twang
twang / twang/ • n. a strong ringing sound such as that made by the plucked string of a musical instrument or a released bowstring. ∎ a nasal or other distinctive manner of pronunciation or intonation characteristic of the speech of an individual, area, or country: an American twang.• v. make or cause to make such a sound: [intr.] a spring twanged beneath him. ∎ [tr.] play (an instrument) in such a way as to produce such sounds: some old men were twanging banjos. ∎ [tr.] utter (something) with a nasal twang: the announcer was twanging out all the details.DERIVATIVES: twang·y adj.
TWANG
TWANG.
1. Also nasal twang. A NASAL way of speaking attributed to English Puritans in the 16/17c: ‘To make incoherent Stuff (seasoned with Twang and Tautology) pass for high Rhetorick’ ( Robert South, Sermons, 1661).
2. A distinctive ACCENT or voice quality: ‘You talk very good English, but you have a mighty Twang of the foreigner’ ( Farquhar, The Beaux' Stratagem, 1707). See CHEE-CHEE ENGLISH.
1. Also nasal twang. A NASAL way of speaking attributed to English Puritans in the 16/17c: ‘To make incoherent Stuff (seasoned with Twang and Tautology) pass for high Rhetorick’ ( Robert South, Sermons, 1661).
2. A distinctive ACCENT or voice quality: ‘You talk very good English, but you have a mighty Twang of the foreigner’ ( Farquhar, The Beaux' Stratagem, 1707). See CHEE-CHEE ENGLISH.
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twang