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symphonious
symphonious, a. Only in literary use. (sɪmˈfəʊnɪəs) [f. L. symphōnia symphony + -ous, after harmonious.] 1. Full of or characterized by ‘symphony’ or harmony of sounds (symphony 2); sounding pleasantly together or with something else; concordant; harmonious: = harmonious 2.1652 Benlowes Theoph. vi. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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symphonous
symphonous, a. rare. ? Obs. (ˈsɪmfənəs) [f. Gr. σύµϕωνος (see next) + -ous.] = symphonious 1. (In first quot. ironical.)1814 Q. Rev. Apr. 97 The symphonous expression ‘mully⁓grubs’. 1831 J. Wilson in Blackw. Mag. XXX. 403 Hear! hear! bursts in symphonous cadence from the manly bass of Grahame.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Vaazhl
Behindwoods gave a rating of 3 out of 5 and said that the album has "mesmerizing bunch of tracks that flows like one unending symphonious waterfall".
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consonous
consonous, a. rare. ? Obs. (ˈkɒnsənəs) [a. L. conson-us sounding together in harmony, harmonious, f. con- + -son-us -sounding, f. son-us sound.] 1. Sounding together harmoniously, harmonious.1654 Charleton Physiol. 357 If the two strings be Consonous though but in the less perfect Consonance of a Fi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Alan Hirsch
As to its phenomenology, it is made up of the symphonious interplay among six core elements, or "mDNA".
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distinct
▪ I. distinct, ppl. a. (n.) (dɪˈstɪŋkt) Also 5 destinct, distynte, 5–6 dis-, dystynct, distincte, 6 -stynke, -stincke. [ad. L. distinct-us, pa. pple. of distinguĕre or separate, divide, distinguish; cf. F. distinct, -te (13–14th c. in Hatz.-Darm.).] A. as pa. pple. † 1. Distinguished, differentiated...
Oxford English Dictionary
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syn-
▪ I. syn-1 (sɪn) Latinized form of Gr. συν- (= σύν prep. with), together, similarly, alike, occurring in many modern scientific terms, the more recent or less important of which are collected in this article. It undergoes assimilation before consonants, before l to syl-, e.g. syllable, συλλαβή, syll...
Oxford English Dictionary
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cord
▪ I. cord, n.1 (kɔːd) Forms: 4–5 coorde, 4–7 corde, 6 coarde, 7–8 coard, 4– cord. See also chord n.1 [a. F. corde string of a musical instrument, string, rope, cord:—L. chorda, ad. Gr. χορδή gut, string of a musical instrument (made of gut). The later refashioning chord, q.v., is now restricted to a...
Oxford English Dictionary
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