This encompasses random and fairly meaningless collections of words which have a certain euphony. |
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In a variety of languages, either for the sake of euphony, or from caprice or accident, sibilant letters have been interchanged with dentals. |
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That hands-on style brought an integrity and euphony to the lifetime written record of his creative, illuminating and vivifying mind. |
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The eclectic mix of trance, tabla and the violin euphony left the raving party animals craving for more. |
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One doubts, nevertheless, whether a newly elected pontiff would weigh the relative euphony that a name might command in various languages. |
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Let us leave the sweet euphony of Bangla to our poets, and the salvation-enhancement of Sanskrit to our priests. |
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It still fulfilled prescribed ecclesiastical functions, but its euphony and its expressive power showed the way toward artistic autonomy. |
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It's been a long time since a politician offered such euphoria over euphony in political commentary. |
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The mosque, however, continues to be used by Muslims, adding to the beautiful euphony of sounds that echo daily as the faithful are called to prayer. |
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One of the big joys of this production, after the divine euphony of Kremer's sound, is the return to the eleven-instrument orchestration of Piazzolla's original score. |
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These bizarre screeching sounds turn into horn samples, which, though they never quite resolve themselves, manage to work up an atmosphere of a nauseated euphony. |
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And to the fidelity of transposal I have sacrificed everything: elegance, euphony, clarity, good taste, modern usage, and even grammar. |
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Cacophony, the opposite of euphony, is usually produced by combinations of words that require a staccato, explosive delivery. |
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In this manner, the principles of equidistance and harmonic euphony are accommodated within one tonal-harmonic system. |
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Poems were recited in literary circles and in public, hence the importance attached to euphony, smoothness, and artistic structure. |
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Like a Smiths song, it elevates and celebrates the mundane through expert use of rhythm and euphony and economy. |
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A man who wrote wondrously for the ear was surely not seduced by the euphony of her name, but they fell in love and she stuck to him over the years through many a scrape. |
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Meanwhile, in the English-speaking world Ukraina was no longer the Ukraine, but Ukraine, a change recommended neither by history, etymology, or euphony. |
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He employs a wide variety of tonal registers and often emphasizes dissonance or euphony in particular verses by varying the intensity of speed and volume while reading. |
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She also worked on its musicality, playing with rhymes, euphony and consonance. |
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It is against euphony to make two genitives of the same form follow each other, particularly when they are Saxon genitives. |
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The joyful soaring sound of the trumpet, the rich euphony of the French horn and the grand tones of the trombone and tuba give the brass family a majestic, commanding sound. |
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Yisrael bets everything on the euphony generated by the softness of the touch, the refinement of the stamp, the fluidity of the transitions and the subtlety in modulations. |
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Mandalay. In the name there was a euphony which beckoned to the imagination, yet this was the bitter, withered reality. |
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In Newspeak, euphony outweighed every consideration other than exactitude of meaning. |
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Fauxbourdon was, therefore, an important element in the transition from the medieval emphasis on perfect consonants to the euphony that characterized the a cappella polyphony of the Humanist era. |
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Songs in a tonal language like Yoruba depend on tonological patterning for their beauty and euphony. |
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