[{"word":"octaves","phonetics":[],"meanings":[{"partOfSpeech":"noun","definitions":[{"definition":"An interval of twelve semitones spanning eight degrees of the diatonic scale, representing a doubling or halving in pitch frequency.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[],"example":"The melody jumps up an octave at the beginning, then later drops back down an octave."},{"definition":"The pitch an octave higher than a given pitch.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[],"example":"The bass starts on a low E, and the tenor comes in on the octave."},{"definition":"A coupler on an organ which allows the organist to sound the note an octave above the note of the key pressed (cf sub-octave)","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"A poetic stanza consisting of eight lines; usually used as one part of a sonnet.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"The eighth defensive position, with the sword hand held at waist height, and the tip of the sword out straight at knee level.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"The day that is one week after a feast day in the Latin rite of the Catholic Church.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"An eight-day period beginning on a feast day in the Latin rite of the Catholic Church.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"An octonion.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"Any of a number of coherent-noise functions of differing frequency that are added together to form Perlin noise.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]},{"definition":"The subjective vibration of a planet.","synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]}],"synonyms":[],"antonyms":[]}],"license":{"name":"CC BY-SA 3.0","url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0"},"sourceUrls":["https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/octave","https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/octaves"]}]