plangent
English
    
WOTD – 15 May 2012
    
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈplænd͡ʒənt/
- Audio (Southern England) - (file) 
 
- Rhymes: -ændʒənt
Adjective
    
plangent (comparative more plangent, superlative most plangent)
- Having a loud, mournful sound.
- 1879, Robert Louis Stevenson, “chapter 1”, in The Story of a Lie:- [S]how him a refined or powerful face, let him hear a plangent or a penetrating voice […] and his mind was instantaneously awakened.
 
- 1919, Ronald Firbank, Valmouth (Duckworth hardback), page 49:- Since mid-day their plangent, disquieting cries had foretold its approach.
 
- 2013 Sept. 22, Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim, “Music Review: A Middle East Mourned and Celebrated in Suites”, in New York Times:- In the lament about the massacre — the work’s second movement — he entered a more urgent register in the high reaches of the cello, but the sense of grief was more plangent than raw, devoid of any real outrage.
 
 
- (rare) Beating, dashing, as waves.
- 1922, Clark Ashton Smith, Desire of Vastness:- What central sea with plume-plucked midnight strewn,
 Plangent to what enormous plenilune
 That lifts in silence, hinderless and stark?
 
 
Related terms
    
Translations
    
having a loud mournful sound
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Latin
    
    
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