Need another word that means the same as “loudness”? Find 9 synonyms and 30 related words for “loudness” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Loudness” are: brashness, flashiness, garishness, gaudiness, glitz, meretriciousness, tawdriness, intensity, volume
Loudness as a Noun
Definitions of "Loudness" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “loudness” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- Tasteless showiness.
- The magnitude of sound (usually in a specified direction.
Synonyms of "Loudness" as a noun (9 Words)
brashness | The trait of being rash and hasty. |
flashiness | Tasteless showiness. |
garishness | Tasteless showiness. |
gaudiness | Tasteless showiness. |
glitz | Extravagant but superficial display. The glitz and sophisticated night life of Ibiza. |
intensity | Chromatic purity: freedom from dilution with white and hence vivid in hue. The pain grew in intensity. |
meretriciousness | An appearance of truth that is false or deceptive; seeming plausibility. |
tawdriness | Tasteless showiness. |
volume | An amount or quantity of something, especially when great. A biography of George Bernard Shaw in three volumes. |
Associations of "Loudness" (30 Words)
accent | Put stress on utter with an accent. A strong American accent. |
ardor | Intense feeling of love. They were imbued with a revolutionary ardor. |
auditory | Of or relating to the process of hearing. The auditory nerves. |
brawn | Possessing muscular strength. Pork brawn. |
decibel | (in general use) a degree of loudness. His voice went up several decibels. |
dysphonia | Speech disorder attributable to a disorder of phonation. |
emphatic | An emphatic consonant. An emphatic word. |
febrile | Of or relating to or characterized by fever. A febrile illness. |
feverish | Characterized by or displaying a frenetic excitement or energy. Worked at a feverish pace. |
forte | A thing at which someone excels. Small talk was not his forte. |
heighten | Become more extreme. The tension heightened. |
husky | (of a person) big and strong. Clothing sizes for husky boys. |
infrasonic | Having frequencies below those of audible sound. |
intensity | The amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation. Hydrothermal processes of low intensity. |
loud | Used chiefly as a direction or description in music loud with force. His voice is loud and challenging. |
might | Used in reported speech, to express possibility or permission. You might have told me. |
muscle | A muscle or muscles when well developed or prominently visible under the skin. The calf muscle. |
noise | Make a lot of noise. During the firework display that ended the gala the noise reached 98 decibels. |
octave | Each of the two notes at the extremes of an octave. |
pressure | To cause to do through pressure or necessity by physical moral or intellectual means. Gas can be fed to the turbines at a pressure of around 250 psi. |
rhapsodize | Say (something) with great enthusiasm. He began to rhapsodize about Gaby s beauty and charm. |
sinew | A piece of tough fibrous tissue uniting muscle to bone; a tendon or ligament. The sinews of government. |
sonic | (of speed) having or caused by speed approximately equal to that of sound in air at sea level. A sonic wave. |
sound | The distinctive quality of the music of a particular composer or performer or of the sound produced by a particular instrument. The beautiful sound of music. |
static | Concerned with or producing or caused by static electricity. The reception was going sour breaking up into static. |
strength | The condition of financial success. The wind had markedly increased in strength. |
stress | Put stress on utter with an accent. She endured the stresses and strains of life. |
tendinous | Consisting of or resembling tendons. A band of muscular and tendinous fibres. |
voice | The melody carried by a particular voice or instrument in polyphonic music. He is unable to voice the g sound. |
zeal | A feeling of strong eagerness (usually in favor of a person or cause. He felt a kind of religious zeal. |