0 the sounds from the mouth made in speaking or singing -- stemme
1 the voice regarded as the means of expressing opinion -- stemme
the voice of reason/conscience.
The voice of the people should not be ignored
2 to express (feelings etc) -- give udtryk for
He voiced the discontent of the whole group.
3 to produce the sound of (especially a consonant) with a vibration of the vocal cords as well as with the breath -- udtale
‘Th’ should be voiced in ‘this’ but not in ‘think’.
Elderly people's accounts of home care rationing : missing voices in longterm care policy debates.
On more than one occasion, he voices doubts regarding the bourgeois' fitness for political subjection.
He goes on to include the voice's capacity to move the listener within this framework of physical gesture.
The orthodox gold supporters attained a resumption of convertibility, but the voices for employment and against deflation attained a significant devaluation from the pre-war parity.
In this phenomenon a nasal stop induces nasalisation of a liquid or voiced stop occurring anywhere to its right in the stem.
Like quotation marks, direct quotation is a means through which the journalist indexes other voices and positions himself or herself with respect to those voices.
What all of these locations have in common is the presence of street vendors' voices.
Eventually, the two voices intertwine more loosely in overlapping solo statements.