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(music) A song composed for and/or performed by a duo.
A pair or couple, especially one that is harmonious or elegant.
2005, James Henderson, Caribbean and the Bahamas:
The fare is Caribbean with an Asian touch — millefeuille of sun-dried tomato, Paris mushrooms and chargrilled local asparagus followed by a duet of chicken and shrimp...
1822, Lord Byron, Letter to Mr. Moore, Pisa, July 12, 1822, in The Letters of George Gordon Byron, edited by Mathilde Blind, London: Walter Scott, 1887, p. 277,
When you can spare time from duetting, coquetting, and claretting with your Hibernians of both sexes, let me have a line from you.
1975, Edward O. Wilson, Sociobiology: The New Synthesis, Belknap Press, p. 223,
Duetting species are typically monogamous.
1986, Thomas A. Sebeok, chapter 7, in I Think I Am a Verb: More Contributions to the Doctrine of Signs, New York: Springer Science+Business, published 2013, page 87:
In several dozen species of birds there has been found a phenomenon known as duetting, or antiphonal singing: the first part of a song is executed by one partner of a pair, then the other partner very promptly chimes in to sing the second part.
1864, Charles Whitehead, “The Stock-Broker”, in Heads of the People: or, Portraits of the English, volume I, London: Henry G. Bohn, page 23:
“My dear papa!” duetted the girls; but there was something in the husband and father's face, that told the three ladies it would be worse than useless to raise that question at present.
1884, Anonymous, A Speculation, Denver: D. M. Richards, Chapter 12, p. 50,
“A bear!” exclaimed the Major, jumping up and coming forward.
“A bear!” dueted the Doctor and Right Rev., pressing hastily to the front.
Usage notes
In the UK and other Commonwealth countries, the present and past participles of this verb are often spelled with a double T: duetted and duetting