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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
discord
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
marital
▪ What was the relationship between new roofs and marital discord?
▪ His parents evidently did not suffer from drunkenness, gluttony, or excesses of marital discord.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
foment revolution/trouble/discord etc
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Money is the single biggest cause of discord in marriage.
▪ The verdict has increased racial discord in the country.
▪ There has always been discord over NATO's role in world conflict.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Also it promotes that holistic sense of the whole of life's experience being brought into harmony, including the discords.
▪ Clearly, their ties to the place remained, and no discord or rivalry over it seeps into family correspondence.
▪ Even the deliberate discords were music to her ears.
▪ His parents evidently did not suffer from drunkenness, gluttony, or excesses of marital discord.
▪ One has to be struck by the amount of discord in public discussion of family issues.
▪ The board prohibited the petition because it was controversial and would cause teachers to take opposing political positions, thereby creating discord.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Discord

Discord \Dis*cord"\, v. i. [OE. discorden, descorden, from the French. See Discord, n.] To disagree; to be discordant; to jar; to clash; not to suit.

The one discording with the other.
--Bacon.

Discord

Discord \Dis"cord`\, n. [OE. discord, descord, OF. discorde, descorde, F. discorde, from L. discordia, fr. discors, -cordis, discordant, disagreeable; dis- + cor, cordis, heart; cf. F. discord, n., and OF. descorder, discorder, F. discorder, to discord, L. discordare, from discors. See Heart, and cf. Discord, v. i.]

  1. Want of concord or agreement; absence of unity or harmony in sentiment or action; variance leading to contention and strife; disagreement; -- applied to persons or to things, and to thoughts, feelings, or purposes.

    A false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren.
    --Prov. vi. 19.

    Peace to arise out of universal discord fomented in all parts of the empire.
    --Burke.

  2. (Mus.) Union of musical sounds which strikes the ear harshly or disagreeably, owing to the incommensurability of the vibrations which they produce; want of musical concord or harmony; a chord demanding resolution into a concord.

    For a discord itself is but a harshness of divers sounds m???ing.
    --Bacon.

    Apple of discord. See under Apple.

    Syn: Variance; difference; opposition; contrariety; clashing; dissension; contention; strife; disagreement; dissonance.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
discord

early 13c., descorde, "unfriendly feeling, ill will;" also "dissention, strife," from Old French descorde (12c.) "disagreement," from Latin discordia, from discors (genitive discordis) "disagreeing, disagreement," from dis- "apart" (see dis-) + cor (genitive cordis) "heart" (see heart). Musical sense is late 14c.

discord

c.1300, from Old French discorder (13c.), from Latin discordare (see discord (n.)).

Wiktionary
discord

n. 1 Lack of concord, agreement or harmony. 2 tension or strife resulting from a lack of agreement; dissension. 3 (context music English) An inharmonious combination of simultaneously sounded tones; a dissonance. 4 Any harsh noise, or confused mingling of sounds. vb. (context archaic English) To disagree; to be at variance; to fail to agree or harmonize; clash.

WordNet
discord
  1. n. lack of agreement or harmony [syn: strife]

  2. disagreement among those expected to cooperate [syn: dissension]

  3. a harsh mixture of sounds [syn: discordance]

  4. strife resulting from a lack of agreement [syn: discordance]

  5. v. be different from one another [syn: disagree, disaccord] [ant: match]

Wikipedia
Discord

Discord may refer to:

  • Discord, Iowa, a community in the United States
  • Dissonance (music)
  • Discordia, a Roman goddess equivalent to the Greek goddess of strife and discord, Eris
  • Discord (software), a voice over IP voice and chat service for gamers
Discord (album)

Discord is a compilation album by punk rock band Bomb Factory. It was released exclusively in Europe on MHP/Skalopards Records and includes all tracks from the Discord maxi single and Fat Boost mini album (with the exception of the hidden track), as well as the popular track "Exciter".

Discord (film)

Discord is a 1933 British drama film directed by Henry Edwards and starring Owen Nares, Benita Hume and Harold Huth. Its plot involves a struggling composer who has to be supported financially by his wealthier wife. It was based on the play A Roof and Four Walls by E. Temple Thurston.

Discord (software)

Discord is a free proprietary VoIP application designed for gaming communities. Discord runs on Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, Android, iOS, Linux and in a web browser.

As of July 2016 the software had been used by over 11 million users.

Usage examples of "discord".

The people of Ilion stood along the tops of the walls of the city and laughed at the Achaians in discord.

It could produce horrible discords, turn John into an idiot, say, or an invalid, as it tried to do, or perhaps an acromegalic monster, with gigantic hands and head, by stimulating bone-growth after maturity.

Cotton Tufts warned that there were people sowing discord, claiming Adams was all for monarchy and planned to put an English prince on a throne in America.

Without significance except as vignettes, as interesting discords, as pleasurable because vivid examples of the algedonic polarity of existence.

After some experience of the superior strength and numbers of their adversaries, the Sarmatians implored the protection of the Roman monarch, who beheld with pleasure the discord of the nations, but who was justly alarmed by the progress of the Gothic arms.

And tyrants through the breach of discord threw The chain which binds and kills.

That evening, when Long Quiet reached the Comanche camp he received an unwelcome reminder of the discord between the Comanches and the White-eyes.

In order to find him sufficient occupation nearer home, the Emperor fanned into a flame the smouldering embers of discord between Odovacar and Feletheus, king of the Rugians, the most powerful ruler of those Danubian lands from which the Italian king himself had migrated into Italy.

Fiume in September once more inflamed popular passion, and Dalmatia, the islands in the Adriatic, Albania, Epirus, and the Dodecanese were apples of discord between Italy and the Balkan States which distracted the Allies throughout the summer and autumn.

The popular dissensions, founded on the most serious interest, or holy pretence, have scarcely equalled the obstinacy of this wanton discord, which invaded the peace of families, divided friends and brothers, and tempted the female sex, though seldom seen in the circus, to espouse the inclinations of their lovers, or to contradict the wishes of their husbands.

That music rose in a tangled tracery: arabesques of order competing fugally with the improvised discords of the party downstairs, which peaked sometimes in cusps and ogees of noise.

Australian Cuddie Headrig proved that the sectarian discords of former ages had little power to break his rest.

The emulation, and sometimes the discord, which reigned between two professions of opposite interests and incompatible manners, was productive of beneficial and of pernicious consequences.

Legion of Dynamic Discord, the Erisian Liberation Front or even the Justified Ancients of Mummu, Markoff Chaney began his own crusade against the Illuminati, not even knowing that they existed.

If they produce in one section of the country what is called for, by the wants of another section, and this other section can supply the wants of the first, they are not matters of discord, but bonds of union, true bonds of union.