Associations to the word «Phrygian»
Noun
- Anatolia
- Thrace
- Zeus
- Iliad
- Armenian
- Trojan
- Persian
- Goddess
- Greek
- Lydia
- Minor
- Mode
- Troy
- Cult
- Greco
- Octave
- Cap
- Inscription
- Romans
- Bc
- Myth
- Scale
- Asia
- Deity
- Rite
- Greece
- Antiquity
- Migration
- Assyrian
- European
- Worship
- Cadence
- Macedonian
- Invention
- Ill
- Spear
- Syrian
- Mystery
- God
- Byzantine
- Balkans
- Egyptian
- Herodotus
- Language
- Tone
- Origin
- Epithet
- Overrun
- Fable
- Iranian
- Mother
- Legend
- Bonnet
- Cymbal
- Ff
- Chord
- Carmichael
- Marianne
- Ide
- Thebes
- Eunuch
- Aphrodite
- Hector
- Allegory
- Petticoat
- Century
- Ida
- Helmet
- Iconography
- Genu
- Ovid
- Gates
- King
- Liberty
- Nymph
- Revolutionary
Adjective
Wiktionary
PHRYGIAN, adjective. Of or relating to Phrygia, its people, or their culture.
PHRYGIAN, adjective. In the Phrygian language.
PHRYGIAN, noun. A native or inhabitant of Phrygia.
PHRYGIAN, proper noun. The language of the Phrygian people.
PHRYGIAN, proper noun. (music) Phrygian mode
PHRYGIAN CADENCE, noun. (music) A type of imperfect cadence frequently found in Baroque compositions. The gesture consists of a IV6-V final cadence in the minor mode at the end of a slow movement or slow introduction. It implies that a fast movement is to follow without pause, generally in the same key.
PHRYGIAN CAP, noun. A close-fitting cap represented in Greek and Roman art as worn by Orientals, assumed to have been conical in shape. It has been adopted in modern art as the so-called liberty cap, or cap of liberty.
PHRYGIAN CAPS, noun. Plural of Phrygian cap
PHRYGIAN MODE, noun. (music) a mode that is a minor key with the second scale degree lowered by one half step
PHRYGIAN STONE, noun. A light, spongy stone, resembling a pumice, used by the ancients in dyeing, and said to be drying and astringent.
Dictionary definition
PHRYGIAN, noun. A native or inhabitant of Phrygia.
PHRYGIAN, noun. A Thraco-Phrygian language spoken by the ancient inhabitants of Phrygia and now extinct--preserved only in a few inscriptions.
Wise words
It is better wither to be silent, or to say things of more
value than silence. Sooner throw a pearl at hazard than an
idle or useless word; and do not say a little in many words,
but a great deal in a few.