The root of "dissonant" is the Latin verb sonare. Can you guess what "sonare" means? Here's a hint: some related derivatives are "sonata," "supersonic," and "resonance." Does it sound to you as if "sonare" has something to do with sound? If so, you're right. In fact, sonare means "to sound, is related to the Latin noun sonus (meaning "sound"), and is an ancestor of the English word sound. "Dissonant" includes the negative prefix dis-. What is "dissonant," therefore, sounds inharmonic, conflicting, or clashing.
a dissonant chorus of noises arose from the busy construction site
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The major-sevenths, by stuffing four notes into the chords, offered greater harmonic options, and Sikes was determined to take advantage of them, encouraging Wayne to incorporate the dissonant notes into her high harmonies.—Tom Roland, Billboard, 22 Apr. 2025 And there’s a blunt, pulp poetry to Manny’s conclusion (if not a particularly sensitive one), driven to despair by an inability to live in the dissonant but very real space between one’s religious moral compass and the realities of one’s life.—Andy Andersen, Vulture, 18 Apr. 2025 What’s especially dissonant is watching Kenya, once a frequent target of this exact brand of mean girl theatrics, weaponize that same energy with alarming precision.—Shelby Stewart, Essence, 14 Apr. 2025 Some of those weird dissonant chords, there’s some of that in there for sure.—Joe Lynch, Billboard, 21 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for dissonant
Word History
Etymology
Middle English dissonaunte, from Latin dissonant-, dissonans, present participle of dissonare to be discordant, from dis- + sonare to sound — more at sound entry 1
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