different between ariose vs triose

ariose

English

Etymology

From Italian arioso (airy, breezy) (from aria (air; aria, song) (from Ancient Greek ???? (??r, air; wind), possibly ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h?ews- (dawn; east)) + -oso) +? -ose.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /???i???s/, /?æ-/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /???i?o?s/, /?æ-/
  • Hyphenation: ari?ose

Adjective

ariose (comparative more ariose, superlative most ariose)

  1. (music) Melodic and song-like.
    Antonym: recitative

Synonyms

  • See Thesaurus:euphonious

Related terms

  • aria
  • arialike
  • arioso (noun)

Translations

References


Italian

Adjective

ariose

  1. feminine plural of arioso

Anagrams

  • aerosi
  • oserai

ariose From the web:

  • what does arose mean
  • what does ariose mean in music
  • ariose meaning
  • what is arose
  • what does the word arose mean


triose

English

Etymology

tri- +? -ose.

Noun

triose (plural trioses)

  1. (biochemistry) A sugar or saccharide containing three carbon atoms. Trioses are the smallest monosaccharides. Dihydroxyacetone and L-/D-glyceraldehyde are the only trioses.

Hypernyms

  • monosaccharide

Hyponyms

  • ketotriose
  • dihydroxyacetone
  • aldotriose
  • glyceraldehyde

Translations

Anagrams

  • Sortie, Storie, Tories, oister, restio, sortie, storie, tiroes, tories, œstri

French

Noun

triose m (plural trioses)

  1. (biochemistry) triose

Synonyms

  • glycéraldéhyde
  • glycérose

triose From the web:

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