intonācija

Etymology
Via other European languages, ultimately borrowed from (a Medieval Latin formation), made into a 4th-declension feminine noun.

Noun

 * 1)  intonation the melodic curve of an utterance that expresses part of its content
 * 2)  intonation, tone the melodic contour on a specific syllable
 * 3)  intonation the smallest part of a melody that has expressive meaning; the performance of a music piece, with voice or instrument
 * 4)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  intonation, tone the melodic contour on a specific syllable
 * 2)  intonation the smallest part of a melody that has expressive meaning; the performance of a music piece, with voice or instrument
 * 3)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  intonation the smallest part of a melody that has expressive meaning; the performance of a music piece, with voice or instrument
 * 2)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  intonation the smallest part of a melody that has expressive meaning; the performance of a music piece, with voice or instrument
 * 2)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  intonation the smallest part of a melody that has expressive meaning; the performance of a music piece, with voice or instrument
 * 2)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.
 * 1)  tone, overtone a general conceptual and emotional mood expressed in, e.g., word order, context, punctuation, etc.