| 1. | the unisonous vocal music used in the Christian church from the earliest times. |
| 2. | modal liturgical music; Gregorian chant. |
| 3. | a cantus firmus or theme chosen for contrapuntal development. |
| 4. | any simple and unadorned melody or air. |

plain·chant (plān'chānt') n. See plainsong. [French plain-chant (translation of Medieval Latin cantus plānus) : plain, plain; see plain + chant, song; see chant.] |
plainchant
the Gregorian chant (q.v.) and, by extension, other similar religious chants. The word derives from the 13th-century Latin term cantus planus ("plain song"), referring to the unmeasured rhythm and monophony (single line of melody) of Gregorian chant, as distinguished from the measured rhythm of polyphonic (multipart) music, called cantus mensuratus, or cantus figuratus ("measured," or "figured," song). Its other main application is to ancient Christian music with the same unmeasured rhythm and monophony-in the West, Ambrosian, Gallican, and Mozarabic chants (qq.v.); in the East, Byzantine, Syrian, Coptic, Ethiopian, and Armenian chants (qq.v.). It may also refer to similar non-Christian religious music, such as Jewish and Hindu chants.
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