aftersound

Noun

 * 1) A sound that persists or remains audible after its source has ceased to produce it; the perception of such a sound.
 * 2)  The second, slower phase of decay in the sound made by a piano string when it is struck.
 * 3)  A weaker sound that immediately follows a more salient one, such as the second, less prominent vowel sound in a falling diphthong.
 * 4) * 1881,, “The simple sounds of all the living Slavonic languages compared with those of the principal Neo-Latin and Germano-Scandinavian Tongues,” Transactions of the , 1880-1881, p.377,
 * In English I cannot hear the sound of Italian o chiuso, but only that of (o5) followed by an aftersound, as in home, or without this aftersound, as in more.
 * 1)  The second, slower phase of decay in the sound made by a piano string when it is struck.
 * 2)  A weaker sound that immediately follows a more salient one, such as the second, less prominent vowel sound in a falling diphthong.
 * 3) * 1881,, “The simple sounds of all the living Slavonic languages compared with those of the principal Neo-Latin and Germano-Scandinavian Tongues,” Transactions of the , 1880-1881, p.377,
 * In English I cannot hear the sound of Italian o chiuso, but only that of (o5) followed by an aftersound, as in home, or without this aftersound, as in more.
 * 1)  A weaker sound that immediately follows a more salient one, such as the second, less prominent vowel sound in a falling diphthong.
 * 2) * 1881,, “The simple sounds of all the living Slavonic languages compared with those of the principal Neo-Latin and Germano-Scandinavian Tongues,” Transactions of the , 1880-1881, p.377,
 * In English I cannot hear the sound of Italian o chiuso, but only that of (o5) followed by an aftersound, as in home, or without this aftersound, as in more.
 * In English I cannot hear the sound of Italian o chiuso, but only that of (o5) followed by an aftersound, as in home, or without this aftersound, as in more.