8 Free Number Sound Effects - Most Popular
Countdown, Talkie, in French

Countdown from 10 to 0, in french, in a walkie-talkie. UCS Category: VOXMale. Length: 00:12.
Countdown, in french

Countdown, by female vocal synthesis, from 20 to 0, in French. UCS Category: ROBTVox, VOXFem. Length: 00:21.
Key 1 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 1 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Tone, matching search #2

Telephone tone when searching a correspondent. This is a sound wave frequency of 440 Hz sinusoidal. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Key 6 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 6 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Key 8 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 8 key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Tone, matching search #1

Telephone tone when searching a correspondent. This is a sound wave frequency of 440 Hz sinusoidal, slightly clipped. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Key # in DTMF

The audible signal when the # key on a telephone is pressed, in "DTMF".
DTMF stands for "Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency." It is a technology used for tone dialing. Each key on a telephone keypad emits a unique combination of two sound frequencies (one low and one high), allowing the telephone system to easily detect which key has been pressed. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
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Search tips:
- Use simple keywords (1-2 words work best)
- Prefer English terms when possible
- Avoid typos and misspellings
- Try synonyms if you don't find results
- Use singular nouns (cat, not cats)
- Skip adjectives (cat not big cat)
- Avoid onomatopoeia and slang
- Don't describe what the sound is NOT
- Focus on the sound source (door, engine, bird)
- Use simple keywords (1-2 words work best)
- Prefer English terms when possible
- Avoid typos and misspellings
- Try synonyms if you don't find results
- Use singular nouns (cat, not cats)
- Skip adjectives (cat not big cat)
- Avoid onomatopoeia and slang
- Don't describe what the sound is NOT
- Focus on the sound source (door, engine, bird)