| toni |
| Toni |
| tonic | (n) lime- or lemon-flavored carbonated water containing quinine, Syn. tonic water, quinine water |
| tonic | (n) (music) the first note of a diatonic scale, Syn. keynote |
| tonic | (n) a medicine that strengthens and invigorates, Syn. restorative |
| tonic | (adj) of or relating to or producing normal tone or tonus in muscles or tissue, Example: a tonic reflex; tonic muscle contraction |
| tonic | (adj) employing variations in pitch to distinguish meanings of otherwise similar words, Syn. tonal, Example: Chinese is a tonal language |
| tonic | (adj) used of syllables, Syn. accented, Ant. atonic, Example: a tonic syllables carries the main stress in a word |
| tonic | (adj) relating to or being the keynote of a major or minor scale, Example: tonic harmony |
| tonic accent | (n) emphasis that results from pitch rather than loudness, Syn. pitch accent |
| tonic epilepsy | (n) epilepsy in which the body is rigid during the seizure |
| tonicity | (n) the elastic tension of living muscles, arteries, etc. that facilitate response to stimuli, Syn. tone, tonus, Ant. atonicity, Example: the doctor tested my tonicity |
| Tonic | a. [ Cf. F. tonigue, Gr. &unr_;. See Tone. ]
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| Tonic | n. [ Cf. F. tonique, NL. tonicum. ]
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| Tonical | a. Tonic. [ R. ] Sir T. Browne. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tonicity | n. (Physiol.) The state of healthy tension or partial contraction of muscle fibers while at rest; tone; tonus. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tonight | adv. [ Prep. to + night ] |
| Tonight | n. The present or the coming night; the night after the present day. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tonite | n. [ Cf.L. tonare to thunder. ] An explosive compound; a preparation of gun cotton. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Tonika { f } | tonic [Add to Longdo] |
| Toningenieur { m }; Toningenieurin { f }; Tonmeister { m }; Tonmeisterin { f } | sound engineer [Add to Longdo] |
| tonisch { adj } | tonic [Add to Longdo] |