释义 |
Definition of monochord in English: monochordnoun ˈmɒnə(ʊ)kɔːdˈmɑnəˌkɔrd An instrument for comparing musical pitches, using a taut wire whose vibrating length can be adjusted with a movable bridge. 测弦器 Example sentencesExamples - The original Trautonium was essentially a monophonic instrument: Indeed, it could be described as a state of the art descendant of the Pythagorean monochord - a wire stretched across a fingerboard.
- In the forest, the blind prince made a primitive monochord and began to wander from village to village singing for money.
- It is a physical concept, on the physical difference between the human singing voice, and a monochord, which gives various tones by touching.
- This experience led to early experiments with a wooden bread board, nails and some wire, creating a primitive monochord.
- The clavichord was, in effect, a series of monochords placed in a single box, and it was called monochordia (manicorde, etc.) by many 15th and 16th-century writers.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French monacorde, via late Latin from Greek monokhordon, neuter (used as a noun) of monokhordos 'having a single string'. Definition of monochord in US English: monochordnounˈmɑnəˌkɔrdˈmänəˌkôrd An instrument for comparing musical pitches mathematically, using a taut wire whose vibrating length can be adjusted with a movable bridge. 测弦器 Example sentencesExamples - The original Trautonium was essentially a monophonic instrument: Indeed, it could be described as a state of the art descendant of the Pythagorean monochord - a wire stretched across a fingerboard.
- In the forest, the blind prince made a primitive monochord and began to wander from village to village singing for money.
- The clavichord was, in effect, a series of monochords placed in a single box, and it was called monochordia (manicorde, etc.) by many 15th and 16th-century writers.
- This experience led to early experiments with a wooden bread board, nails and some wire, creating a primitive monochord.
- It is a physical concept, on the physical difference between the human singing voice, and a monochord, which gives various tones by touching.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French monacorde, via late Latin from Greek monokhordon, neuter (used as a noun) of monokhordos ‘having a single string’. |