wave-form
Americannoun
Etymology
Origin of wave-form
First recorded in 1840–50
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Yet the ear, or the ear and the brain together, can resolve this complicated wave-form into its constituents, and this is done more easily if we listen to the sound with resonators, the pitch of which corresponds, or nearly corresponds, to the frequencies of the partials.
From Project Gutenberg
It is then possible to see whether the "wave-form" of the current is what it ought to be.
From Project Gutenberg
Morrow's composition, a nervy layering of strings, seems to whisper and sigh like the wind at a broken window, and Rachel Shipp's wave-form lighting sees the dancers alternately picked out in clear, watery silver and dissolving into a wash of black.
From The Guardian
It has to do with the frequency and the wave-form of the noise coming out of the exhaust.
From Time Magazine Archive
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For he imagined his impulses, emotions, tendencies all taking this wave-form, sweeping his moods up to a certain point, then dropping back into his centre—the Sea, he called it— which held steady below all temporary fluctuations—only to form once more and happen all over again.
From Project Gutenberg
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.