All words

tenuto

Meaning

In musical performance, indicating that a note or passage should be prolonged or sustained for its full duration, often with a sense of measured progress.

Examples by difficulty

Basic: Simple, everyday vocabulary — the easiest to read.

The violinist's bow moved with purpose. Each note was held, *tenuto*, letting the deep sound fill the quiet hall. It felt like a slow, steady breath, each moment given its full weight before the next began.

The conductor lifted his baton. He signaled to the violinist, his eyes conveying a quiet urgency. Hold that high note, he seemed to say, let it ring with its full weight, a tenuto that stretched time itself. The audience leaned in, captivated by that single, lingering sound.

The old miner held his breath, the pickaxe suspended mid-swing. He listened, the silence stretching, each second a deep, drawn-out note. His muscles remained taut, tenuto, waiting for the faintest telltale rumble from the rock face. Danger demanded this focused sustain.

The conductor, with a dramatic flourish, held his arms out, commanding the orchestra to play that one long note *tenuto*. It felt like forever, each tick of the invisible clock making the sound stretch, stretch, stretch, like a very slow, very boring yawn.

The badger, surprisingly skilled at the kazoo, played his solo with a *tenuto* grip. Each squeaky blast was held as long as his little lungs allowed, a determined rumble of badger-ness. He imagined himself a grand orchestra, each held note a victory lap around a particularly juicy grub.

Normal: Standard, everyday language.

The conductor held his breath, his arms frozen, signaling a long, tenuto note from the strings. The sustained sound filled the tense silence, each fraction of a second drawing out the anticipation, making the audience feel every moment of the unfolding drama.

The old lighthouse keeper held the final note, a deep, resonant hum that vibrated through the stone tower. He let it ring out, *tenuto*, allowing the vast silence of the ocean to absorb its steady, unwavering presence. It was a sound of waiting, of a vigil that had lasted decades.

The conductor’s hands guided the sound, a deep, resonant hum that built in intensity. He signaled for a passage to be held, a long, sustained note, truly *tenuto*, as the tension in the subterranean chamber reached its peak. The hum vibrated through the metal walls, a slow, deliberate warning.

The opera singer, bless her heart, attempted a particularly high note, but it came out more like a surprised goose honking. The conductor, ever the optimist, waved his arms with a dramatic flair, urging the note to be *tenuto*, to stretch and linger. It felt like an eternity, a musical eternity, that is.

The sloth, renowned for its glacial pace, approached the microphone. The conductor, a frantic hummingbird, waved his baton. "A tenuto performance!" he chirped, "Let that single, prolonged sigh of existential ennui *really* hang in the air. Don't rush it, folks. Let it resonate with the crushing weight of Monday mornings."

Advanced: Richer vocabulary that stretches an upper-level reader.

The violinist leaned into the final phrase, her bow drawing out each note. It was a profound moment, a tenuto passage that demanded patience, a deliberate extension of feeling and sound. The audience held their breath, sensing the weight of that sustained beauty.

The old automaton’s music box whirred, each note held with deliberate emphasis. A single, resonant tone, played *tenuto*, stretched out, a fragile beacon in the quiet workshop. It wasn't rushed; instead, it felt like a deliberate moment, a measured breath before the next mechanical chime.

The old prospector held the worn harmonica, his breath catching before he blew. The sustained, rich tone he coaxed out felt like a moment of quiet contemplation, a deliberate *tenuto* echoing the endless patience required to coax treasure from stone. He let the sound linger, a testament to time spent waiting.

The opera singer, bless her ambitious diaphragm, belted out the final note, aiming for a majestic, held sound. However, her commitment to the *tenuto* interpretation bordered on the absurd; the audience began to fidget, wondering if they’d accidentally wandered into a time warp where a single note could last a geological epoch.

The opera singer, mid-aria about a rogue badger's pilfered cheese, held the final note tenuto, stretching it so long the conductor nervously checked his pocket watch, suspecting time itself was now complicit in the dairy-related drama.

Challenging: Rare, high-register vocabulary for serious word lovers.

The conductor gestured, urging the strings to hold the final chord, *tenuto*. A resolute stillness descended as the resonant tone lingered, fulfilling its obligation, each fraction of a second deliberate, imbuing the silence that followed with profound significance.

The lone explorer, perched precariously, heard the wind's mournful cry. He knew this was the moment; every breath, every observation had led to this protracted silence. The sustained, resonant hum of the ancient mechanism, *tenuto*, pulsed a warning, its duration a testament to immense, unseen forces at play.

The surveyor meticulously measured the seismic fault line. Each careful pronouncement of distance, each slight tremor accounted for, felt _tenuto_. They understood the immense, subterranean forces requiring this deliberate, sustained attention, a measured progress against the earth's immeasurable power.

The flutist, usually a whirlwind of virtuosic scales, unexpectedly adopted a most egregious, prolonged note, held with such a profound *tenuto* that the entire audience felt their very corporeal essence begin to calcify. He savored each infinitesimal vibration, a veritable sonic molasses, until a rogue pigeon, evidently unamused by this glacial adagio, dive-bombed his meticulously sustained legato.

The beleaguered bard, facing a particularly recalcitrant audience of jaded gargoyles, struggled mightily to render the ancient ballad. He desperately emphasized each sonorous syllable, a veritable *tenuto* of melancholic lament, hoping to arrest their ennui and dissuade them from their impending, cacophonous debauchery.

Difficulty

Challenging — Rare, high-register words for serious word lovers.

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