overtone

overtone
overtone
tr['əʊvətəʊn]
noun
1 insinuación nombre femenino, connotación nombre femenino
the play has political overtones la obra tiene connotaciones políticas
overtone ['o:vər.to:n] n
1) : armónico m (en música)
2) hint, suggestion: tinte m, insinuación f
overtone
n.
armónico (Sonido) (FIS, MUS) s.m.
noun (suggestion, hint) (usu pl) dejo m, deje m (Esp)

the film had clear political overtones — la película tenía un claro trasfondo político

['ǝʊvǝtǝʊn]
N
1) (=hint, element)

a speech with a hostile overtone — un discurso con cierto tono hostil

the strike has political overtones — la huelga tiene un trasfondo político

a play with religious overtones — una obra con connotaciones religiosas

a wine with citrus overtones — un vino con un cierto sabor cítrico

2) (=connotation) [of word, phrase] connotación f
3) (=insinuation) insinuación f

his behaviour was full of sexual overtones — no paraba de insinuarse

4) (Mus) armónico m
* * *
noun (suggestion, hint) (usu pl) dejo m, deje m (Esp)

the film had clear political overtones — la película tenía un claro trasfondo político


English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • overtone — overtone, undertone Both words denote an extra layer of meaning or significance seen in a word or statement. An overtone, which is also commonly used in the plural overtones, suggests subtle additional meaning (and corresponds roughly to the… …   Modern English usage

  • Overtone — O ver*tone , n. [A translation of G. oberton. See {Over}, {Tone}.] (Mus.) One of the harmonics faintly heard with and at a higher frequency than a fundamental tone as it dies away, produced by some aliquot portion of the vibrating sting or column …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • overtone — index implication (inference), innuendo, intimation, suggestion Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • overtone — (n.) 1867, in literal sense, from OVER (Cf. over) + TONE (Cf. tone) (n.); a loan translation of Ger. Oberton, first used by German physicist Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821 1894) as a contraction of Overpartialton upper partial tone …   Etymology dictionary

  • overtone — [n] implication, hint association, connotation, flavor, inference, innuendo, intimation, meaning, nuance, sense, suggestion, tone, undercurrent, undertone; concept 278 …   New thesaurus

  • overtone — ► NOUN 1) a musical tone which is a part of the harmonic series above a fundamental note, and may be heard with it. 2) a subtle or subsidiary quality, implication, or connotation …   English terms dictionary

  • overtone — [ō′vər tōn΄] n. [transl. of Ger oberton, contr. < oberpartialton, upper partial tone] 1. Acoustics Music any of the attendant higher tones heard with a fundamental tone produced by the vibration of a given string or column of air, having a… …   English World dictionary

  • Overtone — Overtones redirects here. For other uses, see Overtones (disambiguation). An overtone is any frequency higher than the fundamental frequency of a sound. The fundamental and the overtones together are called partials. Harmonics are partials whose… …   Wikipedia

  • overtone — UK [ˈəʊvə(r)ˌtəʊn] / US [ˈoʊvərˌtoʊn] noun [countable] Word forms overtone : singular overtone plural overtones a quality or feature that is noticeable but not obvious a book with political overtones …   English dictionary

  • overtone — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ strong ▪ a play with strong religious overtones ▪ serious ▪ negative ▪ The word ‘cheap’ has negative overtones …   Collocations dictionary

  • overtone — virštonis statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. higher harmonic; overtone vok. Oberton, m rus. обертон, m pranc. note harmonique, f; son harmonique, m …   Fizikos terminų žodynas

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