A dissonant or disharmonious combination of sounds In strict harmony, it must be resolved or followed by a concordant sound Search Google com for Discord
strife resulting from a lack of agreement disagreement among those expected to cooperate lack of agreement or harmony To expose to censure or ill favor; to put out of the good graces of any one
{i} disagreement, disharmony (between people or things); harsh and unpleasant sound; unharmonious combination of sounds (Music)
Music. An inharmonious combination of simultaneously sounded tones; a dissonance
Want of concord or agreement; absence of unity or harmony in sentiment or action; variance leading to contention and strife; disagreement; applied to persons or to things, and to thoughts, feelings, or purposes
Union of musical sounds which strikes the ear harshly or disagreeably, owing to the incommensurability of the vibrations which they produce; want of musical concord or harmony; a chord demanding resolution into a concord
(classical mythology) a golden apple thrown into a banquet of the gods by Eris (goddess of discord--who had not been invited); the apple had `for the fairest' written on it and Hera and Athena and Aphrodite all claimed it; when Paris (prince of Troy) awarded it to Aphrodite it began a chain of events that led to the Trojan War
not in agreement or harmony; "views discordant with present-day ideas" lacking in harmony To expose to censure or ill favor; to put out of the good graces of any one
A pair of cases for two ordered data variables in which the value of one variable for the first case is higher (or lower) than its value in the second case, and the relative relationship is switched for the second variable For example, the following pair is discordant: X1 X2 10 100 20 50
() C.1230, Middle English descorde, discorde; from Anglo-Norman, Old French descort (derivative of descorder), descorde (“disagreement”); from Latin discordia, from discord-, discors (“disagreeing, disagreement”), from dis- (“apart”) + cor, cordis, cord-, cors (“heart”) Verb derives from Middle English discorden, from Anglo-Norman, Old French descorder, from Latin discordāre, from discord-, as above.