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・ changeful
・ changeless
・ changeling
・ changer
・ chank
・ channel
・ channeling
・ chanson
・ chanson de geste
・ chansonnette
chant
・ chantant
・ chanter
・ chanterelle
・ chantey
・ chanticleer
・ chanting
・ chantor
・ chantress
・ chantry


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chant : 英英辞書
Chant
(), v. t.[imp. & p. p.Chanted; p. pr. & vb. n.Chanting.] [F. chanter, fr. L. cantare, intens. of canere to sing. Cf. Cant affected speaking, and see Hen.]
1. To utter with a melodious voice; to sing.
The cheerful birds . . . do chant sweet music.
Spenser.
2. To celebrate in song.
The poets chant in the theaters.
Bramhall.
3. (Mus.) To sing or recite after the manner of a chant, or to a tune called a chant.

Chant
v. i.
1. To make melody with the voice; to sing. "Chant to the sound of the viol." Amos vi. 5.
2. (Mus.) To sing, as in reciting a chant.
To chant (or chaunt)
horses, to sing their praise; to overpraise; to cheat in selling. See Chaunter. Thackeray.

Chant
n.[F. chant, fr. L. cantus singing, song, fr. canere to sing. See Chant, v. t.]
1. Song; melody.
2. (Mus.) A short and simple melody, divided into two parts by double bars, to which unmetrical psalms, etc., are sung or recited. It is the most ancient form of choral music.
3. A psalm, etc., arranged for chanting.
4. Twang; manner of speaking; a canting tone. [R.]
His strange face, his strange chant.
Macaulay.
Ambrosian chant, See under Ambrosian.
Chant royal [F.], in old French poetry, a poem containing five strophes of eleven lines each, and a concluding stanza. -- each of these six parts ending with a common refrain.
Gregorian chant. See under Gregorian.



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