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Definitions

aria

[ahr-ee-uh, air-ee-uh] / ˈɑr i ə, ˈɛər i ə /
NOUN
operatic solo
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.

McDonald says listening to Benton sing an aria from “Natasha, Pierre, and The Great Comet of 1812” inspired her to sing it.

From Los Angeles Times

It’s also clear in “Aria of the Ghost Bird,” the desolate final movement, a setting for soprano of the unrequited mating call of the last Kauai oo, a bird native to Hawaii that has not been heard since the 1980s.

From New York Times

It’s possible, he theorizes, that patients who develop ARIA—which tends to happen early in treatment—may later develop brain volume loss and ventricles that take on more fluid.

From Science Magazine

Shaw renders a car’s GPS as an electronically processed voice that veers from turn-left instructions to poetic flights, yielding to an introspective aria just right for Lucas’s tender voice.

From New York Times

Her transformational soaring final aria gave the opera’s ending a satisfying intensity.

From Seattle Times