crescendos

variants also crescendoes or crescendi
plural of crescendo

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of crescendos The tag team has led to the band’s best collection where super sharp hooks meet ugly, glorious crescendos and curious arrangements. Jed Gottlieb, Boston Herald, 7 Apr. 2026 After the best of the album’s crescendos, Ellis strips everything away again, pining for a character named Annie. Hannah Jocelyn, Pitchfork, 19 Dec. 2025 To date, astronomers have managed to detect about 300 such mergers via their associated crescendos of gravitational waves. Phil Plait, Scientific American, 13 Feb. 2026 Herzi’s slender, unassuming drama contains few emotional crescendos or grand insights, although this is the rare French film to center on a Muslim lesbian as its protagonist. Los Angeles Times, 12 June 2026 The crescendos of Tines’s operatic bass-baritone bleed through the entirety of the Geffen like thunder, concretizing the space into a heartbeat of resistance that reanimates the categorization of witness. Horace D. Ballard, Artforum, 22 Apr. 2026 These musical crescendos are practically chapter titles, offering opportunities for sobering reflection. Siddhant Adlakha, Variety, 13 Feb. 2026
Recent Examples of Synonyms for crescendos
Noun
  • Designed for autonomous mobile robots, humanoids, and industrial automation systems, the sensor provides 180°×180° three-dimensional spatial awareness, enabling robots to detect people and obstacles at all heights.
    Jijo Malayil, Interesting Engineering, 6 July 2026
  • Well, Tristan climbed it; my knee-knocking fear of heights halted me halfway up.
    Jeff Chu, Travel + Leisure, 6 July 2026
Noun
  • The Ed Sullivan Theater, which first opened in 1927, is a 13-story shadow box preserving bits from a rich history of pop culture pinnacles past.
    Edward Segarra, USA Today, 2 July 2026
  • The human hand is one of three pinnacles of hominid evolution, along with the brain and the voice box.
    Stephen Witt, New Yorker, 29 June 2026
Noun
  • Full moons are culminations — don’t forget to pause and see what’s already come full circle before rushing into more.
    Dossé-Via Trenou, Refinery29, 28 Nov. 2025
Noun
  • The star loves a striped moment, which is especially clear in her collection of tops and Oxfords.
    Annie Blackman, InStyle, 3 July 2026
  • It’s also lightly lined and has a deep V-neck design that can remain hidden under different tops.
    Clara McMahon, PEOPLE, 3 July 2026
Noun
  • The campground offers hiking, backpacking, wildlife viewing and fishing amid towering mountain peaks, alpine lakes and dense forest.
    Andrea Margolis, FOXNews.com, 3 July 2026
  • Chance of lightning increases as a thunderstorm approaches and peaks when the storm is overhead.
    NC Weather Bot, Charlotte Observer, 3 July 2026
Noun
  • Her materials include those most basic elements of the earth—geology—and her forms borrow from totems, obelisks, prehistoric megaliths, and Indigenous Caribbean zeniths.
    Emily Watlington, ARTnews.com, 7 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Each concert climaxes with Pinkerton’s sword fight against the Rat Reaperess, leading to the singer’s inevitable defeat.
    Steve Appleford, SPIN, 29 June 2026
  • Chases and weird extraterrestrial stuff abounds, leading to one of Spielberg's most gripping climaxes ever.
    Brian Truitt, USA Today, 13 June 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Crescendos.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/crescendos. Accessed 8 Jul. 2026.

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