sound system
See also: Soundsystem
English
editAlternative forms
edit- soundsystem (chiefly Jamaican sense)
Noun
editsound system (plural sound systems)
- An electronic system used to reproduce sound.
- The set of speech sounds that make up a language; a phonology.
- 1958, Anthony Burgess, The Enemy in the Blanket (The Malayan Trilogy), published 1972, page 277:
- One young Tamil teacher had assimilated the sound-system of English so thoroughly to that of his mother-tongue that none of the Chinese and Malay children understood him.
- (music, originally Jamaica) A mobile platform playing selected recorded music, set up as a social event, often with an entrance fee.
- 2019 August 23, Dave Simpson, “The sound systems of Notting Hill carnival: 'I'll stop when I can't walk'”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
- Rooted in Caribbean culture and introduced to the UK by the Windrush generation, sound systems – static or truck-bound collectives of MCs and DJs playing music through customised, bass-heavy speakers – have been integral to Notting Hill carnival since 1973.
Translations
editelectronic system that produces sound
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the set of speech sounds that make up a language; a phonology
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