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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
accompaniment
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
musical
▪ Improvisation and expression as well as musical accompaniment of the exercises plays a central role in the training programme of the Medau-Schule.
▪ After all, when events unfold in the real world, they do so without musical accompaniment.
orchestral
▪ He was also a noisy eater, as if providing an orchestral accompaniment for his brother.
▪ The orchestral accompaniment her was again alert, matching the pianist's skill in fine style.
▪ Without realizing it, their orchestral accompaniment fined itself to the quality of her voice.
■ NOUN
guitar
▪ Lieder by Franz Schubert with guitar accompaniments from the period.
organ
▪ In ships at sea chaplains or commanding officers have pre-recorded tapes containing organ accompaniments and a compilation of hymns.
piano
▪ We discussed the idea of Jean-Claude setting them to piano accompaniment.
▪ A piano accompaniment being captured in a London recording studio of 1904.
▪ She had a lovely sweet voice, and always had to sing without piano accompaniment, for she alone knew the songs.
■ VERB
make
▪ Added to a simple white sauce, they make a good accompaniment to plain meats such as boiled bacon.
▪ Earthy porcini mushrooms, tender and meaty, make the perfect accompaniment.
▪ Cooked almost to a purée with plenty of garlic they make a truly delicious accompaniment to sausages and red meats.
▪ But to tell the truth, the album makes a pretty good accompaniment for just sitting around and eating junk food.
▪ These wines also make a good accompaniment for vegetarian dishes, especially leek-based dishes.
provide
▪ Their discord provided accompaniment for the chase that now developed between the two beings.
▪ He soon provided his own accompaniment.
▪ He was also a noisy eater, as if providing an orchestral accompaniment for his brother.
▪ Down came the rain, thunder and lightning, providing nature's primeval accompaniment.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Huang's wife provided accompaniment on the piano.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Added to a simple white sauce, they make a good accompaniment to plain meats such as boiled bacon.
▪ Cooked almost to a purée with plenty of garlic they make a truly delicious accompaniment to sausages and red meats.
▪ It takes much time and effort to find recorded music that is suitable as movement accompaniment.
▪ Polyphony, which developed in the ninth century, used the organ as bass accompaniment to liturgical song.
▪ Sylvie drew to the accompaniment of voices.
▪ The programme included practical experience in Breathing, movement with apparatus, and movement accompaniment.
▪ These fritters are especially delicious with stewed prunes with orange juice as an accompaniment, if desired.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Accompaniment

Accompaniment \Ac*com"pa*ni*ment\ (-ment), n. [F. accompagnement.] That which accompanies; something that attends as a circumstance, or which is added to give greater completeness to the principal thing, or by way of ornament, or for the sake of symmetry. Specifically: (Mus.) A part performed by instruments, accompanying another part or parts performed by voices; the subordinate part, or parts, accompanying the voice or a principal instrument; also, the harmony of a figured bass.
--P. Cyc.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
accompaniment

1744, from French accompagnement (13c.), from accompagner (see accompany). Musical sense is earliest.

Wiktionary
accompaniment

n. 1 (context music English) A part, usually performed by instruments, that gives support or adds to the background in music, or adds for ornamentation; also, the harmony of a figured bass. 2 That which accompanies; something that attends as a circumstance, or which is added to give greater completeness to the principal thing, or by way of ornament, or for the sake of symmetry.

WordNet
accompaniment
  1. n. an event or situation that happens at the same time as or in connection with another [syn: concomitant, co-occurrence]

  2. a subordinate musical part; provides background for more important parts [syn: musical accompaniment, backup, support]

  3. the act of accompanying someone or something in order to protect them [syn: escort]

Usage examples of "accompaniment".

Of course I intended to send back her letters, but not without the accompaniment of a billet-doux, the gallantry of which was not likely to please her.

Sophie went to the piano, played with feeling, and then sang some Italian airs, to the accompaniment of the guitar, too well for her age.

Miliaria is almost universally an accompaniment of febrile disease, and all disorders in which there occurs a profuse perspiration.

In a time like ours, when we are primarily concerned with the practical application of scientific discoveries, we are mostly accustomed to regard such flights of thought from a past age as nothing but the unessential accompaniment of youthful, immature science, and to smile at them accordingly as historical curiosities.

Toulouse to the accompaniment of mass in the cathedral and Te Deum sung in all the churches.

July 17 to the accompaniment of numerous jokes about the hot young couple.

The spirit of a world-famed violinist played as though behind veils a romance by Rubinstein, to a piano accompaniment that sounded thin and cold, like a spinet.

Sometimes the symphonic accompaniment would fade far off and be forgot.

Thick was sitting on the deck at my feet, his eyes closed, swaying miserably, his music a queasy accompaniment to the rhythm of his body.

Cockle sang two songs without accompaniment, for he was not willing to risk either his hands or his instruments by exposure to the chilling wind.

At that pizzicato, she literally gave voice and sang in accompaniment to the music.

There were tiny bags of an almost impalpably fine grit which Jamshid said was fern seed, to be employed by those who knew the proper accompaniment of magical incantations, to make their corporeal persons invisible.

She lovingly bore it everywhere we journeyed and, in palace or karwansarai or yurtu or on open camp ground, Hui-sheng made sure that the sweet scent of warm clover after a gentle rain was the accompaniment of all our nights.

On the morning Washington departed Philadelphia to assume command at Boston, he and others of the Massachusetts delegation had traveled a short way with the general and his entourage, to a rousing accompaniment of fifes and drums, Adams feeling extremely sorry for himself for having to stay behind to tend what had become the unglamorous labors of Congress.

The perfect expression of thought requires the physical accompaniments of language, gesture, etc.