Dictionary Definition
noise
Noun
1 sound of any kind (especially unintelligible or
dissonant sound); "he enjoyed the street noises"; "they heard
indistinct noises of people talking"; "during the firework display
that ended the gala the noise reached 98 decibels"
2 the auditory experience of sound that lacks
musical quality; sound that is a disagreeable auditory experience;
"modern music is just noise to me" [syn: dissonance, racket]
3 electrical or acoustic activity that can
disturb communication [syn: interference, disturbance]
4 a loud outcry of protest or complaint; "the
announcement of the election recount caused a lot of noise";
"whatever it was he didn't like it and he was going to let them
know by making as loud a noise as he could"
5 incomprehensibility resulting from irrelevant
information or meaningless facts or remarks; "all the noise in his
speech concealed the fact that he didn't have anything to
say"
6 the quality of lacking any predictable order or
plan [syn: randomness, haphazardness, stochasticity] v : emit a
noise [syn: make noise,
resound]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- noiz, /nɔɪz/, /nOIz/
Noun
- Various sounds, usually unwanted.
- Sound or signal generated by random fluctuations
- Unwanted part of a signal. (Signal to noise ratio)
- The measured level of variation in gene expression among cells, regardless of source, within a supposedly identical population
References
(Genetics meaning) "Noise in Gene Expression: Origins, Consequences, and Control." Jonathan M. Raser and Erin K. O'Shea (2005). Science. 309(5743):2010-2013.Translations
various sounds, usually unwanted
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 噪音 (zàoyīn)
- Czech: hluk
- Danish: støj , larm , spektakel
- Dutch: geluid
- Finnish: melu
- French: bruit
- German: Lärm , Geräusch , Krach , as in Krach machen: to make a lot of noise
- Hungarian: zaj
- Italian: rumore
- Japanese: 雑音 (ざつおん, zatsuon)
- Korean: 소음 (soeum)
- Kurdish:
- Polish: hałas , szum
- Portuguese: barulho
- Russian: шум (šum)
- Serbian: шум (šum)
- Slovene: hrup
- Spanish: ruido
- Swedish: ljud
sound or signal generated by random fluctuations
(techn.) Unwanted part of a signal. (Signal to
noise ratio)
(genetics) The measured level of variation in
gene expression among cells, regardless of source, within a
supposedly identical population
- ttbc Breton: trouz , trouzoù p
- ttbc French: bruit
- ttbc Hebrew: רעש
- ttbc Japanese: 音 (おと, oto) (as in a sound: 1), 騒音 (そうおん, sōon) (annoying noise, as produced by motor vehicles or neighbors partying: 1), ノイズ (noizu) (2-3)
- ttbc Lithuanian: triukšmas
- ttbc Portuguese: barulho
- ttbc Spanish: ruido
- ttbc Swahili: kilele
- ttbc Swedish: oljud (1), brus (1 (a quiet noise), 2,3)
- ttbc Telugu: శబ్దం (SabdaM), మోత (mOta), గోల (gOla)
- ttbc Tok Pisin: meknais
- ttbc Turkish: gürültü, patırtı, şıltak
Extensive Definition
In common use, the word noise means unwanted
sound or noise
pollution. In electronics noise can refer
to the electronic signal corresponding to acoustic noise (in an
audio system) or the electronic signal corresponding to the
(visual) noise commonly seen as 'snow' on a
degraded television
or video image. In signal
processing or computing it can be considered data without meaning; that is, data
that is not being used to transmit a
signal, but is simply produced as an unwanted by-product of
other activities. In Information
Theory, however, noise is still considered to be information. In a broader
sense, film grain or even advertisements in web pages can be
considered noise.
Noise can block, distort, or change the meaning
of a message in both human and electronic communication.
In many of these areas, the special case of
thermal
noise arises, which sets a fundamental lower limit to what can
be measured or signaled and is related to basic physical processes
at the molecular level described by well-established thermodynamics
considerations, some of which are expressible by relatively well
known simple formulae.
Acoustic noise
When speaking of noise in relation to sound, what is commonly meant is meaningless sound of greater than usual volume. Thus, a loud activity may be referred to as noisy. However, conversations of other people may be called noise for people not involved in any of them, and noise can be any unwanted sound such as the noise of dogs barking, neighbours playing loud music, road traffic sounds, chainsaws, or aircraft, spoiling the quiet of the countryside.For film sound theorists and practitioners at the
advent of talkies c.1928/1929, noise was non-speech sound or
natural sound and for many of them noise (especially asynchronous
use with image) was desired over the evils of dialogue synchronized
to moving image. The director and critic René Clair writing in 1929
makes a clear distinction between film dialogue and film noise and
very clearly suggests that noise can have meaning and be
interpreted: "...it is possible that an interpretation of noises
may have more of a future in it. Sound cartoons, using "real"
noises, seem to point to interesting possibilities" ('The Art of
Sound' (1929)). Alberto Cavalcanti uses noise as a synonym for
natural sound ('Sound in Films' (1939)) and as late as 1960,
Siegfried Kracauer was referring to noise as non-speech sound
('Dialogue and Sound' (1960)).
Audio noise
In audio, recording, and broadcast systems audio noise refers to the residual low level sound (usually hiss and hum) that is heard in quiet periods of programme.In audio
engineering it can also refer to the unwanted residual electronic
noise signal that gives rise to acoustic noise heard as 'hiss'.
This signal noise is commonly measured using A-weighting or
ITU-R 468 weighting
Electronic noise
Electronic noise exists in all circuits and devices as a result of thermal noise, also referred to as Johnson Noise. Semiconductor devices can also contribute flicker noise and generation-recombination noise. In any electronic circuit, there exist random variations in current or voltage caused by the random movement of the electrons carrying the current as they are jolted around by thermal energy. Lower temperature results in lower thermal noise. This same phenomenon limits the minimum signal level that any radio receiver can usefully respond to, because there will always be a small but significant amount of thermal noise arising in its input circuits. This is why radio telescopes, which search for very low levels of signal from stars, use front-end low-noise amplifier circuits, usually mounted on the aerial dish, and cooled with liquid nitrogen.See also
External links
wikiquote Sound- Guidelines for Community Noise, World Health Organization, 1999
- Aercoustics Engineering Limited. Consultants in Acoustics, Noise and Vibration
- Audio Measuring Articles - Electronics
- Mohr on Receiver Noise: Characterization, Insights & Surprises
- Fundamentals of Electrical Noise
- Noise voltage - Calculation and Measuring of Thermal Noise
- Noise at work European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA)
noise in Afrikaans: Geraas
noise in Catalan: Soroll
noise in Czech: Hluk
noise in Danish: Støj
noise in German: Geräusch
noise in Spanish: Ruido (sonido)
noise in Esperanto: Bruo
noise in French: Bruit
noise in Hebrew: רעש
noise in Indonesian: derau
noise in Italian: Rumore (acustica)
noise in Lithuanian: Triukšmas
noise in Dutch: Ruis (signaal)
noise in Japanese: ノイズ
noise in Norwegian: Støy
noise in Norwegian Nynorsk: Støy
noise in Polish: Szum (sygnał)
noise in Portuguese: Ruído
noise in Russian: Шум
noise in Simple English: Noise
noise in Slovak: Hluk
noise in Slovenian: Šum
noise in Finnish: Melu
noise in Swedish: Brus
noise in Ukrainian: Шум
noise in Chinese: 噪声
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ALGOL,
Aesopian language, Babel,
Bedlam let loose, COBOL,
EDP, FORTRAN, Greek, aimlessness, alphabetic
data, alphanumeric code, amplitude, angular data,
argot, assembler, atmospherics, auditory
effect, auditory phenomenon, babble, babel, ballyhoo, bawling, be noisy, bedlam, binary digit, binary
scale, binary system, bit,
black spot, blare,
blaring, blast, blasting, blind spot, bloom, blooping, bobbery, brawl, brouhaha, bruit about, bug, byte, cacophony, cant, channel, charivari, chirm, cipher, circulate, clamor, clangor, clap, clash, clatter, code, command pulses, commands, commotion, communication
explosion, communication theory, compiler, computer code,
computer language, computer program, confusion of tongues, control
signals, controlled quantity, correcting signals, crash, crawling, creeping, cryptogram, data, data retrieval, data storage,
dead letter, decoding,
definition, din, discord, discordance, dissonance, disturbance, donnybrook, double Dutch,
drift, drunken brawl,
dustup, electronic data
processing, emit a sound, emptiness, empty sound,
encoding, entropy, error, error signals, fade-out,
fading, feedback pulses,
feedback signals, film data, flap, flare, fracas, free-for-all, fringe
area, futility,
garble, ghost, gibberish, gift of tongues,
glossolalia,
gobbledygook,
granulation,
grid, hard shadow, harshness, hell, hell broke loose, hexadecimal
system, howl, hubbub, hue and cry, hullabaloo, image, inanity, information, information
explosion, information theory, input data, input quantity, insignificance, instructions, interference, jangle, jar, jargon, jumble, loud noise, loudness, machine language,
maffick, make a noise,
make a racket, make a sound, make an uproar, meaninglessness, mere
noise, message, multiple
image, multiple messages, noise and shouting, nonsensicality, nullity, numeric data, octal
system, oscillograph data, outcry, output data, output
quantity, pandemonium, phatic
communion, phone, picture, picture noise, picture
shifts, play, polar data,
punch-card data, purposelessness,
racket, rain, raise Cain, raise a clamor,
raise hell, raise the devil, raise the roof, random data, rattle, reception, rectangular data,
redundancy, reference
quantity, resound,
rhubarb, roar, rolling, row, ruckus, ruction, ruly English, rumble, rumbling, rumor, rumpus, scanning pattern,
scintillation,
scramble, secret
language, senselessness, shading, shindy, shivaree, signal, signals, single messages,
slang, snow, snowstorm, sonance, sound, sound intensity level,
sound propagation, sound wave, speak, speech sound, spread, static, thunder, thunderclap, thundering, tintamarre, tumult, turmoil, ultrasound, unmeaningness, unorganized
data, unsignificancy, uproar, visible-speech data,
whoop it up