ventriloquial
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From ventriloquy + -al.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]ventriloquial (comparative more ventriloquial, superlative most ventriloquial)
- Of or relating to ventriloquy.
- 1924, Ford Madox Ford, Some Do Not… (Parade's End), Penguin, published 2012, page 125:
- Her voice came, muffled, as if from the back of the top of his head. The ventriloquial effect was startling.
- 2001 June 1, Jay Kirk, “Preachin' Puppets”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
- Learn the ventriloquial alphabet: A C D E G H I J K L N O Q R S T U X Z
- Spoken to oneself.
- 1915, William J. Locke, Jaffery[2]:
- He threw half-crowns up into the air until they disappeared into the central blue, and then held a ventriloquial conversation, not in the best of taste, with the celestial spirits, who having caught the coins announced their intention of sticking to them.
- Of bird vocalisations, sounding as though emanating from a location other than where the vocalising bird is.
- 2005, Sean Dooley, The Big Twitch, Sydney: Allen and Unwin, page 246:
- We tried this a couple of times with no luck whatsoever, partly because whipbirds are notoriously ventriloquial and we could never agree on where the call was coming from.