okay so I might be wrong, but I beleive “monitor” is used for any speaker thaf repeats the input back to the person performing. I used to work the sound board at a church, and theres little speakers by where the choir sings so they can hear themselves better.
My audio interface also has a “monitor” button next to the xlr inputs, which sends the mic input back into the outputs so I can hear myself talk
Wait, that’s a monitor?
In German it’s called a Wasserwerfer or Monitor. I found no exact translation.
It’s “water cannon” in English.
A monitor is usually this:
Although sound people will call big stage speakers or studio headphones “monitors” for some audiophilic reason.
Monitor is a perfectly acceptable technical term in this case.
okay so I might be wrong, but I beleive “monitor” is used for any speaker thaf repeats the input back to the person performing. I used to work the sound board at a church, and theres little speakers by where the choir sings so they can hear themselves better.
My audio interface also has a “monitor” button next to the xlr inputs, which sends the mic input back into the outputs so I can hear myself talk
A kind of lizard (among other things).
It’s called that in German firefighting