amusia

English

Etymology

From Late Latin, from Ancient Greek ἀμουσία (amousía, without harmony), from ἄμουσος (ámousos, without song). The Muses were nine daughters of Zeus and the goddesses of arts and sciences.

Noun

amusia (countable and uncountable, plural amusias)

  1. The inability to comprehend or respond to music.

Translations


Finnish

Noun

amusia

  1. amusia

Declension

Inflection of amusia (Kotus type 12/kulkija, no gradation)
nominative amusia amusiat
genitive amusian amusioiden
amusioitten
partitive amusiaa amusioita
illative amusiaan amusioihin
singular plural
nominative amusia amusiat
accusative nom. amusia amusiat
gen. amusian
genitive amusian amusioiden
amusioitten
amusiainrare
partitive amusiaa amusioita
inessive amusiassa amusioissa
elative amusiasta amusioista
illative amusiaan amusioihin
adessive amusialla amusioilla
ablative amusialta amusioilta
allative amusialle amusioille
essive amusiana amusioina
translative amusiaksi amusioiksi
instructive amusioin
abessive amusiatta amusioitta
comitative amusioineen

Portuguese

Noun

amusia f (uncountable)

  1. (neurology) amusia (the inability to comprehend or respond to music)

Spanish

Noun

amusia f (uncountable)

  1. amusia

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.