mic
See also: Appendix:Variations of "mic"
Translingual
English
Etymology
Abbreviation of microphone. Attested since 1961.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmaɪk/
- Rhymes: -aɪk
Noun
mic (plural mics)
- Alternative form of mike (“microphone”)
- 1987, Eric B. & Rakim, I Know You Got Soul:
- Picture a mic, the stage is empty
A beat like this might tempt me
To pose, show my rings and my fat gold chain
Grab the mic like I'm on Soul Train
Derived terms
Verb
mic (third-person singular simple present mics, present participle micing or mic'ing, simple past and past participle miced or mic'd or mic'ed)
- Alternative form of mike
- If we add the drum kit, we'll have to mic the orchestra.
- 2002, Darren Brown with Jackie Bushman, Hunting Trophy Whitetails, page 167:
- At 11:00 am, Doug mics up with me on the radio, and I advise him to go back to camp to get a quad, that we have a monster down.
- 2003, Sleazegrinder, Gigs from Hell: True Tales of Rock and Roll Gone Wrong, page 104:
- Imagine playing a venue the size of an aircraft hangar without your tiny amps miced up through the PA!
- 2006, Sarah Davis with Dave Laing, The guerilla guide to the music business, page 164:
- This lacks the gut-punch of miced-up bass but hopefully the player can rise to the challenge and give his or her take extra energy to make up for it.
- 2007, Trev Wilkins, Access all areas: a real world guide to gigging and touring, page 101:
- Dynamics are used extensively for vocals, drums, and 'micing up' amplifiers such as guitar amps but they can be used for almost any application.
- 2009, Francis Rumsey with Tim McCormick, Sound and Recording, page 51:
- but it is extremely useful in applications such as vocals, drums, and the micing-up of guitar amplifiers.
Derived terms
References
- “On Language: How Should ‘Microphone’ be Abbreviated?”, in New York Times, 2010 July 29
Irish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mʲɪc/
Megleno-Romanian
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *miccus, from Ancient Greek μῑκκός (mīkkós, “small”), variant of μικρός (mikrós). Compare Romanian mic, Aromanian njic.
Antonyms
Middle Irish
Romanian
Alternative forms
- мик (mic) — post-1930s Cyrillic spelling
Etymology
Inherited from Vulgar Latin *miccus, from Ancient Greek μῑκκός (mīkkós, “small”), variant of μικρός (mikrós). Compare Aromanian njic. Cf. also Sicilian nicu, Calabrian Neapolitan miccu, Corsican micca, also Italian miccino. May also be related to Latin mīca (“crumb”); compare mică.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mik/
Audio (file) Audio: (file) - Rhymes: -ik
Declension
Declension
Scottish Gaelic
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /miʰkʲ/
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