|
쾌적한 환경에서 듣는
자연의 소리
영어 이야기 1995
euphonious
[ juː|foʊniəs ]
듣기 좋은
옛날 한 가정의 가장들 (할아버지도 될 수 있는)
매우 이기적이고 '배려심'이 부족한 사람들이 꽤 눈에 뜨인다
아들이 귀할 때 자꾸 딸만 낳으니
이 다음에는 딸 그만 낳으라고
말순 (末順) 또는 '끝순'이라고 이름을 지었다
나의 아내는 딸부잣집의 (겨울 8명)의 세째였는데
이름의 끝자에 '사내남 (男)'을 붙여서
친구들에게 '남자 같은 여자'라고 놀림을 받았단다
Her grandfather named her name not EUPHONIOUS
그래서 우리 가족이 미국 시민권을 얻을 때
이름 바꿀 기회가 주저어졌으므로
I renamed her Sophia a EUPHONIOUS name.
나는 그녀에게 듣기 좋은 (뜯도 좋은) 이름인 Sophia 라고 다시 지었다
(Sophia 의 뜻은 지혜) euphonious 라는 형용사는
한국 가곡 '성불사 깊은 밤에 그윽한 풍경소리' 생각이 난다
(홍난파 작곡 이은상 작시)
In Sungbul Temple at midnight
there were calm and EUPHONIOUS wind chimes
성불사의 깊은 밤에
그윽하고 듣기 좋은 풍경소리 있었다
(영어로는 장소 나타내는 부사 먼저 시간 부사 나중이라는
법칙이 있음)
자장가를 듣고 잠드는 아기는
그렇지 않은 아이보다 정서적으로 안정될 가능성이 높다고 한다
The sound of the EUPHONIOUS lullaby sung by parents (especially mother)
may make babies emotional, secure and smart.
부모 (특히 어머니)에 의해 불려지는 듣기 좋은 자장가는
아기들을 정서적이고 안정되며 명철하게 만들지도 모른다
euphonious 는 Greece 어 euphōnos (sweet voice) 가 그 뿌리이며
더 구체적으로 설명하면 eu (good) 이라는 접두어에
phōnē (voice).를 합친 형용사이다
우리는 복잡하고 시끄러운 도시를 떠나 ~
I'd like to sit in the EUPHONIOUS forest,
listening to the sounds of the birds and insects.
나는 새들과 벌레 소리들을 들르면서
쾌적한 숲속에 앉아있고 싶다
음악의 문외한인 내가 이해할 수 없는 것
piano sonata 는 물론 피아노로 연주하는 sonata
piano solo 는 피아노만드로 연주하는 곡인데
piano quartet 는 피아노 사중주라고 하는데
피아노 4 대로 연주하는 것이 아니라
piano 와 다른 세 악기의 연주를 가리키는 것이다
(대개 piano, violin, viola 그리고 cello
나는 내 아내의 소프라노와 내 피아노 반주의 소리
adjective euphōnos, meaning "sweet-voiced" or "musical." Euphōnos was formed by combining the prefix eu- ("good") and phōnē ("voice").
Wind chimes are one of the most euphonious sounds I can think of,
and they always make me think of peaceful times.
The sound of whistle is euphonious, emotional, and melodic.
singly euphonious or a singly cacophonous name.
The euphonious sound of Carrie's cello playing always puts me at ease.
The natural harmony between subject and verb is usually euphonious .
The music wasn't bad, Kathy replied. I thought the violin and the piano produced a euphonious combination.
It is officially, if not exactly euphoniously, called, “George Balanchine’s ‘The Nutcracker.’ ”
They sat in the euphonious forest, listening to the sounds of the birds and insects.
I did not believe in old family names unless they were peculiarly euphonious.
He couldn't understand a word of the poet's euphonious language.
Euphonious in a Sentence
Definition of Euphonious
(of a sound or noise) pleasing to the ear
Examples of Euphonious in a sentence
Wind chimes are one of the most euphonious sounds I can think of, and they always make me think of peaceful times.
The video player is currently playing an ad. You can skip the ad in 5 sec with a mouse or keyboard
I can’t think of anything less euphonious than the sound of nails scratching on a chalkboard.
Victor Lipman
Mind of the Manager
COACHING
Patience Brings Tangible Benefits to Management
Research shows patience has a positive effect on creativity and collaboration.
Posted April 2, 2023
Reviewed by Jessica Schrader
KEY POINTS
Planning, leading, organizing, and controlling are often considered the “big four” attributes needed for management success.
Less emphasis has been placed on a more psychological, intuitive approach.
New research shows that a patient management approach can improve employee creativity and collaboration.
When I was in business school about six centuries ago,
I remember there was much animated discussion around the big four attributes needed for management success. They went by the not-so-euphonious acronym of PLOC: planning, leading, organizing, and controlling.
Source: Kristin Hardwick/Stocksnap
Employees respond well to patient management.Source: Kristin Hardwick/Stocksnap
I have nothing against these skills—they're definitely part of the management equation.
Euphony was borrowed from French at the beginning of the 17th century; the French word (euphonie) derives from the Late Latin euphonia, which in turn traces back to the Greek adjective euphōnos, meaning "sweet-voiced" or "musical." Euphōnos was formed by combining the prefix eu- ("good") and phōnē ("voice").
euphony (n.)
mid-15c., from French euphonie, from Late Latin euphonia, from Greek euphonia "sweetness of voice," related to euphonos "well-sounding," from eu- "good" (see eu-) + phone "sound, voice," from PIE root *bha- (2) "to speak, tell, say." Related: Euphonic (1782); euphonical (1660s); euphonious (1774). Hence, also, euphonium (1864), the musical instrumen
All managers do need to maintain control and get things done.
But the big four by no means tell the whole story.
Their general drift emphasizes the active, forceful orientation popular in the day; as opposed to, say, a more psychological, intuitive approach.
article continues after advertisement
As an example, in 16 B-school courses, I don't think I ever heard the word "patience" mentioned once.
This is why I was recently interested to happen across a Harvard Business Review article titled
"Becoming a More Patient Leader," including research and data on the tangible benefits patience brings to management.
Creativity and productivity
A Georgia Tech professor, David Sluss, had done a survey of 578 working professionals, probing their "immediate supervisor's leadership behaviors and level of patience" and carefully examining the effects it had on them.
His conclusion: "Their responses revealed that patience had a powerful effect: When leaders demonstrated it (meaning their employees’ ratings put them in the highest quartile), their reports’ self-reported creativity and collaboration increased by an average of 16% and their productivity by 13%."
In short, the employees were clearly responding well in a variety of positive ways to a patient management approach.
Valuable addition
I wasn't surprised that management patience was being appreciated by those on the receiving end of it—that makes good sense—but I was pleased to see that it was being thoughtfully studied, with hard data quantifying its multiple benefits.
article continues after advertisement
My own experience over decades of management was that patience was indeed a very good thing; you could easily see employees responding well to it, just as you could regularly see employees reacting negatively to a more abrupt, irritated (impatient) approach. But these were just impressions, not research.
Don't get me wrong—I don't want to sound Pollyanna-ish. I'm not suggesting that needs for leading, organizing, and controlling are insignificant. All patience and no control won't get the job done either, at least probably not in the time frame you need it done by.
But it's hard to disagree with patience. It's just human nature—people like it, and they relate well to it. Employees don't like to be constantly barked at, whether by dogs or people.
THE BASICS
What Is Coaching?
Find a life coach near me
So, good for Professor Sluss for taking the time to dissect this everyday attribute we don't hear nearly enough about in business. I'm glad to see this kind of research out there. A healthy dose of patience is a useful addition to any management tool