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Antonyms for dissonance
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : dis-uh-nuh ns |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈdɪs ə nəns |
Definition of dissonance
Origin :- early 15c., "disagreement," from Middle French dissonance and directly from Late Latin dissonantia, from Latin dissonantem (see dissonant). Figurative use dates from 1875.
- noun disagreement
- noun noise, discord
- The dissonance is at its highest, yet the hour has struck for the lift of harmony.
- Extract from : « Child and Country » by Will Levington Comfort
- There is dissonance from chaos; the song clears as the order begins.
- Extract from : « Child and Country » by Will Levington Comfort
- The dissonance between her feelings and her actions troubled her no whit.
- Extract from : « Captain Desmond, V.C. » by Maud Diver
- A "Meditation" is bleak, with a strong, free use of dissonance.
- Extract from : « Contemporary American Composers » by Rupert Hughes
- They concentrated, tuned, turned their thoughts against the dissonance.
- Extract from : « Captives of the Flame » by Samuel R. Delany
- And the dissonance of the complaint jarred her back to common-sense.
- Extract from : « The Man Who Was Good » by Leonard Merrick
- Terence Mann stopped playing, tense with a dissonance of perplexity.
- Extract from : « The Trial of Callista Blake » by Edgar Pangborn
- Upon his ears a thousand sounds seemed to beat in tumult—and dissonance.
- Extract from : « The Tempering » by Charles Neville Buck
- But Nature was just as fair that ambrosial September day as if there was not a dissonance.
- Extract from : « Stories by American Authors, Volume 2 » by Various
- There is among the four qualities within his life no dissonance.
- Extract from : « Abraham Lincoln's Cardinal Traits; » by Clark S. Beardslee
Synonyms for dissonance
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019