boomy
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -uːmi
Adjective
[edit]boomy (comparative boomier, superlative boomiest)
- Characterized by heavy bass sounds.
- 1999, Jon Chappell, The Recording Guitarist: A Guide for Home and Studio[1], page 54:
- If you're miking a boomy acoustic, the proximity effect can work against you, but having it on a thin-sounding arch-top can work for you.
- 2007, Gary Gottlieb, Shaping Sound in the Studio and Beyond: Audio Aesthetics and Technology[2], page 250:
- As an airliner approaches you from a long way off, the sound is first heard as rumble, and, as it get closer and then directly overhead, the sound becomes increasingly boomier.
- 2008 February 26, Allan Kozinn, “In Precise Movements, a Russian Sense of Drama”, in New York Times[3]:
- For the third movement Mr. Safronov had Schubert’s piano sketch as a guide, but his big, boomy orchestration, with a gentle pastoral trio at its core, sounded jarring after the first two movements.
- Of or pertaining to a financial boom, resources boom, baby boom, etc.
- c. 1880s, Rudyard Kipling, quoted in 1992, John William Reps, The Making of Urban America: A History of City Planning in the United States, page 412,
- Tacoma was literally staggering under a boom of the boomiest. I do not quite remember what her natural resources were supposed to be, […] .
- 1903, Mining Magazine: An International Monthly Review of Current Progress in Mining and Metallurgy, volume 7, page 132:
- A larger amount of capital is seeking investment than in the boomiest of boom times, yet there is no boom now.
- 1979, Business Week, numbers 2592-2600, page 72:
- Even in boomier times, the flexibility that leasing provides has become increasingly important to companies.
- c. 1880s, Rudyard Kipling, quoted in 1992, John William Reps, The Making of Urban America: A History of City Planning in the United States, page 412,