Tone
Pronunciation
- UK enPR: tÅn, IPA: /təʊn/
- US enPR: tÅn, IPA: /toÊŠn/
- Rhymes: -əʊn
Origin 1
From French ton, from Latin tonus ("sound, tone"), from Ancient Greek τόνος (tonos, "strain, tension, pitch"), from τείνω (teinÅ, "I stretch")
Full definition of tone
Noun
tone
(plural tones)- (music) A specific pitch.
- (music) (in the diatonic scale) An interval of a major second.
- (music) (in a Gregorian chant) A recitational melody.
- The character of a sound, especially the timbre of an instrument or voice.
- General character, mood, or trend.Her rousing speech gave an upbeat tone to the rest of the evening.
- (linguistics) The pitch of a word that distinguishes a difference in meaning, for example in Chinese.
- (dated) A whining style of speaking; a kind of mournful or artificial strain of voice; an affected speaking with a measured rhythm and a regular rise and fall of the voice.Children often read with a tone.
- (literature) The manner in which speech or writing is expressed.
- W. C. BryantTheir tone was dissatisfied, almost menacing.
- (obsolete) State of mind; temper; mood.
- BolingbrokeThe strange situation I am in and the melancholy state of public affairs, ... drag the mind down ... from a philosophical tone or temper, to the drudgery of private and public business.
- The shade or quality of a colour.
- The favourable effect of a picture produced by the combination of light and shade, or of colours.This picture has tone.
- The definition and firmness of a muscle or organ. see also: tonus
- (biology) The state of a living body or of any of its organs or parts in which the functions are healthy and performed with due vigor.
- (biology) Normal tension or responsiveness to stimuli.
Synonyms
- (an interval of a major second): whole tone
Related terms
Verb
- (transitive) to give a particular tone to
- (transitive) to change the colour of
- (transitive) to make (something) firmer
- (intransitive) to harmonize, especially in colour
- (transitive) To utter with an affected tone.
Synonyms
Origin 2
From Middle English tone, ton, toon, from the incorrect division of thet one ("the/that one"). Compare Scots tane in the tane; see also tother.