English

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Etymology

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From after- +‎ sound.

Noun

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aftersound (plural aftersounds)

  1. A sound that persists or remains audible after its source has ceased to produce it; the perception of such a sound.[1]
    Synonyms: echo, resonance, reverberation
    Antonym: foresound
    Hypernym: after-impression
    • 1659, Nathanael Homes, A Sermon Preached before Parliament[3], London: Edward Brewster, published 1660, page 33:
      [] the strings of an instrument, [] being strucken with the hand, do verberate the ayre in its first sound, and are reverberated by the ayre to an after-sound.
    • 1970, Elmore Leonard, chapter 7, in Valdez is Coming[4], Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, page 132:
      He fired the Winchester twice again, into the distance, then lowered it, the ringing aftersound of the gunfire in his ears.
    • 1985, Iris Murdoch, The Good Apprentice[5], Penguin, published 2001, Part 2, p. 189:
      Edward was awakened that night by a loud clattering noise which left an after-sound of high ringing.
    • 2021, Colm Tóibín, chapter 18, in The Magician, New York: Scribner:
      And the aftersound of the music played in the light-filled drawing room would grow closer to pure silence each year, until time ended.
  2. (acoustics) The second, slower phase of decay in the sound made by a piano string when it is struck.[2]
    Coordinate term: prompt sound
  3. (phonetics, obsolete) A weaker sound that immediately follows a more salient one, such as the second, less prominent vowel sound in a falling diphthong.
    • 1881, Louis Lucien Bonaparte, “The simple sounds of all the living Slavonic languages compared with those of the principal Neo-Latin and Germano-Scandinavian Tongues,” Transactions of the Philological Society, 1880-1881, p. 377,[6]
      In English I cannot hear the sound of Italian o chiuso, but only that of (o 5) followed by an aftersound, as in home, or without this aftersound, as in more.
    • 1910, Max Niedermann, Outlines of Latin Phonetics[7], London: Routledge, page 46:
      They [gu and qu] were not groups formed of a guttural stop and the semi-vowel v, but guttural stops with a labial aftersound; the latter receiving a very much weaker articulation than the semi-vowel v.

References

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  1. ^ W. A. Newman Dorland, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary, Philadelphia: Saunders, 1980: “sensation of a sound after cessation of the stimulus causing it.”[1]
  2. ^ Malcolm J. Crocker (ed.), Encyclopedia of Acoustics, New York: Wiley, 1997, Volume 4.[2]