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Song   /sɔŋ/   Listen
Song

noun
1.
A short musical composition with words.  Synonym: vocal.
2.
A distinctive or characteristic sound.  "The song of the wind" , "The wheels sang their song as the train rocketed ahead"
3.
The act of singing.  Synonym: strain.
4.
The characteristic sound produced by a bird.  Synonyms: birdcall, birdsong, call.
5.
A very small sum.
6.
The imperial dynasty of China from 960 to 1279; noted for art and literature and philosophy.  Synonyms: Song dynasty, Sung, Sung dynasty.



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"Song" Quotes from Famous Books



... life although as then I was confined to Nature and books. Then I bounded across the fields; my spirit often seemed to ride upon the winds, and to mingle in joyful sympathy with the ambient air. Then if I wandered slowly I cheered myself with a sweet song or sweeter day dreams. I felt a holy rapture spring from all I saw. I drank in joy with life; my steps were light; my eyes, clear from the love that animated them, sought the heavens, and with my long hair loosened to the winds I gave my body and my mind to sympathy and delight. But now my ...
— Mathilda • Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

... contraction. But there is dash in the book, the keenest earnestness and evidence of a mind made up, and every now and then a mystic softness and richness of pity, yearning towards a voluptuous imagery like that of the Song of Solomon. The plan is straggling. First there is a list of twelve positions which the book proves, or heads under which its contents may be distributed. Then there is an address or dedication to "the Right Honourable Both Houses of the High Court of Parliament," ...
— The Life of John Milton Vol. 3 1643-1649 • David Masson

... of this distaste for the severer studies may probably be found in his natural indolence and his love of convivial pleasures. "I was a lover of mirth, good humor, and even sometimes of fun," said he, "from my childhood." He sang a good song, was a boon companion, and could not resist any temptation to social enjoyment. He endeavored to persuade himself that learning and dullness went hand in hand, and that genius was not to be put in harness. Even in riper years, when the consciousness of his own deficiencies ...
— Oliver Goldsmith • Washington Irving

... as a birth-place. This little hamlet and former fortress, perched on a mountain top, is, perhaps, little changed in outward appearance since a soldier-poet, destined to revolutionise France with a song, was born there a hundred years ago. The immortal, inimitable Marseillaise, which electrified every French man, woman, or child then, and stirs the calmest with profound emotion now, is, indeed, the Revolution incorporated into poetry, ...
— Holidays in Eastern France • Matilda Betham-Edwards

... their king at thus leaving the Holy City in infidel hands, the army marched despondently back to Jaffa, and thence to Acre, the French and English mutually accusing each other of having been the cause of the failure to take Jerusalem. The Duke of Burgundy vented his spite by composing a scurrilous song about Richard, which was sung in the French camp. The King of England, much annoyed, revenged himself in a similar manner by writing a few stinging lines, in which he answered these "trumped-up scandals with a few plain truths" about the duke and his other ...
— With Spurs of Gold - Heroes of Chivalry and their Deeds • Frances Nimmo Greene


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