| 释义 | 
		Definition of hymnody in English: hymnodynoun ˈhɪmnədiˈhɪmnədi mass nounThe singing or composition of hymns.  Example sentencesExamples -  In short, I prefer hymnody that directs our minds to God, not to contemplation of How Truly Wonderful We Are.
 -  There has been an explosion of creative new hymnody, reflected and made available in a host of new hymnals.
 -  This remarkable text by Fred Kaan is a great addition to Christmas hymnody.
 -  Noteworthy also is the greater use of one another's legacy of hymnody.
 -  Wither is considered a pioneer of English hymnody because of his Hymnes and Songs of the Church published in 1623.
 -  Again, the miserable poverty of so much contemporary hymnody likewise undermines the most careful attention to liturgy.
 -  So too, it is only sleeping children that we liken to angels-even though our hymnody reminds us that angels never sleep!
 -  Cyberspace will not eclipse the Eucharist or destroy Protestant hymnody, although it might frustrate a lot of liturgists and composers!
 -  Second, the Moravians were the pioneers in what we would today know as evangelical hymnody.
 -  She attends to the scriptural basis of prayer and hymnody, as well as reading and sermon.
 -  Of the discursive chapters, Duck's review of Trinitarian language in English-language hymnody is probably the most illuminating.
 -  Protestant hymnody in particular has a special hold on him.
 -  There is very little that reflects the Christian hymnody of ‘field and forest, flowery meadow, flashing sea.’
 -  While some looked for a one-kind-fits-all solution, the actual hymnody reflected a more complicated situation.
 -  Given that strict approach, then, ‘There is no way in the world to prove uninspired hymnody.’
 -  There was, of course, a vast amount of music in the U.S. in this period besides symphonic music, Lutheran hymnody, and Wagnerian opera.
 -  The late 1960s and early 70s were times of great experimentation and upheaval in hymnody.
 -  We can also benefit from our African brothers and sisters when it comes to hymnody, song and melody.
 -  Where should we stand with church architecture, hymnody, liturgical elements and the like?
 -  The old traditions of lined-out hymnody, camp-meeting choruses, and shape-note tunes played signal roles in the conversion of slaves to Christianity.
 
 
 Derivatives   noun   The familiar adaptation used here is the work of Thomas Helmore, a nineteenth-century hymnodist.  Example sentencesExamples -  The great hymnodist alludes to the transferral of the bones in his Carmina Nisibena.
 -  Father John went on to become one of the two best hymnodists among the Greek Fathers.
 -  The holy hymnodist employs his poetic ability to herald the same message ‘we who sit in darkness and shadow found the truth’.
 -  Not even works of Methodism's co-founder and greatest hymnodist, Charles Wesley, were spared.
 
 
 
 Origin   Early 18th century: via medieval Latin from Greek humnōidia, from humnos 'hymn'.    Definition of hymnody in US English: hymnodynounˈhimnədēˈhɪmnədi The singing or composition of hymns.  Example sentencesExamples -  Where should we stand with church architecture, hymnody, liturgical elements and the like?
 -  Given that strict approach, then, ‘There is no way in the world to prove uninspired hymnody.’
 -  Cyberspace will not eclipse the Eucharist or destroy Protestant hymnody, although it might frustrate a lot of liturgists and composers!
 -  There is very little that reflects the Christian hymnody of ‘field and forest, flowery meadow, flashing sea.’
 -  There has been an explosion of creative new hymnody, reflected and made available in a host of new hymnals.
 -  While some looked for a one-kind-fits-all solution, the actual hymnody reflected a more complicated situation.
 -  Of the discursive chapters, Duck's review of Trinitarian language in English-language hymnody is probably the most illuminating.
 -  In short, I prefer hymnody that directs our minds to God, not to contemplation of How Truly Wonderful We Are.
 -  Wither is considered a pioneer of English hymnody because of his Hymnes and Songs of the Church published in 1623.
 -  Protestant hymnody in particular has a special hold on him.
 -  Second, the Moravians were the pioneers in what we would today know as evangelical hymnody.
 -  There was, of course, a vast amount of music in the U.S. in this period besides symphonic music, Lutheran hymnody, and Wagnerian opera.
 -  She attends to the scriptural basis of prayer and hymnody, as well as reading and sermon.
 -  Again, the miserable poverty of so much contemporary hymnody likewise undermines the most careful attention to liturgy.
 -  This remarkable text by Fred Kaan is a great addition to Christmas hymnody.
 -  We can also benefit from our African brothers and sisters when it comes to hymnody, song and melody.
 -  The old traditions of lined-out hymnody, camp-meeting choruses, and shape-note tunes played signal roles in the conversion of slaves to Christianity.
 -  The late 1960s and early 70s were times of great experimentation and upheaval in hymnody.
 -  So too, it is only sleeping children that we liken to angels-even though our hymnody reminds us that angels never sleep!
 -  Noteworthy also is the greater use of one another's legacy of hymnody.
 
 
 Origin   Early 18th century: via medieval Latin from Greek humnōidia, from humnos ‘hymn’.     |