different between harmony vs harmonise
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)
- 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.
- December 4 2010, Evan Thomas, "Why It’s Time to Worry", in Newsweekk
- A pleasing combination of elements, or arrangement of sounds.
- (music) The academic study of chords.
- (music) Two or more notes played simultaneously to produce a chord.
- (music) The relationship between two distinct musical pitches (musical pitches being frequencies of vibration which produce audible sound) played simultaneously.
- 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
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- what harmony in music
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- what harmony of inabel
harmonise
English
Verb
harmonise (third-person singular simple present harmonises, present participle harmonising, simple past and past participle harmonised)
- Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of harmonize.
Anagrams
- harmonies
French
Verb
harmonise
- first-person singular present indicative of harmoniser
- third-person singular present indicative of harmoniser
- first-person singular present subjunctive of harmoniser
- third-person singular present subjunctive of harmoniser
- second-person singular imperative of harmoniser
Anagrams
- harmonies
harmonise From the web:
- what harmonises with e
- what harmonises with a
- what harmonises with c
- what harmonises with d
- what harmonises with b
- what harmonises with f
- what harmonises with red
- harmonized means
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