octaviate
English
Etymology
Modelled on French octavier; see octavate for more.
Verb
octaviate (third-person singular simple present octaviates, present participle octaviating, simple past and past participle octaviated)
- (music, rare) To octavate.
- 1992, in Chelys, volumes 21-22, pages 33 and 37:
- He octaviates some fragments of the tune (including the first note) without even the excuse of avoiding difficult stopping.
- […]
- The transcriber adapts chords to his instrument, sometimes octaviates or simplifies the bass on technical grounds, but a peculiarity of this setting is the inclusion of some thorough-bass realization at places where the solo part plays in unison […]
- 2000, Richard Charles Boulanger (editor), the csound book, page 317:
- As the fundamentals of each fof begin to octaviate, they are desynchronized by individual envelopes, […]
- 2002, J C Risset, Examples of the musical use of digital audio effects, in the Journal of New Music Research:
- In Marseille, I also generated some synthetic sounds with the MUSICV program. I chose a defective major-minor pitch scale, which does not exactly octaviate […]
- 1992, in Chelys, volumes 21-22, pages 33 and 37: