eptameride
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]eptameride (plural eptamerides)
- (music, obsolete) Alternative spelling of heptameride
- 1963, Scripta Mathematica, vol. 1, page 296, ISSN 0036-9713.
- Later he spoke of "subdividing each Eptameride into ten parts, called Decamerides." But he did not use this more subtle division in practice.
- 1964, James Woodrow Krehbiel, “Harmonic Principles of Jean-Philippe Rameau and his Contemporaries”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[1], →OCLC, page 9:
- The second contribution of Sauveur is the development of a more exact method of computing intervals based upon logarithmic numbers which he terms merides, eptamerides and decamerides.
- 1991, Theoria, vol. 5-6, page 26, ISSN 1554-1312.
- The interval of the fifth, it will be recalled, contains 176 eptamerides or 25 merides (plus 1 eptameride).
- 2004, J. Murray Barbour, Tuning and Temperament: A Historical Survey, →ISBN, page 122:
- The Merides were divided into seven parts called Eptamerides. For more subtle distinctions, Sauveur suggested using Decamerides, 10 of which comprised one Eptameride.
- 1963, Scripta Mathematica, vol. 1, page 296, ISSN 0036-9713.