mute
mute / myoōt/ • adj. 1. refraining from speech or temporarily speechless: Irene, the talkative one, was now mute. ∎ not expressed in speech: she gazed at him in mute appeal. ∎ characterized by an absence of sound; quiet: the great church was mute and dark. ∎ dated, chiefly offens. (of a person) without the power of speech.2. (of a letter) not pronounced: mute e is generally dropped before suffixes beginning with a vowel.• n. 1. date, usu. offens. a person without the power of speech. ∎ hist. (in some Asian countries) a servant who was deprived of the power of speech. ∎ hist. an actor in a dumbshow. ∎ hist. a professional attendant or mourner at a funeral.2. a device that softens the sound (and typically alters the tone) of a musical instrument, in particular: ∎ a clamp placed over the bridge of a stringed instrument to deaden the resonance without affecting the vibration of the strings. ∎ a pad or cone placed in the opening of a brass or other wind instrument.3. a device on a television, telephone, or other appliance that temporarily turns off the sound: she put the remote on mute.• v. [tr.] 1. (often be muted) deaden, muffle, or soften the sound of: her footsteps were muted by the thick carpet. ∎ muffle the sound of (a musical instrument), esp. by the use of a mute. ∎ fig. reduce the strength or intensity of: his professional contentment was muted by personal sadness.2. turn off (the sound on a television, telephone, or other appliance) by activating the mute: he turns the set on, mutes the sound, but flicks through the channels.DERIVATIVES: mute·ly adv.mute·ness n.
mute
mute
Hence vb. XIX.