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Lyric Very Common

Lyric has 10 different meanings across 4 categories:

Noun · Verb · Adjective · Proper Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

the text of a popular song or musical-comedy number

"his compositions always started with the lyrics"

"he wrote both words and music"

"the song uses colloquial language"

2

a short poem of songlike quality

"The singer opened her set by performing a classic lyric about heartbreak under the streetlights."

3

A lyric poem.

"She recited her favorite lyric from the poetry collection during the school assembly."

Verb
1

write lyrics for (a song)

"The poet agreed to lyric a new ballad for the upcoming music festival."

Adjective
1

expressing deep emotion

"the dancer's lyrical performance"

2

used of a singer or singing voice that is light in volume and modest in range

"a lyric soprano"

3

relating to or being musical drama

"the lyric stage"

4

of or relating to a category of poetry that expresses emotion (often in a songlike way)

"lyric poetry"

5

Of, or relating to a type of poetry (such as a sonnet or ode) that expresses subjective thoughts and feelings, often in a songlike style

"The poet's lyric verse captured her deepest sorrow through intimate imagery and emotional intensity."

In plain English: A lyric is something that expresses personal feelings and emotions rather than telling a story about events.

"The lyric video helped promote the new song quickly."

Usage: Use the adjective lyric to describe poems or songs that express personal emotions rather than narrative stories. This term is commonly applied to lyrics found in ballads, love songs, or any verse focused on inner feeling instead of factual events.

Proper Noun
1

A male given name

"The new band member chose the stage name Lyric to honor his grandfather."

Example Sentences
"The lyric video helped promote the new song quickly." adj
"The lyric poem captured the singer's quiet joy about summer rain." adj
"She wrote a very lyric description of her morning coffee routine." adj
"My friend sent me a lyric note saying he missed our old songs." adj
See Also
lyricist poem cantiga lyre epode poetry song melodious
Related Terms
Antonyms
dramatic
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
text poem write
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
love lyric ode relyric

Origin

The word lyric comes from the Ancient Greek for a poem sung with a lyre, a stringed instrument. Over time, this specific musical meaning traveled into English to describe any words set to music.

Rhyming Words
ric cric eric uric tric bric elric baric deric zoric xeric seric ulric doric ceric moric roric daric adric beric
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