tuneful

IPA: tˈunfʌɫ

adjective

  • Having or producing a pleasing tune; melodic or melodious
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Examples of "tuneful" in Sentences

  • The singing is lively and tuneful.
  • (Imagine some kind of tuneful, rhythmic structure here).
  • One old gentleman, something of a beau as well as a successful lawyer, congratulated Vickers on his "tuneful" music.
  • Another characteristic of the same nature was their wonderful lack of musical ability, or of any kind of tuneful creativeness.
  • In yet another grand Altman-esque gesture, the actors composed their own songs for "Nashville"--and a most tuneful soundtrack it is.
  • "The chorale pieces, which are dark and serious, full of rough jagged edges; and the character songs, which are more popular and tuneful, but no less innovative."
  • The "Let's put on a show!" blueprint -- a longtime staple of theater and film -- gets a gospel spin in the tuneful and amusing, if tortoise-paced, musical comedy "Sanctified."
  • While on the train passing through Pennsylvania he wrote some verses in a letter to Sidney Colvin about the beautiful river with the "tuneful" name, of which one stanza runs thus:
  • "My book should smell of pines, and resound with the hum of insects," might have been its motto, so sweet and wholesome was it with a springlike sort of freshness which plainly betrayed that the author had learned some of Nature's deepest secrets and possessed the skill to tell them in tuneful words.

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synonyms for tuneful
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