Dictionary Definition
euphony n : any agreeable (pleasing and
harmonious) sounds; "he fell asleep to the music of the wind
chimes" [syn: music]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From (euphōnia) < (euphōnos)Noun
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Phonaesthetics is the claim or study of inherent
pleasantness or beauty (euphony) or unpleasantness (cacophony) of
the sound of certain
linguistic
utterances. Poetry is often
considered euphonic, as is well-crafted literary prose. Important phonaesthetic
devices of poetry are rhyme, assonance and alliteration. Closely
related to euphony and cacophony is the concept of consonance
and dissonance.
The phrase cellar door
has some notoriety as the reputedly most euphonic sound combination
of the English language (specifically, when spoken with a British
accent).
From this meaning should be distinguished the
closely related but different concept of phonaesthesia, which does
not refer directly to aesthetic attributes of sound, but to
phonetic elements that are inherently associated with a semantic meaning. The term was
introduced by J. R. Firth
in 1930 "The phonæsthetic habits [...] and are of general
importance in speech." Firth defined a phonaestheme as "a phoneme
or cluster of phonemes shared by a group of words which also have
in common some element of meaning or function, though the words may
be etymologically unrelated."
Sub-phonematic euphony
In most languages, difficult to pronounce phonetic combinations will be adapted to allow more flowing speech, for reasons of ease of pronunciation rather than aesthetics. These adaptations will be sub-phonematic at first, but over several generations will lead to phonematically relevant sound changes- sandhi ("euphonic" rules in Sanskrit grammar)
- vowel harmony
- assimilation (linguistics)
- dissimilation
- elision
- epenthesis
- affection (linguistics)
- i-mutation
References
- Ross Smith, Inside Language - Linguistic and Aesthetic Theory in Tolkien, Walking Tree Publishers (2007), ISBN 978-3-905703-06-1.
See also
euphony in German: Euphonie
euphony in Esperanto: Belsoneco
euphony in French: Euphonie
euphony in Dutch: Euphony
euphony in Japanese: 音便
euphony in Polish: Eufonia
euphony in Portuguese: Eufonia
euphony in Slovak: Eufónia
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accord,
accordance, attune, attunement, balance, beauty, chime, chiming, concentus, concert, concinnity, concord, concordance, consonance, consonancy, consort, diapason, equilibrium, harmonics, harmony, heavy harmony, homophony, measure, measuredness, monochord, monody, order, orderedness, proportion, rhythm, sweetness, symmetry, symphony, synchronism, synchronization,
three-part harmony, tune,
unison, unisonance