27 Free Tonalite Sound Effects - Most Popular
Tone, Ringback Tone #1

Telephone tone when the phone rings in Europe. This is a sound wave frequency of 440 Hz sinusoidal. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:40.
Answering Machine Beep

Telephone beep of an answering machine. This is a sound wave of 825 Hz sinusoidal frequency. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:01.
Dial Tone, Call Ends

Three beeps emitted by a telephone when the caller hung up. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:02.
Evacuation Alarm #1

Sound of the evacuation siren in a concert hall, triggered by an electrical issue. Each such sequence is normally interspersed with a message in French and English, urging people to leave the building, but I have removed it. UCS Category: ALRMElec. Length: 00:05.
Tone, Ringback Tone #3

Telephone tone when the phone rings, in the United States and Canada. These are two sound waves of frequencies 440 Hz and 480 Hz sinusoidal. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:30.
French Dial Tone: Call

The tone of a telephone when calling my own mobile number. This is called Dual Tone Multi Frequency (DTMF) dialing. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:24.
Tone, Ringback Tone #2

Telephone tone when the phone rings in Europe. This is a sound wave frequency of 425 Hz sinusoidal. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:41.
Evacuation Alarm #3

Sound of the evacuation siren in a concert hall, triggered by an electrical issue. I looped a very short passage. Each such sequence is normally interspersed with a message in French and English, urging people to leave the building, but I have removed it. UCS Category: ALRMElec. Length: 00:17.
Tone, ringback tone #4

Telephone tone when the phone rings, in the UK, Ireland, New Zealand and many other countries with historical ties to the Commonwealth. These are two sound waves of frequencies 400 Hz and 450 Hz sinusoidal. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:30.
Tone, busy #1

Telephone tone when the line is busy, in France. This is a sound wave frequency of 440 Hz sinusoidal, slightly clipped. Half a second, every second. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:12.
Tone, busy #2

Telephone tone when the line is busy, in France. This is a sound wave frequency of 440 Hz sinusoidal. Half a second, every second. This sound is easy to loop. UCS Category: COMTelph. Length: 00:20.
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.
Evacuation alarm #2

Sound of the evacuation siren in a concert hall, triggered by an electrical issue. Each such sequence is normally interspersed with a message in French and English, urging people to leave the building, but I have removed it. UCS Category: ALRMElec. Length: 00:05.
Key 3 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 3 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 4 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 4 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 0 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 0 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 2 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 2 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 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 7 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 7 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 9 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 9 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.
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.
Key 5 in DTMF

The audible signal when the 5 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 * 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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- Avoid typos and misspellings
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- 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)