TENOR


Meaning of TENOR in English

I. ˈtenə(r) noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English tenour, tenor, from Old French, from Latin tenor, act of holding on, uninterrupted course, from tenēre to hold — more at thin

1.

a. : the course of thought that is held to through a discourse, speech, or piece of writing : the general drift of something spoken or written : intent , purport , substance

the tenor of the book is expressed in the introduction — J.B.Griffin

b. : an exact copy of a writing set forth in the words and figures of it : transcript

c. : the concept, object, or person meant in a metaphor : the latent aspect of a metaphorical statement — compare vehicle 2b

2.

a.

(1) : a melodic line that usually forms the cantus firmus in medieval polyphony

(2) : the voice part next to the lowest in four-part harmony

b. : the highest natural adult male voice

c. : a person who sings the tenor part or an instrument that plays it

d. : the main reciting note in plainsong psalmody

e. : the lowest of a set of church bells used in change ringing

3. : a continuance in a course, movement, or activity : procedure , trend

kept the noiseless tenor of their way — Thomas Gray

earth and sun will continue the even tenor of their ways for an inconceivably long period — K.F.Mather

4. : habitual condition : character , nature , stamp

this success would look like chance, if it were not perpetual, and always of the same tenor — John Dryden

5. : the time between the date of issue or acceptance of a note or draft and the maturity date — compare usance

6. : the percentage or average amount of metal or mineral in an ore

Synonyms: see tendency

II. adjective

: of or relating to the tenor or the tenor part in music

tenor singer

tenor quality

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.