Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    dissonant
    /ˈdɪsənənt/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. not agreeing with or not the same as other things, usually in a way that is strange or hard to accept: Amid the celebrations over the passage of the reform bill this week, one dissonant voice could be heard. Fewer examples. Roosters break into a dissonant chorus at dawn.

  3. 1. : marked by dissonance : discordant. 2. : incongruous. 3. : harmonically unresolved. dissonantly adverb. Did you know? The root of "dissonant" is the Latin verb sonare. Can you guess what "sonare" means? Here's a hint: some related derivatives are "sonata," "supersonic," and "resonance."

  4. If things don't go together well, you can call them dissonant. Dissonant voices are saying different things. Dissonant clothing choices clash. Dissonant chords lack harmony.

  5. Dissonant is an adjective used to describe noise thats harsh and inharmonious. It’s also used to describe things that are in stark disagreement or that lack consistency. In both cases, a close synonym is discordant .

  6. 1. Harsh and inharmonious in sound; discordant. 2. Being at variance; disagreeing. 3. Music Constituting or producing a dissonance. [Middle English dissonaunt, from Old French dissonant, from Latin dissonāns, dissonant-, present participle of dissonāre, to be dissonant : dis-, apart; see dis- + sonāre, to sound; see swen- in Indo-European roots .]

  7. not agreeing with or not the same as other things, usually in a way that is strange or hard to accept: Amid the celebrations over the passage of the reform bill this week, one dissonant voice could be heard. Fewer examples. Roosters break into a dissonant chorus at dawn.

  8. 1. characterized by or constituting a dissonance; discordant. 2. opposing in opinion, temperament, etc.; incompatible; incongruous. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved. Derived forms. dissonantly (ˈdissonantly) adverb. Word Frequency. dissonant in American English.

  9. Definition of dissonant adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. adjective. Harsh and inharmonious in sound; discordant. American Heritage. Opposing in opinion, temperament, etc.; incompatible; incongruous. Webster's New World. Being at variance; disagreeing. American Heritage. Characterized by or constituting a dissonance; discordant. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Synonyms: inharmonic. disharmonious

  11. Dissonant definition: . See examples of DISSONANT used in a sentence.