With its negative prefix in-, inaudible means the opposite of audible. What's clearly audible to you may be inaudible to your elderly grandfather. Modern spy technology can turn inaudible conversations into audible ones with the use of high-powered directional microphones, so if you think you're being spied on, make sure there's a lot of other noise around you. And if you don't want everyone around you to know you're bored, keep your sighs inaudible.
Examples of inaudible in a Sentence
She spoke so quietly that she was almost inaudible.
The sound is inaudible to humans but can be heard by dogs.
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Those enhancements are definitely what carries this film forward, as the actual dialogue between characters can be sparse, and even inaudible at times.—Devonne Goode, Parents, 18 Apr. 2025 Johnson exclaimed while recoiling, seemingly followed by inaudible expletives.—Elizabeth Crisp, The Hill, 8 Apr. 2025 Each of the waves is inaudible to the human ear if encountered on its own.—Ben Coxworth, New Atlas, 18 Mar. 2025 Viewers of the Liberty Ball performance had commented on technical issues that plagued Billy Ray’s set, leaving his guitar inaudible and forcing him to perform a cappella.—Jessica Lynch, Billboard, 23 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for inaudible
Word History
Etymology
Late Latin inaudibilis, from Latin in- + Late Latin audibilis audible
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