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vocable
[voh-kuh-buhl]
noun
a word; term; name.
a word considered only as a combination of certain sounds or letters, without regard to meaning.
adjective
capable of being spoken.
vocable
/ ˈəʊəə /
noun
any word, either written or spoken, regarded simply as a sequence of letters or spoken sounds, irrespective of its meaning
a vocal sound; vowel
adjective
capable of being uttered
Other Word Forms
- vocably adverb
- nonvocable adjective
- unvocable adjective
- ˈdz adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of vocable1
Word History and Origins
Origin of vocable1
Example Sentences
The birds’ phrasings are both melodic and mechanical, cyclical and spontaneous, like the wordless vocables of scat singers.
Some of the songs have lyrics that can be translated into words but many others include what are called vocables - sounds that don’t have meanings like words do.
There is an immense amount of positive knowledge to be acquired between the ages of ten and eighteen—rules of grammar, strings of vocables, dates, names of towns, rivers, and mountains, mathematical formulas, &c.
It is a pluralistic world now, and lordly Intuition—a dangerous vocable—rules over mere mental processes.
The philanthropic spectator suffers from no scarcity of words to express his particular attitude if he desires to do so; why then should he not leave socialists the enjoyment of their vocable?
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