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| '''Supraminor''' (sometimes also '''superminor''') is an [[interval quality]] used to describe [[interval]]s wider than [[minor]], but narrower than [[neutral]].
| | #redirect [[Submajor and supraminor]] |
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| == Terminology ==
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| While "superminor" is more consistent with the analogous "[[supermajor]]", it is more likely to be interpreted as "more minor", therefore implying intervals narrower than minor, whereas such intervals are rather called [[subminor]]. This may be caused by the common use of "super" in English both as an adverb and a prefix, leading to a possible parsing of the term as "super major", while "supra" is only used as a prefix. Nonetheless, since both Latin prefixes are equivalent in meaning, both terms are technically correct and are interchangeable.
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| The term "supraminor" has been used regularly by many people, including Manuel Op de Coul<ref>Op de Coul, Manuel. [https://www.huygens-fokker.org/docs/intervals.html ''Stichting Huygens-Fokker: List of intervals''].</ref>, [[John Chalmers]]<ref>Chalmers, John. [https://eamusic.dartmouth.edu/~larry/published_articles/divisions_of_the_tetrachord/ ''Divisions of the Tetrachord'']. 1993.</ref>, [[Dave Keenan]]<ref>Keenan, Dave. [https://dkeenan.com/Music/IntervalNaming.htm ''A note on the naming of musical intervals'']. 1999, updated 2001.</ref>, [[Margo Schulter]]<ref>Schulter, Margo. [https://www.bestii.com/~mschulter/IntervalSpectrumRegions.txt ''Regions of the Interval Spectrum'']. 2010.</ref> and [[Deja Igliashon]]<ref>[[Extra-Diatonic Intervals]]</ref>. As of January 19th, 2025, the term "supraminor" has 660 more occurrences on [[XA Discord]] compared to "superminor".
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| == References ==
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| <references/>
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| [[Category:Terms]]
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