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View synonyms for harmony

harmony

[hahr-muh-nee]

noun

plural

harmonies 
  1. agreement; accord; harmonious relations.

  2. a consistent, orderly, or pleasing arrangement of parts; congruity.

  3. Music.

    1. any simultaneous combination of tones.

    2. the simultaneous combination of tones, especially when blended into chords pleasing to the ear; chordal structure, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.

    3. the science of the structure, relations, and practical combination of chords.

  4. an arrangement of the contents of the Gospels, either of all four or of the first three, designed to show their parallelism, mutual relations, and differences.



harmony

/ ˈhɑːmənɪ /

noun

  1. agreement in action, opinion, feeling, etc; accord

  2. order or congruity of parts to their whole or to one another

  3. agreeable sounds

  4. music

    1. any combination of notes sounded simultaneously

    2. the vertically represented structure of a piece of music Compare melody rhythm

    3. the art or science concerned with the structure and combinations of chords

  5. a collation of the material of parallel narratives, esp of the four Gospels

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

harmony

  1. The sounding of two or more musical notes at the same time in a way that is pleasant or desired. Harmony, melody, and rhythm are elements of music.

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Other Word Forms

  • nonharmony noun
  • preharmony noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of harmony1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English armonye, from Middle French, from Latin harmonia, from Greek harmonía “joint, framework, agreement, harmony,” akin to hárma “chariot,” harmós “joint,” ararískein “to join together”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of harmony1

C14: from Latin harmonia concord of sounds, from Greek: harmony, from harmos a joint
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Synonym Study

See symmetry. Harmony, melody in music suggest a combination of sounds from voices or musical instruments. Harmony is the blending of simultaneous sounds of different pitch or quality, making chords: harmony in part singing; harmony between violins and horns. Melody is the rhythmical combination of successive sounds of various pitch, making up the tune or air: a tuneful melody to accompany cheerful words.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

"I wanted to imagine new harmony," he said, "because I believe that is what we all need."

From BBC

His March 2025 show was designed to make a statement on global politics, with him stating that he "wanted to imagine new harmony" as he believed "that is what we all need".

From BBC

They sang in perfect harmony: "Without the Communist Party, there is no modern China."

From BBC

You’ve constantly reinvented yourself from a harmony singer to a lead singer in a band to soloist to an actress to band member again and now as a fashion collaborator.

There’s a high and lonesome fiddle sounding the alarm, before a gloriously defiant harmony vocal: “I’m a hard headed woman . . . and I don’t owe ya sh*t.”

From Salon

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