antiphony

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English

Noun

antiphony (countable and uncountable, plural antiphonies)

  1. (music, singing) Alternate, or responsive singing by a choir split into two parts; a piece sung or chanted in this manner.
  2. Alternate, or responsive ideas or opinions; juxtaposition.
    • 1662, Henry More, An Antidote Against Atheism, Book II, A Collection of Several Philosophical Writings of Dr. Henry More, p. 76:
      "Besides that Cardan pleases himself with that Antiphonie in Nature, that as the Ostrich being a Bird, yet never shes in the Aire, so this Bird of Paradise should alwayes be in the Aire, and never rest upon the Earth."
  3. (phonetics) Synonym of apophony (contrastive vowel modification).
    • 1953, The French Review, volume 27, page 300:
      Still another phase of language which interests Professor Orr is that of vowel antiphony in the functional development of language; e.g. the “front-back” vowel sequence (tittle-tattle, et patati et patata, etc.).
    • 2000, Edward Nye, Literary and Linguistic Theories in Eighteenth-Century France: From Nuances to Impertinence, →ISBN, page 175:
      Roman Jakobson gives evidence to show how language uses ‘antiphony’ or vowel opposition in pairs of words with opposite meanings: ‘gleam’ and ‘gloom’, ‘here’ and ‘there’, or in French ‘petit’ and ‘grand’.
    • 2019, Paul Rastall, Bottom-Up Linguistics: Perspectives and Explorations with a Postscript on Language and Reality, →ISBN, page 36:
      The various types of reduplication [] include full reduplication (tum-tum), [] vowel antiphony (flip-flop, criss-cross) []

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