释义 |
sym·pho·ny \ˈsim(p)fənē, -ni\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English symphonie, from Old French, from Latin symphonia, from Greek symphōnia, from symphōnos agreeing in sound, concordant (from syn- + phōnē voice, sound) + -ia -y — more at ban 1. : a consonance or harmony of sounds < night was a symphony of sounds — Guy Fowler > 2. a. : an instrumental musical passage in a vocal composition b. : sinfonia 1 c. : an instrumental movement in a choral work < the Pastoral Symphony in Handel's Messiah > d. : an elaborate instrumental composition usually in sonata form for full orchestra e. : a work of similar proportions for organ f. : symphony orchestra 3. a. : consonance or harmony of color (as in a painting) b. : a pictorial composition or other arrangement marked by consonance or harmony of color 4. : something that in its harmonious complexity or variety suggests a symphonic composition < barren wastelands burst out in a fleeting symphony of wild flowers — Gladwin Hill > |