UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: NOUN
- N/A
- An unchanging intonation
- A single tone repeated with different words or different rhythms (especially in rendering liturgical texts)
- A single unvaried tone of speech or a sound
- A succession of sounds or words uttered in a single tone of voice.
- A chant in a single tone.
- Sameness or dull repetition in sound, style, manner, or color.
- The utterance of successive syllables, words, or sentences, on one unvaried key or line of pitch.
- A single unvaried tone or sound.
- Something spoken or written in one tone or strain.
- A single or uniform tint or color.
- In rhetoric, a sameness of tone; the utterance of successive syllables at one unvaried pitch, with little or no inflection or cadence.
- Monotony or sameness of style in writing or speaking.
- In music:
- A single tone, without harmony or variation in pitch.
- Recitation of words in such a tone, especially in a church service, sometimes with harmonic accompaniment and with occasional inflections or melodic variations; intoning; chanting.
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: ADJECTIVE
- Lacking melody
- Not melodic.
- Sounded or spoken in a tone unvarying in pitch
- Of a sequence or function; consistently increasing and never decreasing or consistently decreasing and never increasing in value
- Characterized by or uttered in a monotone.
- Of or having a single color.
- Designating sequences, the successive members of which either consistently increase or decrease but do not oscillate in relative value. Each member of a monotone increasing sequence is greater than or equal to the preceding member; each member of a monotone decreasing sequence is less than or equal to the preceding member.
- Property of a function to be either always decreasing or always increasing
- Having a single unvaried pitch
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: VERB
- N/A
- To speak in a monotone.
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- Of a sequence or function
- To recite in a single, unvaried tone; intone; chant.
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: RELATED WORDS
- Cacophonous, Melodic, Melismatic, Toneless, Tuneful, Clangorous, Dissonant, Tuneless, Cacophonic, Atonal, Unmelodious, Monotonic, Monotone, Monotonous, Unmusical
- Bland, Mumble, Drawl, Staccato, Decreasing, Chant, Unmelodious, Increasing monotonic, Decreasing monotonic, Drone, Unmusical, Monotonic, Monotonous, Unmelodic, Droning
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Cacophonous, Melodic, Melismatic, Toneless, Tuneful, Clangorous, Dissonant, Tuneless, Cacophonic, Atonal, Unmelodious, Monotonic, Monotone, Monotonous, Unmusical
- Bland, Mumble, Drawl, Staccato, Decreasing, Chant, Unmelodious, Increasing monotonic, Decreasing monotonic, Drone, Unmusical, Monotonic, Monotonous, Unmelodic, Droning
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- N/A
- Of course, but he forced himself, indifferent monotone.
- It is monotone, slurred, and at times explosive.
- Tnr shines out kinda monotone, not have island!
- His monotone deadpan voice causes Emma to pout.
- Have you ever heard someone speak in monotone?
- Fatou a power LEO: the Monotone Convergence Theorem.
- We try to be very monotone and understated.
- No eye contact, monotone voices, and flat affect.
- The main result is that monotone VNP is strictly stronger than monotone VP.
- The composite of two monotone mappings is also monotone.
UNMELODIC vs MONOTONE: QUESTIONS
- N/A
- Is it reasonable to assume that access structures are monotone?
- How to wear Ankara pants with a monotone lace blouse?
- How to compute a monotone Hermite spline from slope data?
- Is every continuous function monotone on some rational interval?
- How do you use monotone operators for error analysis?
- Does graph of a monotone function have measure zero?
- Is there a family of monotone likelihood ratio functions?
- Does monotonicity affect the performance of a monotone model?
- What is an example of a monotone increasing function?
- Why is the cumulative distribution function monotone increasing?