From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishtwangtwang1 /twæŋ/ noun [countable usually singular] 1 SPEAK A LANGUAGEa quality in the way someone speaks, produced when the air used to speak passes through their nose as well as their mouth a nasal twang Her voice had a slight Australian twang.2 SOUNDa quick ringing sound like the one made by pulling a very tight wire and then suddenly letting it go
Examples from the Corpus
twang• Not a snap or a twang, but the hamstring had gone for the second time in successive matches.• The wire parted with a twang.• That coppery twang on the emergency cord that hangs tight in his gut.• a high-pitched Midwestern twang• Cameron wanted to give him a computer, but Alexia prevailed and soon the house was full of twangs and scales again.• Mulcahey heard the twang of banjos, a chorus of voices.• Whether Southern drawl or Mid-West twang, it was all the same to me.twangtwang2 verb [intransitive, transitive] SOUNDif you twang something or if it twangs, it makes a quick ringing sound by being pulled and then suddenly let go She twanged the guitar strings.→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
twang• The slightest movement caused them to twang and reverberate through the silent apartment.Origin twang (1500-1600) From the sound