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melodious
/ ɪˈəʊɪə /
adjective
- having a tune that is pleasant to the ear
- of or relating to melody; melodic
Derived Forms
- ˈǻ徱dzܲ, adverb
- ˈǻ徱dzܲԱ, noun
Other 51Թ Forms
- ·d·dzܲ· adverb
- ·d·dzܲ·Ա noun
- ԴDzm·d·dzܲ adjective
- non·d·dzܲ· adverb
- non·d·dzܲ·Ա noun
- v··d·dzܲ adjective
- over··d·dzܲ· adverb
- over··d·dzܲ·Ա noun
- ܲm·d·dzܲ adjective
- un·d·dzܲ· adverb
- un·d·dzܲ·Ա noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of melodious1
Example Sentences
Writing in the Guardian, Lisa Wright awarded it four stars, praising its "poignant moments", while The Telegraph's Neil McCormick gave it five stars, calling it a "glorious return to his bombastic, melodious 1970s pomp".
“The concerts help me to escape whenever the seclusion of working on an album becomes too much,” she says in Spanish that sounds just as melodious as her singing.
The chorus is just two notes sung over and over again, and not the two most melodious notes in the world.
In its state of abandoned tear-down, the venue offers melodious visual rhymes: electrical cords dangling from the ceiling ape Wool’s snarls of found-wire sculpture; crumbling plaster mirrors the attitudinal blotches of his oils and inks.
“I’m not waiting any longer,” Mr. Bayle roared, his words coated in the melodious southwest accent.
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