different between harmony vs acquiescence

harmony

English

Etymology

First attested in 1602. From Middle English armonye, from Old French harmonie/armonie, from Latin harmonia, from Ancient Greek ??????? (harmonía, joint, union, agreement, concord of sounds).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?h??m?ni/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?h??m?ni/
  • Homophone: hominy (god-guard merger and weak vowel merger)

Noun

harmony (countable and uncountable, plural harmonies)

  1. Agreement or accord.
    • December 4 2010, Evan Thomas, "Why It’s Time to Worry", in Newsweekk
      America's social harmony has depended at least to some degree on economic growth. It is easier to get along when everyone, more or less, is getting ahead.
  2. A pleasing combination of elements, or arrangement of sounds.
  3. (music) The academic study of chords.
  4. (music) Two or more notes played simultaneously to produce a chord.
  5. (music) The relationship between two distinct musical pitches (musical pitches being frequencies of vibration which produce audible sound) played simultaneously.
  6. A literary work which brings together or arranges systematically parallel passages of historians respecting the same events, and shows their agreement or consistency.
    a harmony of the Gospels

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Further reading

  • harmony in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • harmony in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.

harmony From the web:

  • what harmony means
  • what harmony remote do i have
  • what harmonic has subdominant function
  • what harmony remote works with firestick
  • what harmony in music
  • what harmony is clair de lune
  • what harmony is in music and why it is important
  • what harmony of inabel


acquiescence

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French acquiescence.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?æk.wi???s.?ns/

Noun

acquiescence (countable and uncountable, plural acquiescences)

  1. A silent or passive assent or submission, or a submission with apparent content, distinguished from avowed consent on the one hand, and on the other, from opposition or open discontent; quiet satisfaction.
  2. (law) Inaction, passivity, or neglect to take legal action when it is called for in order to assert, preserve, or safeguard a right, and which inaction implies the abandonment of said right.

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:acquiescence.

Related terms

  • acquiesce

Synonyms

  • sufferance

Translations

acquiescence From the web:

  • what acquiescence mean
  • what does acquiescence mean
  • what is acquiescence bias
  • what does acquiescence
  • what is acquiescence in law
  • what does acquiescence mean in the bible
  • what is acquiescence bias in psychology
  • what does acquiescence mean in to kill a mockingbird
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