1 disharmonious | Definition of disharmonious

disharmonious

adjective
dis·​har·​mo·​ni·​ous | \ ˌdis-(ˌ)hĂ€r-ˈmƍ-nē-əs How to pronounce disharmonious (audio) \

Definition of disharmonious

: lacking in harmony

Examples of disharmonious in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

Here is a transcript of relevant passages from her speech: Change, especially change that requires legislative solutions, will not occur easily given our vast, inherently disharmonious, and increasingly polarized country. Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic, "A Civil-Rights Icon Urges Law Grads to Defend Free Speech," 29 May 2018 In the meantime, our Mr. Mooney slithers into the pub, bringing the disharmonious vibe of a swinging, sexed-up London into this frozen outpost of the middle-class 1950s. Ben Brantley, New York Times, "Review: A Criminally Enjoyable ‘Hangmen’ From Martin McDonagh," 5 Feb. 2018 But upstart vanguardists like Charles Ives and Henry Cowell instead took an idiosyncratic and disharmonious approach that shirked European models. William Robin, New York Times, "The Pioneering Modernist Who Wrote an Audacious String Quartet," 13 Oct. 2017 At Williams, led by a disharmonious board that includes two activist hedge fund managers bent on selling the company and a longtime chief executive determined to keep it independent, the deal was hated by many from the start. Leslie Picker And Julie Creswell, New York Times, "Once a Coup, Pipeline Company Deal Becomes a Nightmare," 25 Feb. 2016

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'disharmonious.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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First Known Use of disharmonious

1659, in the meaning defined above

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Rhyming Dictionary: Words that rhyme with disharmonious