a cappella
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian alla cappella (“in the manner of the [Sistine] chapel”), referring to non-instrumental choirs.
Pronunciation
Noun
a cappella (plural a cappellas)
- (music) A vocal performance with no instrumental accompaniment.
Adverb
- (music) In a manner of a choir with no instrumental accompaniment; literally, "in the style of the (Sistine) Chapel (in Rome)", such as a musical Mass done a cappella. [First attested in the late 19th century.][1]
- Groups of teens singing a cappella on street corners got recording contracts.
- (obsolete, music) In alla breve time.
Translations
performed by a choir with no instrumental accompaniment
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Adjective
- (music) Singing solely or mainly without instrumental accompaniment. [First attested in the late 19th century.][1]
- An a cappella group sang during the wedding reception.
- (music, US) Related to a form of purely vocal music mostly associated with American college performance groups.
- 2012. Powerful Voices. Joshua S. Duchan.
- Socially, a cappella groups tend to be tight-knit ensembles in which close interpersonal relationships are formed.
- 2012. Powerful Voices. Joshua S. Duchan.
- (obsolete, music) alla breve.
References
- Brown, Lesley, ed. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary. 5th. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Italian
Portuguese
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian a cappella.
Spanish
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