melody deutsch
EN[ˈmɛlədi] [ˈmelədi]US
DMelodie WMelodie
- Eine Melodie (von griech. melos = Lied und odé = Gesang) ist in der Musik eine charakteristisch geordnete Folge von Tönen. Sie ist durch die auftretenden Intervalle, deren Richtung (fallend, steigend) und ihren Rhythmus bestimmt.
EN Melody
- SubstantivPLmelodiesPREmélo-
- tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase.
- Slowly she turned round and faced towards a neat white bungalow, set some way back from the path behind a low hedge of golden privet. No light showed, but someone there was playing the piano. The strange elusiveness of the soft, insistent melody seemed to draw her forward.
- tune; sequence of notes that makes up a musical phrase.
- Mehr Beispiele
- Wird in der Mitte des Satzes verwendet
- A later generation of bebop pianists would often be accused of one-handedness; their right hands flew along with melodies and improvisations, while their "weak" left hands just plonked chords.
- Now, against the Beethoven rhythm and the antiphonal outcry (E), the 'celli intone a spacious and somber melody whose beginning is shown at F.
- The first violin often plays the lead melody lines in a string quartet.
- In der Endung des Satzes verwendet
- Now, more than 300 years later, Walt Disney lias spun the idea into a whoop-dee-doo of comic characters, a spatterdash of Technicolor and a u-dee-dah of nostalgic melodies.
- The 1980s all-Girl-Band">girl band, the Bangles, reunites for a comeback album with crisp Beatles-esque melodies.
- Wird in der Mitte des Satzes verwendet
Definition of melody in English Dictionary
- Wortart Hierarchie
- Substantive
- Zählbare Nomen
- Zählbare Nomen
- Substantive
- en melodyless
- en melodylike
Source: Wiktionary