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tolling

Tolling vs Gong - What's the difference?

tolling | gong | Related terms |


As verbs the difference between tolling and gong

is that tolling is present participle of lang=en while gong is to make the sound of a gong; to ring a gong.

As nouns the difference between tolling and gong

is that tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled while gong is a percussion instrument consisting of a metal disk that emits a sonorous sound when struck with a soft hammer.

Clangour vs Tolling - What's the difference?

clangour | tolling | Related terms |

Clangour is a related term of tolling.


As nouns the difference between clangour and tolling

is that clangour is (british|canadian) a loud, repeating clanging sound; a loud racket; a din while tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled.

As verbs the difference between clangour and tolling

is that clangour is (british|canadian) to make a clanging sound while tolling is .

Tolling vs Knell - What's the difference?

tolling | knell | Related terms |


As verbs the difference between tolling and knell

is that tolling is present participle of lang=en while knell is to ring a bell slowly, especially for a funeral; to toll.

As nouns the difference between tolling and knell

is that tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled while knell is the sound of a bell knelling; a toll.

Clank vs Tolling - What's the difference?

clank | tolling | Related terms |

Clank is a related term of tolling.


As nouns the difference between clank and tolling

is that clank is a loud, hard sound of metal hitting metal while tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled.

As verbs the difference between clank and tolling

is that clank is to make a clanking sound while tolling is .

Tolling vs Chime - What's the difference?

tolling | chime | Related terms |


As verbs the difference between tolling and chime

is that tolling is present participle of lang=en while chime is to make the sound of a chime.

As nouns the difference between tolling and chime

is that tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled while chime is a musical instrument producing a sound when struck, similar to a bell (e.g. a tubular metal bar) or actually a bell. Often used in the plural to refer to the set: the chimes.

Resounding vs Tolling - What's the difference?

resounding | tolling | Related terms |

Resounding is a related term of tolling.


As nouns the difference between resounding and tolling

is that resounding is the action of the verb to resound while tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled.

As verbs the difference between resounding and tolling

is that resounding is while tolling is .

As an adjective resounding

is having a deep, rich sound; mellow and resonant.

Wikidiffcom vs Tolling - What's the difference?

wikidiffcom | tolling |


As a verb tolling is

.

As a noun tolling is

the act by which a bell is tolled.

Clash vs Tolling - What's the difference?

clash | tolling | Related terms |

Clash is a related term of tolling.


As nouns the difference between clash and tolling

is that clash is (onomatopoeia) a loud sound while tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled.

As verbs the difference between clash and tolling

is that clash is to make a loud clash while tolling is .

Tolling vs Jangle - What's the difference?

tolling | jangle | Related terms |

Tolling is a related term of jangle.


As verbs the difference between tolling and jangle

is that tolling is while jangle is to make a rattling metallic sound.

As nouns the difference between tolling and jangle

is that tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled while jangle is a rattling metallic sound.

Din vs Tolling - What's the difference?

din | tolling | Related terms |


As nouns the difference between din and tolling

is that din is a loud noise; a cacophony or loud commotion while tolling is the act by which a bell is tolled.

As verbs the difference between din and tolling

is that din is to be filled with sound; to resound while tolling is present participle of lang=en.

As an acronym DIN

is deutsches Institut für Normung. (German Institute for Standardization.

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