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Dictionary
to tuning
noun
A melody.
Exact(58)
There's a cheerfully experimental approach to tuning.
Attention will turn instead to tuning some underperforming bits of the business.
Voters are accustomed to tuning out during July and August, experts said.
The difference is those instances occur often enough that fans become accustomed to tuning in earlier or later than usual.
Us teachers are just as prone to tuning out of a "lecture" and contemplating lunch instead as any pupil.
RACING at a high-altitude track like Bandimere Raceway, outside of Denver, can be maddening for competitors used to tuning their engines for sea-level conditions.
"I didn't leave the putting green until 8 56," Woods said, alluding to tuning his game with his swing guru, Butch Harmon.
Its strings are hitched to tuning pegs and to a tailpiece passing over a bridge held in place by the pressure of the strings.
Dearth loves Ocho Cinco's celebrations, all the Jets do, and they admit to tuning in for what place-kicker Mike Nugent calls "the whole 'What did Chad do this week?' moment".
Rosalbina Bernal, 78, who heard messages from her children and grandchildren during the six weeks she spent in captivity earlier this year, said she looked forward to tuning her radio and listening to what her relatives had to say.
A lot more engineering goes into generating sonic clarity, including thousands of hours devoted to tuning the system to the peculiarities of a car's cabin, with all of its reflective glass, unusual angles and sound eating seats.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com