English language

How to pronounce fadeout in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Synonyms receding
Type of disappearance
Derivation fade out
Type Words
Type of disturbance, interference, noise

Examples of fadeout

fadeout
The zombie drama delivers the dramatic goods after last week's wrenching fadeout.
From the orlandosentinel.com
No fadeout can come fast enough to please the cigarette's most zealous opponents.
From the time.com
It is a fadeout that engagingly spoofs the fadeout as a gimmick for ending pop records.
From the time.com
At the fadeout, Wayne has been pinked in the knee, Mitchum in the thigh.
From the time.com
As he runs into the fadeout, a passing hippie asks him where he is going.
From the time.com
Ben is too flawed for a happy ending, but by the fadeout we can't help wishing him well.
From the freep.com
Miami's ACC title trumped Indiana's fadeout in the Big Ten tournament.
From the sacbee.com
From first fade-in to final fadeout, Rock more than lives up to his name.
From the time.com
It is the viewers who must proceed, flinch by flinch, to the fadeout.
From the time.com
More examples
  • Receding: a slow or gradual disappearance
  • A gradual temporary loss of a transmitted signal due to electrical disturbances
  • Fadeout (1970) is a mystery novel by American crime writer Joseph Hansen, and the first to feature his popular character Dave Brandstetter, an openly gay detective.
  • (Fade-outs) The practice of ending a shot by progressively darkening the image until it becomes pure black. This is usually, though not exclusively, used as a kind of visual 'full stop', signifying that the scene in question has finished. ...
  • A gradual decrease in a setting (such as volume) that begins at a specified value and reaches zero in a certain length of time.
  • A gradual transition from full exposure to complete black.
  • A shot that ends by changing from the proper exposure to an extreme under or over exposure.
  • The opposite of a fade-in.
  • Gradually decreasing the loudness of a signal level to silence (or to "black" in video).