What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

Zygonic vs Zygon - What's the difference?

zygonic | zygon |

Zygon is a related term of zygonic.



As an adjective zygonic

is of or relating to the theory that imitation is the ultimate organising force in music.

As a noun zygon is

in the cerebrum, a short crossbar fissure that connects the two pairs of branches of a larger zygal (H-shaped) fissure.

zygonic

English

Adjective

(-)
  • (music) Of or relating to the theory that imitation is the ultimate organising force in music.
  • * 2005 , Adam Ockelford, Repetition in music: theoretical and metatheoretical perspectives (page 35)
  • The following account of the first movement of Mozart's Piano Sonata K.333, which focuses largely on the opening bars, is intended to demonstrate zygonic theory in action in a music-analytical context.
  • * 2006 , Neil Lerner, Joseph Straus, Sounding Off: Theorizing Disability in Music (page 143)
  • Half arrowheads are indicative of difference and are used in a zygonic context to show approximate imitation.
  • * 2012 , Raymond MacDonald, Gunter Kreutz, Laura Mitchell, Music, Health, and Wellbeing (page 290)
  • This research showed that a zygonic approach could provide an intuitively persuasive metric for the fluctuating patterns of musical influence as they unfolded, event by event.

    zygon

    English

    Noun

    (en-noun)
  • In the cerebrum, a short crossbar fissure that connects the two pairs of branches of a larger zygal (H-shaped) fissure.
  • * 1896', Andrew J. Parker, "Morphology of the Cerebral Convolutions with special reference to the order of Primates", ''Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia'', Second Series, ' 10 (3): 323
  • “The evidence is threefold: (1) as admitted by Ecker, the zygon always appears independently in the foetus;
  • An affinity or connection in a piece of music between tones, chords, or phrases, such that one part appears to repeat, to imitate, or to derive from the other, especially when perceived as an organising principle in the music; a zygonic relationship.
  • * 2005 , Adam Ockelford, Repetition in music: theoretical and metatheoretical perspectives (page 121)
  • Chopin's Prelude op. 28 no. 6 comprises 403 notes which give rise—in just one sub-domain (pitch class)—to around 13,000 potential primary zygons', 500 million potential secondary '''zygons''', and 1018 potential tertiary ' zygons .
  • * 2006 , Neil Lerner, Joseph Straus, Sounding Off: Theorizing Disability in Music (page 142)
  • Zygonic relationships, or zygons , are depicted using the letter Z.
  • * 2012 , Adam Ockelford, Applied Musicology: Using Zygonic Theory to Inform Music Education, Therapy, and Psychology Research , page 106
  • Observe that the second melodic interval is deemed to exist in imitation of the first through the repetition of magnitude but not polarity through an "inverse" secondary zygon of pitch.