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Origin and history of odeum

odeum(n.)

"classical concert hall," c. 1600, from Latin odeum, from Greek ōdeion, the name of a public building in Athens designed for musical performances, from ōidē "song" (see ode).

Entries linking to odeum

1580s, from French ode (c. 1500), from Late Latin ode "lyric song," from Greek ōidē, an Attic contraction of aoidē "song, ode;" related to aeidein (Attic aidein) "to sing;" aoidos (Attic oidos) "a singer, singing;" aude "voice, tone, sound," probably from a PIE *e-weid-, perhaps from root *wed- "to speak." In classical use, "a poem intended to be sung;" in modern use usually a rhymed lyric, often an address, usually dignified, rarely extending to 150 lines. Related: Odic.

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    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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