英:['mɒnəʊkɔ:d]
美:['mɒnəˌkɔd]
英:['mɒnəʊkɔ:d]
美:['mɒnəˌkɔd]
mon·o·chord
ma n kord
Middle English monocorde, from Middle French, from Medieval Latin monochordum, from Greek monochordon, from mon- + chordē string — more at yarn
The first known use of monochord was in the 15th century
monochordnoun
an instrument that has been used to test hearing acuity and that consists of a single string stretched over a sounding board and a movable bridge set on a graduated scale
1 With gongs, crystal bowls, Tibetan singing bowls, Native American flute, didgeridoo, Celtic Harp, monochord, vibraphone.
1 一致
unisonant one even consistent uniform conform concurrent coherent agreeable consonant congruent unitary undifferentiated coincident concordant congruous accordant consentaneous consentient in after solid united agreeably community touch agreement union identity concert accordance consistency unity compatibility consensus correspondence accord sympathy reconciliation coincidence keeping chime parity conformity uniformity unison unification oneness conformance conformation concurrence concordance concord harmonization congruence consonance congruity consistence reconcilement concent consilience consonancy consecution correspondency time answer agree sort square jump gear consist cotton unite overlap concur sympathize consort cohere quadrate homologize reduce respond tune reconcile unify harmonize uno animo