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I . tune [tju:n] N

1. tune (melody):

tune
tune
napev m

2. tune no pl (pitch):

to be in/out of tune

3. tune Brit TECH:

tune
tune
to give a car a tune
to change one's tune

II . tune [tju:n] VB trans

1. tune MUS:

tune

2. tune:

tune RADIO, AUTO
tune RADIO, AUTO

I . tune in VB intr

1. tune:

tune RADIO, TV
tune RADIO, TV
tune RADIO, TV

2. tune inf (be sensitive to sth):

II . tune in VB trans Aus

tune RADIO, TV

I . tune up VB intr

tune

II . tune up VB trans

1. tune AUTO:

tune

2. tune MUS:

tune

ˈtheme tune N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Most manufacturers tune for optimum emissions (running rich to protect the catalytic converter) and fuel economy purposes which can limit performance.
en.wikipedia.org
The theme tune that has been in place since 2001 (apart from a brief theme tune change during 2006-07) is used until episode 18.
en.wikipedia.org
Together they wrote and produced the Nintendo theme tune.
en.wikipedia.org
With a mouth organ, however, if two people play the same tune, it sounds different.
www.dnaindia.com
But this tune perks me up all the time.
en.wikipedia.org
The show went on and to the tune of a sell out and a concert was secured for 2013.
en.wikipedia.org
The article also quotes an ad executive who states that close-ended story lines make it easier for new viewers to tune in and figure out what's going on.
en.wikipedia.org
Our own credit rating agency paid for by us, guaranteed to dance to our tune.
www.europarl.europa.eu
Destinations that include romantic dining, art and music, an afternoon at a spa are in tune with Libran sensibilities.
www.thestar.com
This meant that viewers had to tune in each week to see how the previous week's cliffhanger would be resolved.
en.wikipedia.org

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