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Playing a set of bells that are (usually) hung in a tower
Answer for the clue "Playing a set of bells that are (usually) hung in a tower ", 8 letters:
carillon
Alternative clues for the word carillon
Word definitions for carillon in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
”Carillon” is a recitation with orchestral accompaniment written by the English composer Edward Elgar as his Op. 75, in 1914. The words are by the Belgian poet Émile Cammaerts '''. It was first performed in the Queen's Hall , London, on 7 December 1914, ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A set of bells, often in a bell tower, sometimes operated by means of a keyboard (manual or pedal), originating from the Low Countries. 2 A tune adapted to be played by musical bells.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But a great carillon pealing, pealing. ▪ The resulting effect is reminiscent of a carillon of wooden hells. ▪ There was an air of intentness about him, a concentrated purpose that set a whole carillon of alarm bells ringing.
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. set of bells hung in a bell tower playing a set of bells that are (usually) hung in a tower [syn: bell ringing , carillon playing ] [also: carillonning , carillonned ]
Usage examples of carillon.
The door had been burst open, and as I entered and looked up the stairwell that led to the clocktower and carillon, I noted a diffuse and flickering greenish light descending from the highest level.
He showed them the little monastery of Loretto, long monkless, with its honeyed carillon of bells and its blinding treasury.
As the carillon of the Campanile finished ringing out the hour, she picked up her notebook and hurried down the hall.
And just then, out there, like Hounds let loose, the church bells of America all begin to toll, peculiarly lucid in the fog, a dense Carillon, tun'd so exotically, they might be playing anything, Methodist hymns, Opera-hall Airs, jigs and gigues, work songs of sailors, Italian serenades, British Ballads, American Marches.
They had driven a hundred and ninety miles from Bruges, more or less, in under three hours and they were welcomed by the carillons ringing out eleven o'clock.
Stephen's rang solemnly joyful carillons out across the sunlit roofs of the city.
The Carillon Motel stationery featured, for no discernible architectural reason, a medieval bell tower.
Like a carillon of crystal bells, their chimings and tinklings rang outso infinitely sweet and clear and plaintive that it was both a pain and a pleasure to hear.
Like a carillon of crystal bells, their chimings and tinklings rang out—so infinitely sweet and clear and plaintive that it was both a pain and a pleasure to hear.
A carillon of three bronze bells, all large but of different sizes, hung from the ceiling in the center of this lofty space.
The cathedral's carillons proclaimed the fifteenth hour as I knocked at the door of the Hall of Lost Sounds, and for a moment I feared that, in their din, my own would go unheard.
There was a noise of carillons and thunderbolts, a buffeting wind, blinding flashes of light that penetrated my closed lids, smells of ordure and ozone and doping perfume.
There was a noise of carillons and thunderbolts, a buffeting wind, blinding flashes of light that penetrated my dosed lids, smells of ordure and ozone and doping perfume.
I remember a white horse that had bells on its harness, and the bells were playing Christmas carols, like the carillon in Carfax Tower.
He was, in fact, prepared to tell anyone in Haven who didn't like his new carillon that they could take a flying fuck at a rolling doughnut.