Diesis: Difference between revisions

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Move the JI intervals to the diesis (melodic unit) page
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** rarely, [[648/625]], the ''diminished comma'' or ''greater diesis'';  
** rarely, [[648/625]], the ''diminished comma'' or ''greater diesis'';  
* by extension, a melodic unit of about the size of 128/125. See ''[[Diesis (melodic unit)]]''.  
* by extension, a melodic unit of about the size of 128/125. See ''[[Diesis (melodic unit)]]''.  
Intervals with the word in the name:
* [[Magic comma]], or ''small diesis''
* [[Porcupine comma]], or ''maximal diesis''
* [[Tetracot comma]], or ''minimal diesis''
* [[49/48]], the ''large septimal diesis''
* [[50/49]], the ''septimal tritonic diesis''


In addition, there are a number of archaic usages in [[Ancient Greek music]]:  
In addition, there are a number of archaic usages in [[Ancient Greek music]]:  

Revision as of 12:21, 25 November 2024

English Wikipedia has an article on:

The diesis (/ˈdaɪəsɪs/ DY-ə-sis; plural dieses) most commonly refers to:

  • The difference between two enharmonic notes in a scale. See Diesis (scale theory);
  • by extension, 128/125 (≈ 41¢), the augmented comma or lesser diesis;
    • rarely, 648/625, the diminished comma or greater diesis;
  • by extension, a melodic unit of about the size of 128/125. See Diesis (melodic unit).

In addition, there are a number of archaic usages in Ancient Greek music:

  • 256/243, known as the limma today;
  • a variety of quartertones.

Normal diesis

The normal diesis (≈ 38.7¢) is an interval size measure defined as one step of 31edo.

See also

This disambiguation page lists pages associated with the title Diesis.

If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended page.