"Vibrational" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Relating to vibrations, often referring to the energy or frequency at which something vibrates. Can also describe a feeling or atmosphere of excitement, energy, or activity.
To vibrate means to move quickly back and forth, vibrating or shaking, often with a regular, oscillating motion. This can be seen or felt in various situations, such as: <br><br>1. Physical movement: Something that vibrates physically, for example, a guitar string, a mobile phone, or an engine.<br>2. Sensory experience: A feeling of vibration, for instance, when you feel a buzz in your phone or the rumble of a train.<br><br>The word 'vibrate' can also imply something transmits energy or signals through vibrations.
Vibratile refers to something or someone that vibrates, or tends to vibrate. It can also describe something that is full of energy and vitality, or that is highly variable or fluctuating.
Vibratility is not a word in English language. However, the word "vibrancy" is related to "vibratility" and means:<br><br>(n.) Brightness and attractiveness; liveliness.<br><br>Example sentence: "The city's vibrancy made it an exciting place to visit."
A very rare word!<br><br>A vibratiuncle is a bumblebee that is hived in the same bee family (i.e., an Apian cultivar) that is generally not of the species being primarily bred.
Vibrators can refer to several things, but the common meanings are:<br><br>1. Vibrations: oscillations or waves that transfer energy through a medium, often in the form of sound or mechanical motion.<br>2. Electromechanical devices: also known as handheld personal massagers, used for sexual pleasure or stimulation, usually by individuals.<br>3. Seismic instruments: devices that detect and measure vibrations in the Earth's surface, often used in seismology to study earthquakes and structure of the Earth.<br><br>It's worth noting that the term has multiple contexts and connotations, and not all uses of the term are related to each other.
Vibrionaceae is a family of curved, Gram-negative bacteria in the class Gammaproteobacteria. They are rod-shaped bacteria, usually motile by a polar flagellum. They are generally facultative anaerobes or microaerophiles, but some species can be strictly anaerobic or aerobic.<br><br>Members of this family are often found in marine environments, brackish water, and mud flats. However, some species of Vibrio can also live in freshwater, estuaries, salterns and gastrointestinal tracts of animals.<br><br>The genus name "Vibrio" was given by Émile Duval in 1869 and it comes from the Latin word for "a vibration", in reference to the interval gallina's egg masses egg stages swing with so little.