Table of Contents
2. resonator
noun. a hollow chamber whose dimensions allow the resonant oscillation of electromagnetic or acoustic waves.
Antonyms
3. resonator
noun. an electrical circuit that combines capacitance and inductance in such a way that a periodic electric oscillation will reach maximum amplitude.
Antonyms
4. cavity
noun. ['ˈkævəti'] a sizeable hole (usually in the ground).
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- cavitas (Latin)
- cavus (Latin)
5. cavity
noun. ['ˈkævəti'] (anatomy) a natural hollow or sinus within the body.
Synonyms
- sinus
- tympanum
- nasopharynx
- abdominal cavity
- ventricle
- vestibule
- blastocoel
- axilla
- oropharynx
- laryngopharynx
- tympanic cavity
- greater peritoneal sac
- uterine cavity
- pleural cavity
- cranial orbit
- buccal cavity
- omental bursa
- pelvic cavity
- cleavage cavity
- physical structure
- vacuole
- chamber
- cecum
- cranial cavity
- body structure
- peritoneal cavity
- archenteron
- renal pelvis
- lesser peritoneal cavity
- blastocoele
- segmentation cavity
- lumen
- bodily cavity
- fossa
- cloaca
- intracranial cavity
- pulp cavity
- blind gut
- pit
- caecum
- mediastinum
- structure
- complex body part
- eye socket
- nasal cavity
- locule
- coelom
- loculus
- middle ear
- pelvis
- organic structure
- antrum
- pericardial cavity
- body
- bursa omentalis
- amniotic cavity
- tubular cavity
- anatomical structure
- abdomen
- celoma
- blastocele
- pericardial space
- socket
- orbital cavity
- axillary cavity
- celom
- thoracic cavity
- orbit
- cavum
- axillary fossa
- chest cavity
- bodily structure
- armpit
Antonyms
Etymology
- cavitas (Latin)
- cavus (Latin)
6. cavity
noun. ['ˈkævəti'] space that is surrounded by something.
Antonyms
Etymology
- cavitas (Latin)
- cavus (Latin)
7. cavity
noun. ['ˈkævəti'] soft decayed area in a tooth; progressive decay can lead to the death of a tooth.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- cavitas (Latin)
- cavus (Latin)
Sentences with cavity-resonator
1. Noun Phrase
Since then, physicists have used observations of the stars, toothed wheels, rotating mirrors, radio interferometers, cavity resonators and lasers to refine the measurement.
2. Noun Phrase
One such technique is the cavity resonator method, which uses a device that generates electric current.
3. Noun Phrase
In 1950, British physicists Louis Essen and A.C. Gordon-Smith used a cavity resonator to calculate the speed of light by measuring its wavelength and frequency.