(Musik) Der von einem Sänger oder Instrumentalisten innerhalb einer Gruppe auszuführende Part.
ETYM Old Eng. vois, voys, Old Fren. vois, voiz, French voix, Latin vox, vocis, akin to Greek epos voice, Skr. vac to say, to speak, German erwähnen to mention. Related to Advocate, Advowson, Avouch, Convoke, Epic, Vocal, Vouch, Vowel.
1. The ability to speak; speech.
2. A means or agency by which something is expressed or communicated.
3. A sound suggestive of a vocal utterance.
4. The sound made by the vibration of vocal folds modified by the resonance of the vocal tract; SYN. vocalization.
5. Something suggestive of speech in being a medium of expression.
6. The distinctive quality or pitch or condition of a person's speech.
7. (Linguistics) The grammatical relation of the subject of a verb to the action that the verb denotes.
8. (Metonymy) A singer.
Sound produced through the mouth and by the passage of air between the vocal cords. In humans the sound is much amplified by the hollow sinuses of the face, and is modified by the movements of the lips, tongue, and cheeks.
ETYM Latin votum a vow, wish, will, from vovere, votum, to vow: cf. French vote. Related to Vow.
1. A body of voters who have the same interests.
2. A choice that is made by voting; SYN. ballot, voting, balloting.
3. The opinion of a group as determined by voting.
4. The total number of votes cast; SYN. voter turnout.
Expression of opinion by ballot, show of hands, or other means. For direct vote, see plebiscite and referendum. In parliamentary elections the results can be calculated in a number of ways.
In the us the voting age is 18. Conditions of residence vary from state to state and registration is required before election day. Until declared illegal 1965, literacy tests or a poll tax were often used to prevent black people from voting in the South. Voter registration and turnout in the us remains the lowest in the industrialized world. In 1988, 37% of potential voters failed to register and barely 50% voted in the presidential election, so that George Bush became president with the support of only 27% of the people. Voter registration increased in 1992, and record numbers of voters went to the polls.