- DIAPASON Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Diapason covers a wide range of meanings in English, almost all pertaining to music or sound The word derives from the Greek roots dia-, which means "through" and occurs in such words as diameter and diagonal, and pasōn, the genitive feminine plural of pas, meaning "all "
- Diapason - Wikipedia
Look up diapason in Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- Diapason | Tuning, Pitch Intervals | Britannica
Diapason, (from Greek dia pasōn chordōn: “through all the strings”), in medieval music, the interval, or distance between notes, encompassing all degrees of the scale—i e , the octave
- diapason, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
The name of the two principal foundation-stops in an organ, the Open Diapason, and the Closed or Stopped Diapason, so called because they extend through the whole compass of the instrument; also the name of other stops, e g Violin Diapason
- DIAPASON | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
DIAPASON definition: 1 one of two main stops (= sets of pipes) of a pipe organ: 2 a musical sound that suddenly gets… Learn more
- diapason - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Borrowed from Latin diapason, from Ancient Greek διαπασῶν (diapasôn), that is διά (diá, “through”) + πασῶν (pasôn, “all”) (χορδῶν (khordôn, “notes”)), “through all (notes)”
- DIAPASON definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
In the standard language, accents in monophthongs differ with longer circumflex vowels and in the diapason (tonal grouping) and intensity
- diapason noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of diapason noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
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