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aria
1[ ahr-ee-uh, air-ee-uh ]
noun
- an air or melody.
- an elaborate melody sung solo with accompaniment, as in an opera or oratorio.
Aria
2[ ahr-ee-uh, uh-rahy-uh ]
noun
- a nymph, the mother of Miletus, by Apollo.
-aria
3- a suffix occurring in scientific terms of Latin origin, especially in names of biological genera and groups:
filaria.
aria
/ ˈɑːrɪə /
noun
- an elaborate accompanied song for solo voice from a cantata, opera, or oratorio See also da capo
aria
- A piece of music for one voice (or occasionally two voices) in an opera , oratorio , or cantata . In contrast with recitative singing, arias are melodious; in contrast with ordinary songs, arias are usually elaborate.
Notes
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of aria1
Example Sentences
Composed without arias or set pieces, Dargomyzhsky’s score illuminates Pushkin’s words and paves the way for the truly Russian opera, however grander, of Mussorgsky and Rimsky-Korsakov.
When the personification of Mandrex asks her why she’s allowing him to make a film about the end of her life, Maria tells him that she wants an aria as part of her third act.
In this version, Callas sings this aria while telling her maid that she has just seen the appearance of a ghost near a fountain.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the actor practiced a series of difficult Italian operas and arias, oftentimes in front of hundreds of crew members.
Paige’s big break came in wartime when she sang an operatic aria for servicemen at the Hollywood Canteen.
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