intonation

/ɪntəˈneɪʃən/

intonation

English Noun
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Definition

The rise and fall of the voice in speaking.

Etymology

From French intonation, from Medieval Latin intonatio, from intonō + -tiō.

Example Sentences

  • "She well knew the power of intonation, and thought that, in the absence of the curled lip, the contemptuous twitch of the nose, and the supercilious toss of the head, her message might be acceptable for Louisa's sake,..."
  • "This additional cause of the intonation of thunder, together with the simile with which it is illustrated, is copied from our poet, both by Pliny, Nat. Hist. ii, 431, and Isidorus, Orig. xiii."
  • "As when sulphureous fires, within the caves Of earth long pent, with intonation loud Burst through the riven rocks, and far as eye Can reach their furious devastation spread, So sudden, so resistless was the force Of this blasphemer's bold appeal to arms."
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