[General] the picture's fuzzy.

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kompstar

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To me, 3, 4, and 5 are images of TVs showing fuzzy pictures. 1 and 2 aren't showing pictures at all so "fuzzy picture" doesn't apply. TV number 1 has what's called "snow". TV number 2 has an image that's out of sync; since there's nothing recognizable, it doesn't qualify to me as a fuzzy picture.
 
Which of the sentences below are correct and natural?

1.Something’s wrong with the television – the picture’s snow.

2.Something’s wrong with the television – the picture’s snowy.

3. Something’s wrong with the television – the picture’s out of sync.
 
not a teacher


Only number 2, "the picture's snowy", seems natural to me for these examples.

If someone described the reception to me as being "out of sync", I wouldn't be sure what they meant. I would probably assume that the image was not synchronised with the sound.
 
You're more likely to see a video on the internet that is out of sync than TV IMO- YouTube videos occasionally don't sync the sound with the video, but it's not a problem I have seen much on TV.
 
In analog television the image can lose its synchronization with the signal on the horizontal or vertical axis. One of OP's pictures showed a TV picture displaying this problem.

The image being out of sync with the sound is a common problem with digital TV in the States.
 
Yes. The kinds of distortion you've found images for no longer exist in places that have switched to digital TV. (It's subject to other kinds.)
 
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