单词 | bass |
释义 | bassn.1 1. a. The Common Perch ( Perca fluviatilis), or an allied freshwater species. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Percidae (perches) > [noun] > perca fluviatilis (common perch) bassc1000 perch1381 basec1425 river perch1574 bast1676 Welshman1709 barse1753 grunt1851 redfin1946 c1000 in T. Wright & R. P. Wülcker Anglo-Saxon & Old Eng. Vocab. (1884) I. /180 Lupus, uel scardo, bærs. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 20 Bace, fysche. 1584 T. Cogan Hauen of Health clxxviii. 143 Roche, Loche, Base, Smelt, are verie wholsom fishes. 1801 G. Morris in J. Sparks Life G. Morris (1832) III. 140 Trout and perch, called by the Dutch name of barsch, or bass. 1866 Intellectual Observer No. 56. 101 Sticklebacks, perches, basses. b. black bass n. a fish of the Perch family ( Perca huro) found in Lake Huron. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Percidae (perches) > [noun] > perca huro (sea-bass) sea bass1765 green bass1820 black bass1840 growler1880 1840 Penny Cycl. XVII. 432/1 The Black Bass.. one of best-flavoured fishes of that lake. 1881 Harper's Mag. Sept. 511 The much-prized black bass. 2. A voracious marine fish ( Labrax lupus) of the Perch family, common in European seas; called also Sea-wolf and Sea-dace. Also an allied species (Sea bass) caught on the coasts of North America. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Serranidae (sea-bass) > [noun] > member of genus Centropristis (black sea-bass) bass1530 blackfish1765 sea bass1765 black perch1836 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sciaenidae (drums) > [noun] > member of genus Cynoscion (squeteague) bass1530 trout1604 weakfish1686 sea bass1765 corvina1787 salmon1798 sheep's head1836 squeteague1838 grey trout1856 white trout1861 roncador1867 shad-trout1884 squit1884 bastard trout1888 wheat-fish1888 yellowfin1888 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > family Sciaenidae (drums) > [noun] > genus Sciaena > sciaena ocellata (red drum) bass1530 drummer1615 drum1649 red drum1709 drummer fish1725 red fish1763 red sciaena1803 red bass1837 spot1864 school bass1869 channel bass1873 spotfish1875 masooka1884 red horse1884 red1958 the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > suborder Labrioidei (wrasse) > [noun] > family Labridae > genus Labrax > labrax lupus (sea-wolf) sea-wolf1390 bass1530 1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 196/1 Bace, fysshe, ung bar. 1602 R. Carew Surv. Cornwall ii. f. 106v Sucking Millet, swallowing Basse. 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Lubin, a base, or sea wolfe. 1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia vi. 237 There hath beene taken one thousand Bases at a draught. 1769 T. Pennant Brit. Zool. (new ed.) III. iv. 213 The basse is a strong, active, and voracious fish. 1852 C. Kingsley Andromeda 394 Chasing the bass and the mullet. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2021). bassn.2 1. a. strictly. The inner bark of the lime or linden; sometimes applied loosely to any similar fibre, e.g. split rushes or straw. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > bark > [noun] > other bark basteOE bass1676 bonace bark1756 paperbarkc1837 stringy-bark1848 pottery bark1866 Adansonia1887 1676 J. Worlidge Vinetum Britannicum 46 Fit it aptly to the Stock, and bind it on with..Basse. 1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine sig. I Bass..is a sort of long straw or rushes. 1825 R. P. Ward Tremaine I. xxix. 231 A soft bit of wood..bound with bass to the stem. b. attributive, as in bass-mat. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > floor-covering > [noun] > mat > types of tatami1614 bent-mat1615 bass-mat1727 bump1835 bast mat1837 parawai1847 brocade-matting1902 hooked mat1917 sit-mat1924 1727 R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique (Dublin ed.) at Cabbage Wrap..Bass-mat, etc. about the Roots. 1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. III. vii. iii. 413 Straw-rope shoes and cloaks of bass-mat. c. A fibre obtained from the leaf-bases or leaf-stalks of certain palms, used in the manufacture of brushes, ropes, etc.; also the palm from which this fibre is obtained. Also in combination: bass-broom n. (cf. bast broom at bast n.1 Compounds 1). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > cleaning > brushing or sweeping > [noun] > brush or broom besomc1000 bast broom1357 brush1377 broom14.. sweepc1475 duster1575 bristle brush1601 broom-besom1693 flag-broom1697 stock-brush1700 whisk1745 birch-broom1747 hair-broom1753 spry1796 corn-broomc1810 pope's head1824 whisker1825 sweeping-brusha1828 swish1844 spoke-brush1851 whisk broom1857 Turk's head1859 wisp1875 tube-brush1877 bass-broom?1881 crumb-brush1884 dusting-brush1907 palmetto brush1913 suede brush1915 swale1949 society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > plants, grasses, or reeds > [noun] > vegetable fibre > other plant fibre palmite1555 coir1582 pita1648 kitul1681 silk-cotton1697 pita-thread1748 abaca1751 khus khus1798 gomuti1811 coco fibre1813 Manila hemp1814 pineapple fibre1834 moog1840 piassava1841 Para grass1850 raffia1850 African hair1851 ambari1851 diss1855 munj1855 monkey grass1858 crin vegetal1859 mung1866 lauhala1880 bass?1881 raphia bast1882 istle1883 raphia grass1885 settler's twine1898 tucum1901 Manila fibre1921 bassine1923 sotol1942 ?1881 Census Eng. & Wales: Instr. Clerks classifying Occupations & Ages (?1885) 79 Bass Broom Maker. 1883 Cassell's Family Mag. 222/1 The coarse familiar bass-brooms. 1891 Bull. Misc. Information (Royal Gardens, Kew) Jan. 3 (heading) Extract of Minute by the Governor of Lagos on the Bass fibre of the Bamboo palm (Raphia vinifera). 1891 Bull. Misc. Information (Royal Gardens, Kew) Jan. 3 The ‘African Bass’ is..a stiff and wiry fibre, varying in colour from dark brown to light red. 1895 Army & Navy Co-op. Soc. Price List p. xx Bass Brooms. 1895 Army & Navy Co-op. Soc. Price List 182 Bass Heads... Handles for Bass, each extra, 0/2. 1902 W. I. Hannan Textile Fibres Commerce 145 Bass, Monkey, or Grass, Leopoldinia Piassava or Para Piassava. 1914 Daily Express 8 Dec. 4/5 The connection between the war and bass brooms seems at first sight somewhat obscure, but broom manufacturers..explain that the bass comes principally from Germany. 2. The name given elliptically to various articles made of this or similar material; e.g. a mat, a hassock, a flat plaited bag or flexible basket. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > textile fabric or an article of textile fabric > textile fabric > textile fabric made from specific material > made from other vegetable fibres > [noun] > other > articles made from bass1706 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Bass or Hassock, a kind of Cushion made of Straw, such as are us'd to kneel upon in Churches. Basse, a Collar for Cart-horses, made of Straw, Sedge, Rushes, etc., whence the Bass for kneeling in Churches. 1838 W. Howitt Rural Life Eng. II. iii. xii. 308 Carrying home a bass brimful of vegetables. 1861 E. B. Ramsay Reminisc. Sc. Life v. 118 You hear him..wipe his feet upon the bass. Categories » 3. Building. ‘A short trough for holding mortar, when tiling the roof; it is hung to the lath.’ Nicholson Practical Builder 1823. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † bassn.3 Obsolete. A kiss. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [noun] kissc1000 bassc1450 baisier1477 swapa1566 buss1567 smouch1578 lip-lick1582 lip-clip1606 tuck1611 accolade1654 poguec1670 osculum1706 slobber1884 banger1898 snog1959 c1450 Crt. Love cxiv If the basse ben full there is delight. a1529 J. Skelton My Darling Dere 9 With ba, ba, ba, and bas, bas, bas, She cheryshed hym both cheke and chyn. 1570 Play Wit & Sc. (1848) 13 Nay, Syr, as for basses, From hence none passes But as in gage Of mary-age. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2021). bassn.4 A miners' term for shale stained dark by vegetable matter. Cf. bat n.2 11. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > structure of the earth > constituent materials > rock > sedimentary rock > [noun] > shale > others till1672 bass1686 bat1686 blue metal1699 scallop slate1711 black shale1730 shale-shiver1794 shale1825 till-stonec1830 Wenlock shale1834 famp1836 Boghead1858 oil shale1866 paper shale1874 symon1881 paste-rock1882 slasto1953 1686 R. Plot Nat. Hist. Staffs. iii. 131 Bass or freestone above, and Ironston or earth, below. 1861 E. Hull Coal-fields Great Brit. 54 Some of the shales are so highly carbonaceous as to be nearly black, and form impure coal called ‘bass.’ This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online June 2018). Bassn.6 Bass's ale or beer, the ‘India Pale Ale’ or ‘Bitter Beer’ manufactured by Messrs. Bass & Co. of Burton-on-Trent. Also with a and plural, a bottle of Bass. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > ale or beer > beer > [noun] > other kinds of beer spruce beerc1500 March beer1535 Lubecks beer1608 zythum1608 household beer1616 bottle1622 mumc1623 old beer1626 six1631 four1633 maize beer1663 mum beer1667 vinegar beer1677 wrest-beer1689 nog1693 October1705 October beer1707 ship-beer1707 butt beer1730 starting beer1735 butt1743 peterman1767 seamen's beer1795 chang1800 treacle beer1806 stock beer1826 Iceland beer1828 East India pale ale1835 India pale ale1837 faro1847 she-oak1848 Bass1849 bitter beer1850 bock1856 treble X1856 Burton1861 nettle beer1864 honey beer1867 pivo1873 Lambic1889 steam beer1898 barley-beer1901 gueuze1926 Kriek1936 best1938 rough1946 keg1949 IPA1953 busaa1967 mbege1972 microbrew1985 microbeer1986 yeast-beer- 1849 Illustr. London News 26 May 336 The consumption of Bass..is beyond belief. 1850 W. M. Thackeray Pendennis II. v. 42 Many a day I've drunk a dozen of Bass at Calcutta. 1909 Daily Chron. 3 Feb. 4/6 The first signs of returning vitality given by the Prince was to ask feebly for a bottle of ‘Bass’. 1953 D. Thomas Let. 24 Aug. in Sel. Lett. (1966) 412 Oh, to bask unasked in a Bass cask. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online December 2021). bassadj.n.5 A. adj. 1. Deep-sounding, low in the musical scale. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > thing heard > [adjective] > pitch > low in pitch bassa1450 heavy1589 broad1607 grave1609 deepa1616 gravitoned1657 low-pitched1811 deep-drawn1860 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > [adjective] > low lowa1393 bassa1450 deepa1616 a1450 Musical Treat. in Speculum (1935) 10 262 This same rwle may ye kepe be-twene Dsolre, Dlasolre, & al oþer base keyys. c1450 Contin. Lydgate's Secrees (Sloane 2464) l. 2556 Meene in voys, nouthir to hih nor baas. a1500 Partenay (Trin. Cambr.) l. 945 Ful gret mynstracy; Both hye and bas instrumentes sondry. a1505 R. Henryson Orpheus & Eurydice l. 369 in Poems (1981) 144 With base tonys in ypodorica. a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) iii. v. l. 76 With a bas voce. 1541 T. Elyot Castel of Helthe (new ed.) 51 Let him..begyne to synge lowder and lowder, but styl in a base voice. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene iii. ii. sig. Dd5v Sad words, with hollow voice and bace, Shee to the virgin sayd. 1609 J. Dowland tr. A. Ornithoparchus Micrologus 17 An Interuall..is the distance of a base and high sound. 1615 Bp. J. Hall Farewell Serm. in Recoll. Treat. 677 The trumpets..sounded basest and dolefullest at the last. 1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §173 All base notes, or very treble notes, give an asper sound. 1699 J. Potter Archæologiæ Græcæ II. iii. ix. 90 The first [trumpet] was first us'd in Paphlagonia..; It had a deep base Sound. 1797 T. Holcroft tr. C. Moore Ess. Physiogn. IV. vi. 120 A broad prominent chin—the occipital bone knotty and projecting—a base voice—a firm step. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps ii. i. 226 Boys are chosen..to produce the shrill notes; men are chosen to produce the bass notes. 1863 Proc. Royal Soc. 1862–3 12 229 With a given electric current, a wide strip of mercury gave wide crispations and a base sound, and a narrow strip gave narrow crispations and a high sound. 1905 I. C. Van Panbuys in Proc. 13th Internat. Congr. Americanists 1902 206 I often saw [the agami] there playing ‘hide and seek’ with the children and amusing them by its deep base sound. 1968 H. E. Salisbury 900 Days 525 He got up, walked about the room and then said quietly in his deep base voice, ‘General, your nerves are upset’. 2. a. [partly attributive use of noun.] Of, pertaining to, or suited to, the lowest part in harmonized musical composition. bass voice: that ranging from E♭ below the bass stave to F above it. bass clef: the F clef, now placed on the fourth line from the bottom of the bass stave, formerly sometimes on the third, and earlier on the fifth. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > harmony or sounds in combination > [adjective] > parts in harmony or counterpoint > bass part bass1552 basso1883 society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > singing > singing voice > [adjective] > bass bass1552 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Base synger, succentor. 1597 T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 86 Base descant is that kinde of descanting where your sight of taking and vsing your cordes must be vnder the plainsong. 1832 D. Brewster Lett. Nat. Magic ix. 230 His ears were insensible to all sounds below F, marked by the base cliff. 1880 G. Grove Dict. Music I. 149/1 A bass voice is too..deficient in sweetness for single songs. b. Hence prefixed, sometimes with hyphen, to names of musical instruments or their strings, to indicate that they are of the lowest pitch. For bass clarinet n. at clarinet n. 1, bass saxophone at saxophone n. 1, tuba n.1 1a, see the nouns. ΚΠ 1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 ii. v. 6 I haue sounded the verie base string of humilitie. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Comedy of Errors (1623) iv. iii. 23 Went like a Base-Viole in a case of leather. View more context for this quotation 1658 J. Playford Breif Introd. Skill Musick (new ed.) ii. 80 In Tuning of your [treble] Violin..the Basse or fourth string is G sol re ut. 1789 Oracle 26 Aug. 2/3 The President of the District des Filles Saint Thomas has succeeded better; he has procured a bass drum. 1804 W. Bentley Diary (1911) III. 68 The instrument Music..consisted of the Bass Drum, Bassoon, Clarinet & flute. 1856 M. C. Clarke tr. H. Berlioz Treat. Mod. Instrumentation 152 The sound of the bass trombone is majestic. 1863 N. Hawthorne Our Old Home I. 248 Rain-drops..pattering on the bass-drum. 1880 Grove's Dict. Music (at cited word) When musicians talk of ‘drums’ they mean kettledrums, in contradistinction to the side drum or bass drum. 1880 Grove's Dict. Music (at cited word) The Bass-drum..used to be called the long-drum. 1880 G. Grove Dict. Music I. 150/2 The Bass-flute requires a great deal of breath. 1884 G. W. Cable Dr. Sevier II. liv. 171 The soft boom of a bass-drum. 1928 Rhythm June 31/3 Haydn, a tympanist himself, made use of the bass drum, cymbals and triangle in his Military Symphony. 1996 G. Nicholls in P. Trynka Rock Hardware 96/2 (caption) By 1967, Moon was already using a nine-piece kit with two bass drums. B. n.5 [By some mistakenly taken as derived < base n.1, foundation, with which it has etymologically no connection.] 1. a. The lowest part in harmonized musical composition; the deepest male voice, or lowest tones of a musical instrument, which sing or sound this part. Cf. A. 2. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > [noun] > low pitch > low sound or note bassa1500 bottom1710 grave1728 lows1845 society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > singing > singing voice > [noun] > bass bassa1500 thoroughbass1749 basso1818 basso-profundo1860 basso cantante1876 society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > types of song > [noun] > part-song > a part in > bass bassa1500 society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > harmony or sounds in combination > [noun] > part in harmony or counterpoint > bass parts bourdonc1400 burden1594 bassus1605 thoroughbass1632 bass1666 ground bass1685 continuo1724 continued bass1728 figured bass1786 walking bass1825 basso ostinato1876 bass line1894 bottom1936 bottom line1963 basso continuo- a1500 in R. L. Greene Early Eng. Carols (1935) 269 Whan..bulles of the see syng a good bace. 1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) I. 432 Mony trumpet into sindrie tune, Sum in bas and sum in alt abone. 1597 T. Morley Plaine & Easie Introd. Musicke 3 The Basse or lowest part. 1664 J. Playford Brief Introd. Skill Musick (ed. 4) i. 72 The Bass for the Theorbo. 1666 S. Pepys Diary 30 July (1972) VII. 227 One of my new tunes that I have got Dr Childe to set me a bass to. 1706 A. Bedford Temple Musick viii. 163 The Base usually closing in the Fifth above the Key. a1848 F. Marryat Valerie (1849) I. vi. 172 The milkmaid's falsetto, and the dustman's bass. b. figurative. ΚΠ 1532 T. More Confut. Tyndale in Wks. 405/2 Hys false translacion with their farther false construccion, they thoughte shoulde be the basse and the tenour, whereuppon they woulde synge the trouble, with muche false descant. 1645 J. Milton On Christ's Nativity: Hymn xiii, in Poems 7 The Base of Heav'ns deep Organ. 1649 Bp. J. Taylor Great Exemplar iii. 103 The goodman knew Christ's voice to be a low base of humility. 1728 A. Pope Dunciad ii. 213 Whose hoarse heroic base Drowns the loud Clarion of the braying Ass. 1870 M. D. Conway Earthward Pilgrimage vi. 94 Above the bass of Commerce is the clear tenor of Fraternity. 2. One who sings the bass part. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > singer > singer by type of voice > [noun] > bass bass1591 basso1818 basso-profundo1860 bassist1870 basso cantante1876 1591 E. Spenser Teares of Muses in Complaints 28 The..streames..were..taught to beare A Bases part amongst their consorts. a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) iv. iii. 42 Song-men..most of them Meanes and Bases . View more context for this quotation 1880 G. Grove Dict. Music I. 148/2 The employment of basses and barytons in principal characters on the operatic stage. 3. The bass string of a musical instrument. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > lute- or viol-type parts > [noun] > specific strings minikin1541 bass1560 treble1560 mean1654 G string1831 cantino1876 1560 J. Heywood Fourth Hundred Epygrams xlvi. sig. Biiv Which string in al the harpe wolost thou styll harpe on. Not the base. ?1614 W. Drummond Sonnet: Sound Hoarse Sad Lute in Poems Sad Treeble weepe, and you dull Basses show Your Masters sorrow in a deadly vaine. 1682 J. Dryden Mac Flecknoe 5 At thy well sharpned Thumb..The Treble squeaks for fear, the Bases Rore. 4. a. A bass-viol n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > bowable instrument > [noun] > viol > bass-viol bumfiddle1599 bass-viola1616 baritone1685 bass1702 violone1724 bassette1847 octobass1850 1702 London Gaz. No. 3819/8 For two Violins and a Bass. 1794 J. Wolcot Rowland for Oliver in Wks. II. 66 Watkyn..forbore his bass to seize. b. A double bass. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > bowable instrument > [noun] > double-bass contrabass1598 double bass1728 bull fiddle1880 doghouse1924 bass1927 string bass1927 slap-bass1949 1927 Melody Maker Sept. 926/3 The bass, being a rhythm instrument, must conform to the rhythm set by the rhythm section. 1962 Oxf. Mail 22 June 5/5 The rules allow competitors to use bass and drum accompaniment. 5. Short for thoroughbass n. Draft additions 1997 The low-frequency component of (esp. transmitted or reproduced) sound. Frequently attributive. Cf. treble n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > [noun] > signal > frequency or band of frequencies high frequency1842 low frequency1900 voice frequency1905 audio frequency1913 pulsatance1919 medium frequency1920 side frequency1920 intermediate frequency1924 bass1930 frequency1943 frequency spectrum1955 the world > matter > physics > science of sound > vibration > [noun] > low frequency low frequency1839 sub-bass1839 bass1930 society > communication > record > recording or reproducing sound or visual material > sound recording and reproduction > [noun] > low frequency component of sound bass1930 1930 Wireless World 26 Mar. 333/1 The tone control which emphasizes either treble or bass consists of a variable capacity between the input and output of the power valves. 1936 Wireless World 28 Feb. 214 Bass and treble tone controls. 1975 G. J. King Audio Handbk. iii. 66 For example, bass boost is secured by attenuation of the higher frequencies. 1988 V. Capel Audio & Hi-Fi Engineer's Pocket Bk. 42 To avoid loss of bass, a frequency-dependent phase-shifter progressively changes the relative phase until they [sc. the sounds] are in phase at the lowest frequency. Draft additions June 2007 A bass guitar.Although it is not certain exactly what instrument is referred to in quot. 1937, the contrast with the Bassoguitar (an upright bass) suggests it is probably an electric bass guitar of the type now familiar, which became commercially available (on a very limited scale) at around this time. ΚΠ 1937 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald 19 Sept. 6 c/5 Bassoguitar, $67.50. Electric bass with amplifier... Also 3 used electric guitars. 1952 Pottstown (Pa.) Mercury 18 Oct. 20 (advt.) Fender Precision Bass. A new sensation for bass players. 1970 Music Educators Jrnl. 56 15 (advt.) A new work..featuring optional electric guitars, including the electric bass. 1989 Toronto Star (Nexis) 17 Apr. c4 [Rutherford] came up in the world playing bass for an arty, prog-rock outfit. 2005 Uncut June 30/1 Romeo..plays guitar..while younger sister Michele plays bass and harmonises. Draft additions June 2007 bass-baritone n. [probably after German Bassbariton] a singer who has the ranges of both a bass and a baritone; the voice of such a singer. ΚΠ 1869 Musical Times & Singing Class Circular 14 198/1 (advt.) Mr. George Vigay, bass baritone vocalist, is open for engagements in town or country. 1917 C. Cooke Pract. Singing ii. 20 Though still partaking of the grave quality, the bass-baritone can use the frontale voice..up to C sharp. 2003 Time Out N.Y. 14 Aug. 125/2 He's still got the honey-dripping bass-baritone that astonishes everyone who hears it. Draft additions June 2007 bass bin n. colloquial a large speaker cabinet containing loudspeakers designed to reproduce low-frequency sounds accurately, used esp. to enhance the bass sound at live music performances; cf. woofer n. 2. ΚΠ 1973 Lincoln (Nebraska) Star 14 Apr. 17/9 (advt.) Must sell—bass bins for Fender bass or P.A. woofers. 1981 Winnipeg Free Press 1 Apr. (Classified section) 52/1 Gauss 5840 bass bin. 1992 Independent (Nexis) 8 Oct. 20 At heavy metal concerts fans have been known to stick their heads into the bass bins of the PA system. 2004 Village Voice 31 Mar. 12/4 The Quad installed extra bass bins just for the movie. Draft additions June 2007 bass boost n. the enhancement of low-frequency sound in a recording or performance; a facility on sound equipment which provides this. ΚΠ 1938 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 17 Mar. 4 d (advt.) True bass boost tone control. 1957 Pract. Wireless 33 706/1 Simple switched bass-boost and top-cut compensation is provided. 1969 Gramophone Apr. 1502/3 A small amount of bass boost gives a well balanced performance. 2001 Max Power Dec. 186/3 Additional features include line-out for daisy chaining amps..plus a bass boost. Draft additions June 2007 bass guitar n. any of various instruments resembling a (large) standard guitar, but which produces lower notes; (now) esp. a (usually electric) guitar with a long neck and four heavy strings tuned an octave below the lower strings on a standard guitar. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > guitar or lute type > [noun] > guitar > other guitars slidec1608 samisen1616 angelique1660 angelot1678 angel lutea1708 strim-stramc1730 sitar1777 balalaika1788 ramkie1805 sancho1817 sanxian1839 bass guitar1855 gimbri1876 cuatro1904 electric guitar1933 requinto1937 tamburitza1941 tiple1942 dobro1952 acoustic guitar1953 acoustical guitar1957 bottleneck guitar1961 acoustic1962 slide guitar1968 1855 B. L. Ball Rambles in E. Asia xx. 175 There was an Indian band of music, of flutes, harps, two treble and two bass guitars, &c. 1871 Overland Monthly Dec. 520/1 Curious instruments are produced:..the bajo, or large bass guitar. 1895 Daily News 22 May 7/3 Three mandolas (or mandoras), eighteen guitars..and a bass guitar. 1953 Melody Maker 31 Oct. 14/3 (advt.) Engagements wanted... Bass guitar/vocals. 1988 P. Manuel Pop. Musics Non-Western World (1990) iv. 115 An acoustic bass guitar, the baixo (with four strings tuned like the lower strings on a guitar). 2005 R. Nidel World Music: Basics v. 282 A more relaxed ska, where the guitar strums only on the 2 and 4 and the bass guitar emphasizes the 1 and 3 beats. Draft additions June 2007 bass guitarist n. a person who plays the bass guitar. ΚΠ 1938 N.Y. Times 20 Feb. 10/1 The Ilima Islanders consist of Mr. Kalama, bass guitarist..and Alexander Gullato, guitarist. 1965 Blues Unlimited Dec. 4 Taylor is probably the finest bass guitarist in the business. 2001 Guardian 19 Mar. i. 21/7 The bass guitarist was flanked by a drummer with a conventional kit and five other percussionists banging away. Draft additions June 2007 bass-heavy adj. (of music, sound, etc.) characterized by an abundance or excess of bass frequencies or by a prominent bass line. ΚΠ 1939 Times 1 June 12/2 A well-considered balance of tone that was especially noticeable in the bass-heavy chords of the last act. 1969 Post-Standard (Syracuse, N.Y.) 27 Oct. 28/3 The orchestral accompaniment was rich, with a full, even bass-heavy string tone. 1973 Gramophone Sept. 462/1 The stereo disc seemed bass-heavy with the piano too close. 2002 Time Out N.Y. 29 Aug. 143/4 The real centerpiece of Scarface's albums remains their bass-heavy beats. Draft additions June 2007 bass reflex n. a design feature, consisting of a vent or port in an enclosed loudspeaker, by which the reproduction of low-frequency sound is enhanced by the sound waves emanating through the vent from within the speaker cabinet; chiefly attributive. ΚΠ 1940 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 53 334 It [sc. the loudspeaker] was mounted in a large baffle designed according to the bass-reflex principle. 1979 A. V. Kneese & B. T. Bower Environmental Quality & Residuals Managem. iii. 50 Tonal quality..can be achieved by a small infinite baffle speaker and..a comparatively huge bass reflex. 2000 Edmonton (Alberta) Jrnl. (Nexis) 23 Nov. h4 [The] CTK-731 Electronic Keyboard is a music noodler's delight with its beefy bass reflex audio system. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † bassv.1 Obsolete. transitive and absol. To kiss. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [verb (transitive)] kissc900 reachOE bassc1500 to lay on the lips1530 bussa1566 swap1577 smouch1588 lip1605 bause1607 suaviate1650 to pree a person's mouth1724 accolade1843 to give (someone) onec1882 to give (a person) some sugar1921 steups1967 c1500 Bk. Mayd Emlyn 26 One that yonge was, That coude ofte her basse. c1525 J. Rastell New Commodye Propertes of Women sig. Bi Thus they kys & basse. 1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. v. sig. Hiii He must nedes basse hir. 1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Ciii/2 To Basse, kisse, basiare. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online March 2021). bassv.2 To utter or proclaim with bass voice or sound.Apparently an isolated use. ΚΠ a1616 W. Shakespeare Tempest (1623) iii. iii. 99 The Thunder (That deepe and dreadfull Organ-Pipe)..Did base my Trespasse. View more context for this quotation This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1885; most recently modified version published online December 2020). < n.1c1000n.21676n.3c1450n.41686n.61849adj.n.5a1450v.1c1500v.2a1616 |
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