treble

adj
/ˈtɹɛbəl/

Etymology

PIE word *tréyes From Middle English treble, from Old French treble, from Latin triplus. Doublet of triple.

  1. derived from triplus
  2. derived from treble
  3. inherited from treble

Definitions

  1. Pertaining to the highest singing voice or part in harmonized music.

  2. Threefold, triple.

    • A lofty tower, and strong on every side / With treble walls.
    • Every subscriber of one penny per week, who is sixty years of age, or upwards, and under four-score, to be entitled to receive treble his subscription at the end of the year; that is, his own subscription, and twice as much more.
    • The treble walls and ditches on the land side … diminish the extent of ground covered with houses.
  3. Trebly

    Trebly; triply.

    • Whose deserts might buy him treble
  4. + 13 more definitions
    1. The highest singing voice (especially as for a boy) or part in musical composition.

      • He starts out by saying that there are three sights, the mene, treble, and quadreble, but actually he discusses only two, the treble and quadreble, both of which are read at the transposition of an octave.
      • The voices include a counter (always below the tenor), a countertenor (moving above and below the tenor), mene, treble, and quadreble.
      • The counter involves transposition of the sighted note to the fifth below (for extremely low notes a twelfth), the mene and countertenor do not transpose, the treble transposes to the octave above, and the quadreble to the twelfth above.
    2. A person or instrument having a treble voice or pitch

      A person or instrument having a treble voice or pitch; a boy soprano.

    3. The highest tuned in a ring of bells.

    4. Any high-pitched or shrill voice or sound.

    5. A threefold quantity or number

      A threefold quantity or number; something having three parts or having been tripled.

    6. A drink with three portions of alcohol

      A drink with three portions of alcohol; a triple

    7. Any of the narrow areas enclosed by the two central circles on a dartboard, worth three…

      Any of the narrow areas enclosed by the two central circles on a dartboard, worth three times the usual value of the segment.

    8. Three goals, victories, awards etc. in a given match or season.

      • As for City, a domestic treble is off the cards and they must haul themselves off the floor quickly with the second leg of their last-16 Champions League tie against Barcelona on Wednesday.
    9. To multiply by three

      To multiply by three; to make into three parts, layers, or thrice the amount.

      • German climate minister says speed of carbon cuts needs to be trebled [title]
    10. To become multiplied by three or increased threefold.

      • I am more ſerious then my cuſtome; you Muſt be ſo too, if heed me: which to do Trebbles thee o're.
    11. To make a shrill or high-pitched noise.

    12. To utter in a treble key

      To utter in a treble key; to whine.

      • He outrageously / (When I accused him) trebled his reply.
    13. Alternative form of tribble (“frame for drying paper”).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for treble. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA