Definition of DIATONIC

diatonic

Adjective

  • Pertaining to a musical scale with five whole steps and two half steps.
  • based on the standard major or minor scales consisting of 5 tones and 2 semitones without modulation by accidentals

Adjective Satellite

  • based on or using the five tones and two semitones of the major or minor scales of western music

Adj

  • Relating to or characteristic of a musical scale which contains seven pitches and a pattern of five whole tones and two semitones; particularly, of the major or natural minor scales.

Examples

  • His word choices followed a DIATONIC progression, building harmoniously.

Origin / Etymology

From French diatonique or Late Latin diatonicus, ultimately from Ancient Greek διατονικός (diatonikós), in the phrase [γένος (génos, “type, genus”)] διατονικός (diatonikós) (in reference to the diatonic tetrachord, and in contrast to the chromatic and enharmonic tetrachords), from διάτονος (diátonos) (διά (diá) + τόνος (tónos)), of disputed etymology, as both components are ambiguous.
Most plausibly, διάτονος (diátonos) refers to “stretched intervals”, as the intervals of the diatonic tetrachord are the most evenly distributed or “stretched out”, compared to the chromatic and enharmonic tetrads, which use smaller, more crowded together intervals. Compare pyknon, from πυκνός (puknós, “dense, compressed”), referring to the lower part of the non-diatonic tetrachords: the diatonic tetrachord has widely spaced notes (“stretched out”), while the other tetrachords have a closely spaced notes (“compressed”).

Antonyms

chromatic

Scrabble Score: 11

diatonic: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Word
diatonic: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
diatonic: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 13

diatonic: valid Words With Friends Word