different between unmusical vs cacophonic

unmusical

English

Etymology

un- +? musical

Adjective

unmusical (comparative more unmusical, superlative most unmusical)

  1. Not musical: lacking in musical ability.
  2. Not musical: unmelodic.
    • 1870, The African Repository and Colonial Journal (volume 46, page 231)
      The harp itself was a huge gourd, and a most unmusical "shell" it proved to be.

Translations

unmusical From the web:

  • what is unmusical sound
  • what does musicality mean


cacophonic

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ????? (kakós, bad) + ???? (ph?n?, voice).

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?n?k

Adjective

cacophonic (comparative more cacophonic, superlative most cacophonic)

  1. discordant
  2. unmusical

Related terms

  • cacophony
  • cacophonous

cacophonic From the web:

  • cacophony meaning
  • what does cacophony mean
  • what is cacophonic language
  • what does cacophony sound mean
  • what does cacophony do
  • what does cacophony mean in poetry
  • what is cacophonic in music
  • what does cacophonic
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