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Vibration   /vaɪbrˈeɪʃən/   Listen
Vibration

noun
1.
The act of vibrating.  Synonyms: quiver, quivering.
2.
A shaky motion.  Synonyms: palpitation, quiver, quivering, shakiness, shaking, trembling.
3.
(physics) a regular periodic variation in value about a mean.  Synonym: oscillation.
4.
A distinctive emotional aura experienced instinctively.  Synonym: vibe.  "It gave me a nostalgic vibe"



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"Vibration" Quotes from Famous Books



... sand and the strange, multi-colored forest of weed and coral through which my searchlight bored a single, luminous pathway. But right ahead, looming and wavering, seen for an instant, lost again when a deep vibration stirred and swayed the water, shone the faintly golden shape of a great portal. Acuma I had lost sight of, but I had no need to ask him what lay before me. The wild pounding of my heart told me that I stood at the gateway of the city that had been covered a thousand thousand years ago by the ...
— Us and the Bottleman • Edith Ballinger Price

... feelings would have been deficient in supreme beauty, and therefore less worthy to be imparted, or he would not have had sufficient force to impart them; or his honesty would not have been equal to the strain of imparting them accurately. In any case, he would not have set up in you that vibration which we call pleasure, and which is supereminently caused by vitalising participation in high emotion. As Lamb sat in his bachelor arm-chair, with his brother in the grave, and the faithful homicidal maniac ...
— LITERARY TASTE • ARNOLD BENNETT

... is so different from that of prose, that from the first verses the attention is commanded by the expressions themselves, which, if I may so express it, place the poet at a distance from his auditors. It is not only to the softness of the Italian language, but much more to its strong and pronounced vibration of sonorous syllables, that we must attribute the empire of poetry amongst us. There is a kind of musical charm in Italian, by which the bare sound of words, almost independently of the ideas, produces pleasure; besides, these words have almost ...
— Corinne, Volume 1 (of 2) - Or Italy • Mme de Stael

... rumble, deep, tense, like the muttering vibration before an explosion. Philip's hands gripped his arms, and those arms were as hard as oak. In one hand Adare held a gun. His other fist was ...
— God's Country--And the Woman • James Oliver Curwood

... hum the sound mainly comes from the abdomen. In flies and humble-bees, for example, the 'voice' is caused by air rushing out from the mouths of the air or breathing-tubes. But these sounds are deepened by the vibration of the wings. Those who know something of music will understand what is meant when they are told that the note of the honey-bee on the wing is A; its ordinary 'voice,' however, is an octave higher, and often goes to B and C. From the note produced by the wing, ...
— Chatterbox, 1905. • Various


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