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Definitions

nocturne

[nok-turn] / ˈnɒk tɜrn /
NOUN
serenade
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Granat-Pearce said the portrait of her son as a hard-partying nocturne that emerged in court was not the boy she raised.

From Los Angeles Times

His recordings of Chopin’s études and nocturnes offer lovely, generally introverted, smoothed, even sleepy takes on those works.

From New York Times

While Blanchard’s score moved comfortably between bars, college parties and fraught, tender nocturnes, “Fire” was fairly turgid as drama, its individual sequences clear but the broader conflicts driving its characters obscure.

From New York Times

Jacobs’s textures were also beautifully varied in the “Prière,” the trumpet mellowed by the vast space without losing its focus; the “Prélude, Fugue et Variation” was a wistful nocturne, sensitively controlled and never overblown.

From New York Times

The experience is no less expansive than seeing the ocean or hearing a Chopin nocturne for the first time.

From New York Times