octave

[ok-tiv, -teyv] /ˈɒk tɪv, -teɪv/
noun
1.
Music.
  1. a tone on the eighth degree from a given tone.
  2. the interval encompassed by such tones.
  3. the harmonic combination of such tones.
  4. a series of tones, or of keys of an instrument, extending through this interval.
2.
a pipe-organ stop whose pipes give tones an octave above the normal pitch of the keys used.
3.
a series or group of eight.
4.
Also called octet. Prosody.
  1. a group of eight lines of verse, especially the first eight lines of a sonnet in the Italian form.
    Compare sestet (def 1).
  2. a stanza of eight lines.
5.
the eighth of a series.
6.
Ecclesiastical.
  1. the eighth day from a feast day, counting the feast day as the first.
  2. the period of eight days beginning with a feast day.
7.
one eighth of a pipe of wine.
8.
Fencing. the eighth of eight defensive positions.
adjective
9.
pitched an octave higher.
Origin
1300-50; Middle English < Latin octāva eighth part, noun use of feminine of octāvus, equivalent to oct- oct- + -āvus adj. suffix
Related forms
octaval
[ok-tey-vuh l, ok-tuh-] /ɒkˈteɪ vəl, ˈɒk tə-/ (Show IPA),
adjective
Examples from the web for octave
  • It is an octave and a fifth, not an octave and a half.
  • At that point, he might break into a be-bop-flavored sprint or leap to an upper octave to restate the tune with even more fervor.
  • Li has major manual skills, including an octave technique scarcely to be believed.
  • What this means in musical terms is that the bottom octave gets chopped off.
  • He grinned with a schoolboy's pride as he crawled his way up and down a full octave of half-notes.
British Dictionary definitions for octave

octave

/ˈɒktɪv/
noun
1.
  1. the interval between two musical notes one of which has twice the pitch of the other and lies eight notes away from it counting inclusively along the diatonic scale
  2. one of these two notes, esp the one of higher pitch
  3. (as modifier): an octave leap See also perfect (sense 9), diminished (sense 2), interval (sense 5)
2.
(prosody) a rhythmic group of eight lines of verse
3.
(ˈɒkteɪv)
  1. a feast day and the seven days following
  2. the final day of this period
4.
the eighth of eight basic positions in fencing
5.
any set or series of eight
adjective
6.
consisting of eight parts
Word Origin
C14: (originally: eighth day) via Old French from Medieval Latin octāva diēs eighth day (after a festival), from Latin octo eight
Word Origin and History for octave
n.

c.1300, utaves (plural, via Anglo-French from popular Old French form oitieve, otaves), reformed in early 15c., from Medieval Latin octava, from Latin octava dies "eighth day," fem. of octavus "eighth," from octo (see eight). Originally "period of eight days after a festival," also "eighth day after a festival" (counting both days, by inclusive reckoning, thus if the festival was on a Sunday, the octaves would be the following Sunday). Verse sense of "stanza of eight lines" is from 1580s; musical sense of "note eight diatonic degrees above (or below) a given note" is first recorded 1650s, from Latin octava (pars) "eighth part." Formerly English eighth was used in this sense (mid-15c.)

octave in Culture
octave [(ok-tiv)]

An interval between musical notes in which the higher note is six whole tones, or twelve half tones, above the lower. From the standpoint of physics, the higher note has twice the frequency of the lower. Notes that are an octave apart, or a whole number of octaves apart, sound in some ways like the same note and have the same letter for their names.

octave in Technology
language
A high-level interactive language by John W. Eaton, with help from many others, like MATLAB, primarily intended for numerical computations. Octave provides a convenient command line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically.
Octave can do arithmetic for real and complex scalars and matrices, solve sets of nonlinear algebraic equations, integrate functions over finite and infinite intervals, and integrate systems of ordinary differential and differential-algebraic equations.
Octave has been compiled and tested with g++ and libg++ on a SPARCstation 2 running SunOS 4.1.2, an IBM RS/6000 running AIX 3.2.5, DEC Alpha systems running OSF/1 1.3 and 3.0, a DECstation 5000/240 running Ultrix 4.2a, and Intel 486 systems running Linux. It should work on most other Unix systems with g++ and libg++.
Octave is distributed under the GNU General Public License. It requires gnuplot, a C++ compiler and Fortran compiler or f2c translator.
Latest version: 2.0.16 (released 2000-01-30), as of 2000-06-26.
home (https://che.wisc.edu/octave).
(ftp://ftp.che.wisc.edu/pub/octave/) or your nearest GNU archive site.
E-mail: .
(2000-06-27)
Encyclopedia Article for octave

in music, an interval whose higher note has a sound-wave frequency of vibration twice that of its lower note. Thus the international standard pitch A above middle C vibrates at 440 hertz (cycles per second); the octave above this A vibrates at 880 hertz, while the octave below it vibrates at 220 hertz.

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