Intone
21intone — [ɪn təʊn] verb say or recite with little rise and fall of the pitch of the voice. Derivatives intoner noun Origin C15 (orig. as entone): from OFr. entoner or med. L. intonare, from in into + L. tonus tone …
22intone — verb (T) say something slowly and clearly without making your voice rise and fall much as you speak: The priest intoned the blessing …
23intone — v 1. speak, utter, say, articulate, voice, give voice; pronounce, enunciate, mouth; accentuate; aspirate, whisper, murmur; emit, deliver. 2. chant, Obs. chaunt, cantillate; singsong, chime, drawl; sing, croon, carol; warble, lilt, trill; chirp,… …
24intone — in·tone …
25intone — Исполнять речитативом …
26intone — in•tone [[t]ɪnˈtoʊn[/t]] v. toned, ton•ing 1) to utter with a particular tone or voice modulation 2) to give tone or variety of tone to; vocalize 3) mad to utter in a singing voice (the first tones of a section in a liturgical service) 4) to… …
27intone — [c]/ɪnˈtoʊn / (say in tohn) verb (intoned, intoning) –verb (t) 1. to utter with a particular tone; intonate. 2. to give tone or variety of tone to; vocalise. 3. to utter in a singing voice (the first notes of a section in a liturgical service). 4 …
28intone — v.tr. 1 recite (prayers etc.) with prolonged sounds, esp. in a monotone. 2 utter with a particular tone. Derivatives: intoner n. Etymology: med.L intonare (as IN (2), L tonus TONE) …
29pre-intone — …
30Intoned — Intone In*tone , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Intoned}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Intoning}.] [LL. intonare, intonatum; pref. in in + L. tonus tone. See {Tone} and cf. {Entune}, {Intonate}.] 1. To utter with a musical or prolonged note or tone; to chant; as, to… …