plagal

English

Etymology

From Late Latin plagalis, from plaga, from plagius, from Byzantine Ancient Greek πλάγιος (plágios, plagal), πλάγιος (plágios, oblique).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpleɪɡəl/

Adjective

plagal (comparative more plagal, superlative most plagal)

  1. (music) Designating a mode lying a perfect fourth below the authentic form.
  2. (music) Designating a cadence in which the subdominant chord precedes the tonic.

Antonyms

Derived terms

Anagrams

French

Adjective

plagal (feminine plagale, masculine plural plagaux, feminine plural plagales)

  1. plagal

Further reading

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