harmonic hamâhang (#) Fr.: harmonique (adj.) Of, pertaining to, or noting a series of oscillations in
which each oscillation has a frequency that is an integral multiple of the same basic
frequency. Etymology (EN): From L. harmonicus, from Gk. harmonikos “harmonic, musical,” from harmonia “agreement, concord of sounds,” related to harmos “joint,” arariskein “to join together;” PIE base *ar- “to fit together.” Etymology (PE): Hamâhang, “harmonious, concordant,” from ham- “together, with;
same, equally, even” (Mid.Pers. ham-, like L. com-
and Gk. syn- with neither of which it is cognate. O.Pers./Av.
ham-; Skt. sam-; also O.Pers./Av. hama-
“one and the same,” Skt. sama-; Gk. homos-;
originally identical with PIE numeral *sam-
“one,” from *som-) + âhang “melody, pitch, tune; harmony, concord,” from
Proto-Iranian *āhang-, from prefix ā- + *hang-, from
PIE base *sengwh- “to sing, make an incantation;” cf.
O.H.G. singan; Ger. singen; Goth. siggwan; Swed. sjunga;
O.E. singan “to chant, sing, tell in song;” maybe cognate with |