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canticum

[ kan-ti-kuhm ]

noun

, plural can·ti·ca [kan, -ti-k, uh].
  1. part of an ancient Roman drama chanted or sung and accompanied by music.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of canticum1

< Latin, equivalent to cant ( us ) song ( canto, chant ) + -icum noun suffix; -ic
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Example Sentences

The Christmas Symphony had its longueurs, but Penderecki was a very devotional man, and the St Luke Passion he completed in 1966 suggested that his focus could be sharpened by the constraints of text – as the devotional works that followed, Canticum Canticorum Salomonis, Polish Requiem and De Profundis, proved.

Three big Stravinsky works — “Canticum Sacrum,” “Symphony of Psalms” and the Symphony in Three movements — all from the same September program, are on the effusive side.

Loup frequently takes the stage with the Traverse City choir Canticum Novum, but was so nervous about telling her first story that she wrote it out.

More peculiar still was the world premiere of Newman's Fantasia and Fanfare on Stravinsky's "Canticum Sacrum."

"Canticum Sacrum," however, is a work from 1956 in which Stravinsky was moving toward the 12-tone style that Newman has made such a point in rejecting.

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Canticle of CanticlesCantigny