Word of the Day for Saturday August 27, 2005
descant \DES-kant\, noun: 1. (Music) (a) A melody or counterpoint sung above the plain song of the tenor. (b) The upper voice in part music. 2. A discourse or discussion on a theme.
\DES-kant; des-KANT; dis-\, intransitive verb: 1. (a) To sing or play a descant. (b) To sing. 2. To comment freely; to discourse at length.
[T]hese to their nests, Were slunk, all but the wakeful nightingale; She all night long her amorous descant sung. --John Milton, [1]Paradise Lost
When they start on one of their polarised descants, whether on state education, water rates, crime, the BBC or whatever, they sound like a bumble bee and a wasp fighting in a jam jar. --Gillian Reynolds, "The biggest things to hit radio," [2]Daily Telegraph, May 14, 1999
Mr. Ackroyd's descant on "Great Expectations" is the work of a master. --Alison Lurie, "Hanging Out With Hogarth," [3]New York Times, October 11, 1992
In a custom associated with Athenian gatherings but almost certainly followed elsewhere as well, a myrtle branch was passed around the room, and each of the assembled would descant as the wine flowed. --David Barber, "Children of Orpheus," [4]The Atlantic, June 10, 1998
The police amusingly descant on these jottings: "I can't believe he'd ever write a sentence like 'I shall be compelled to take steps to silence you!'" --Christopher Buckley, "The Chekhov of Coldsands-on-Sea," [5]New York Times, November 16, 1997 _________________________________________________________ |