: folding or creased or hinged to fold like an accordion
an accordion pleat
an accordion door
Examples of accordion in a Sentence
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Noun
On Tuesday, Garth Hudson, who played organ, accordion, saxophone, and more as a member of the Band—perhaps still the group that best embodies the glorious, lawless amalgamation of styles at the very heart of rock and roll—died at the age of eighty-seven, near Woodstock, New York.—Amanda Petrusich, The New Yorker, 24 Jan. 2025 Hudson joined a family of musicians: his father played flute, drums, cornet and the saxophone, performing regularly in local dance bands, while his mother was a vocalist, who also played the accordion and piano.—Shania Russell, EW.com, 21 Jan. 2025 The pleasant, quirky notes of an accordion join the strains of violin, wafting upward toward the darkening sky, accenting the polite chatter of guests hoping for a handshake and a word with America’s latest King Midas and his Nordic queen of a wife.—Miami Herald Archives, Miami Herald, 8 Jan. 2025 As a young man, Laliberté literally ran away to the circus by starting as a street performer, mastering fire-breathing, stilt-walking and playing his father’s accordion.—Catherine Dunwoody, Forbes, 17 Dec. 2024 See all Example Sentences for accordion
Word History
Etymology
Noun
borrowed from German Accordion (now Akkordeon), from Accord (now Akkord) "chord" (borrowed from French accord "chord, harmony, accord entry 2") + -ion (as in Melodion, an earlier keyboard instrument, from Melodiemelody + -on, probably the Greek neuter noun ending)
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