different between mellifluous vs euphonic

mellifluous

English

Etymology

From Latin mellifluus (flowing like honey), from mel (honey) + flu? (flow). Compare superfluous and fluid, from same root, and with dulcet (sweet speech), alternative Latinate term with a similar meaning.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /m??l?flu.?s/, /m??l?flu.?s/

Adjective

mellifluous (comparative more mellifluous, superlative most mellifluous)

  1. Flowing like honey.
  2. (figuratively) Sweet, smooth and musical; pleasant to hear (generally used of a person's voice, tone or writing style).
    Synonyms: birdsweet, dulcet, euphonious, mellifluent
    • 1853: Sir Egerton Brydges, "Life of Milton"
      No verses can be more mellifluous than Petrarch's: something of this will perhaps be attributed to the softness of the Italian language; but the English tongue is also capable of it, however obstinately Johnson may have pronounced otherwise.

Derived terms

  • mellifluousness

Related terms

  • melliloquent
  • superfluous

Translations

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euphonic

English

Etymology

From euphony +? -ic (suffix forming adjectives with the sense ‘of or pertaining to’),

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?n?k

Adjective

euphonic (comparative more euphonic, superlative most euphonic)

  1. Characterized by euphony; harmonious.
    Synonyms: dulcet, euphonious, euphonous, mellifluous

Translations

References

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