[
US
/ˈɑdəbəɫ/
]
[ UK /ˈɔːdəbəl/ ]
[ UK /ˈɔːdəbəl/ ]
NOUN
- a football play is changed orally after both teams have assumed their positions at the line of scrimmage
ADJECTIVE
-
heard or perceptible by the ear
he spoke in an audible whisper
How To Use audible In A Sentence
- Because you're right, there is a great deal of sort of barely covered, sort of littling to nourish kind of (INAUDIBLE) kind of nationalism. CNN Transcript Nov 9, 2007
- I used to be a diabetologist at the Johns (INAUDIBLE) Clinic before I went into mind-body medicine. CNN Transcript Jun 16, 2006
- The sounds of the phoney election war are already dimly audible. Times, Sunday Times
- If they get too close to a buried cable, they get an audible warning. Times, Sunday Times
- His head was hidden under a blue blanket, but deep sighs were audible. Times, Sunday Times
- All she could hear was the barely audible swoosh of water going in and out the windows.
- And, like any good schoolteacher, she modulates her voice to great effect; during moments of particular drama, she is known for speaking to juries in a barely audible whisper.
- This wasn't easy when his cigar, speech impediment and habit of walking about conspired to make him inaudible. Times, Sunday Times
- There was some barely audible whispering and my boss spoke again, only this time in a deeper voice.
- Taking a deep breath he blew a series of inaudible slow notes, making slight adjustments to the slide after each one.