Tuesday, May 31, 2011



Word of the Day for Tuesday, May 31, 2011


leitmotif \LYT-moh-teef\, noun:


1. In music drama, a marked melodic phrase or short passage which always accompanies the reappearance of a certain person, situation, abstract idea, or allusion in the course of the play; a sort of musical label.

2. A dominant and recurring theme.


The leitmotif of the B.O.'s presidency is Spend Baby Spend!

--Spy Maker, JSA's Blog


Each actor to appear on stage is accompanied by a musical phrase on the drum -- a sort of leitmotif to characterize an emotion, much like a Wagnerian drama.-- Eleanor Blau, "Connecticut's Shakespeare", New York Times, July 9, 1982


One theme had recurred so frequently in these conversations that it had become the leitmotif of the trip.-- Jack F. Matlock Jr., Autopsy on an Empire


As is so often the case in a crazy household . . . guilt becomes a leitmotif.-- Frederick Busch, "My Brother, Myself", New York Times, February 9, 1997


Leitmotif (also spelled leitmotiv) is from German Leitmotiv, "leading motif," from leiten, "to lead" (from Old High German leitan) + Motiv, "motif," from the French. It is especially associated with the operas of German composer Richard Wagner.

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