result of vibrations in a nearby body; "sympathetic vibration" of or relating to harmony as distinct from melody and rhythm; "subtleties of harmonic change and tonality"- Ralph Hill of or relating to the branch of acoustics that studies the composition of musical sounds; "the sound of the resonating cavity cannot be the only determinant of the harmonic response
harmonically
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