a. the male voice intermediate between alto and baritone, having a range approximately from the B a ninth below middle C to the G a fifth above it
b. a singer with such a voice
c. a saxophone, horn, recorder, etc, intermediate in compass and size between the alto and baritone or bass
d. (as modifier): a tenor sax
2.
general drift of thought; purpose: to follow the tenor of an argument
3.
a. (in early polyphonic music) the part singing the melody or the cantus firmus
b. (in four-part harmony) the second lowest part lying directly above the bass
4.
bell-ringing
a. the heaviest and lowest-pitched bell in a ring
b. (as modifier): a tenor bell
5.
a settled course of progress
6.
archaic general tendency
7.
finance the time required for a bill of exchange or promissory note to become due for payment
8.
law
a. the exact words of a deed, etc, as distinct from their effect
b. an exact copy or transcript
[C13 (originally: general meaning or sense): from Old French tenour, from Latin tenor a continuous holding to a course, from tenēre to hold; musical sense via Italian tenore, referring to the voice part that was continuous, that is, to which the melody was assigned]
'tenorless
—adj
tenor (ˈtɛnə)
—n
1.
music
a. the male voice intermediate between alto and baritone, having a range approximately from the B a ninth below middle C to the G a fifth above it
b. a singer with such a voice
c. a saxophone, horn, recorder, etc, intermediate in compass and size between the alto and baritone or bass
d. (as modifier): a tenor sax
2.
general drift of thought; purpose: to follow the tenor of an argument
3.
a. (in early polyphonic music) the part singing the melody or the cantus firmus
b. (in four-part harmony) the second lowest part lying directly above the bass
4.
bell-ringing
a. the heaviest and lowest-pitched bell in a ring
b. (as modifier): a tenor bell
5.
a settled course of progress
6.
archaic general tendency
7.
finance the time required for a bill of exchange or promissory note to become due for payment
8.
law
a. the exact words of a deed, etc, as distinct from their effect
b. an exact copy or transcript
[C13 (originally: general meaning or sense): from Old French tenour, from Latin tenor a continuous holding to a course, from tenēre to hold; musical sense via Italian tenore, referring to the voice part that was continuous, that is, to which the melody was assigned]
c.1300, "general meaning, purpose, drift," from O.Fr. tenour "substance, sense" (13c.), from L. tenorem (nom. tenor) "contents, course," originally "a holding on," from tenere "to hold" (see tenet). The musical sense of "high male voice" is attested from c.1388, because the
sustained melody (canto fermo) was carried by the tenor's part.