variants or less commonly timber
: the quality given to a sound by its overtones: such as
a
: the resonance by which the ear recognizes and identifies a voiced speech sound
b
: the quality of tone distinctive of a particular singing voice or musical instrument

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Timber and Timbre

Timber and timbre are two similar-looking words that appear in very different contexts. At least most of the time.

Timber traces back to an Old English word initially meaning “house” or “building” that also came to mean “building material,” “wood,” and “trees” or “woods.” Timbers are large squared lengths of wood used for building a house or a boat. In British English, timber is also used as a synonym for lumber.

Metaphorical senses followed after centuries of the word’s use: the word used for building material became a word meaning “material” or “stuff” in general (“it’s best-seller timber”) and came also to refer to the qualities of character, experience, or intellect (“managerial timber”).

And, of course, there’s also the interjectional use of “timber!” as a cry to warn of a falling tree; the fact that most people know this despite few of them ever having deployed the word in such a situation is almost certainly due to cartoons.

Timbre is French in origin, which is apparent in its pronunciation: it is often pronounced \TAM-ber\ and, with a more French-influenced second syllable, \TAM-bruh\. The French ancestor of timbre was borrowed at three different times into English, each time with a different meaning, each time reflecting the evolution that the word had made in French.

The first two meanings timbre had in English (it referred to a kind of drum and to the crest on a coat of arms) are now too obscure for entry in this dictionary, but its third meaning survives. Timbre in modern English generally refers to the quality of a sound made by a particular voice or musical instrument; timbre is useful in being distinct from pitch, intensity, and loudness as a descriptor of sound.

But because English is rarely simple about such things, we have also these facts: timber is listed as a variant spelling of timbre. And timbre may also be correctly pronounced just like timber as \TIM-ber\. And the spelling of timber was unsettled for many years; it was sometimes spelled tymmer, tymber, and, yes, timbre. The messy overlapping of these similar words is coincidental: the consequence of the intersection of the different cultures and languages that left their traces on English.

Examples of timbre in a Sentence

the timbre of his voice
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Listen for unnatural intonation or odd audio artifacts in voices—a slight robotic timbre or strange pauses could indicate a synthesized voice. Alex Vakulov, Forbes, 9 Mar. 2025 Busoni favored synthesis for the sake of possibility, with an emphasis on orchestration, timbre and spatialization. Joshua Barone, New York Times, 24 Dec. 2024 Tops among them is T.J. Wilkins, who lends Barack Obama a smoky timbre as seductive as the patented sounds of Teddy Pendergrass and Marvin Gaye. Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times, 1 Mar. 2025 In the future, Shapiro said, the software will be able to scrape a user’s Spotify history to personalize the timbre of the music. IEEE Spectrum, 14 Mar. 2019 See All Example Sentences for timbre

Word History

Etymology

French, from Middle French, bell struck by a hammer, from Old French, drum, from Middle Greek tymbanon kettledrum, from Greek tympanon — more at tympanum

First Known Use

1845, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of timbre was in 1845

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Cite this Entry

“Timbre.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/timbre. Accessed 25 Mar. 2025.

Kids Definition

: the quality of a sound or musical tone determined by its overtones and different for each voice or instrument

Medical Definition

timbre

noun
tim·​bre
: the quality given to a sound by its overtones: as
a
: the resonance by which the ear recognizes and identifies a voiced speech sound
b
: the quality of tone distinctive of a particular singing voice or musical instrument

More from Merriam-Webster on timbre

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