coda - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • add: Paul Davies chairs a debate between proponents of each theory, adding a coda of his own.
  • have: In Coles ' case the story had a coda.
  • provide: This fast tempo returns, finally, to provide a coda.
  • haunt: And unsurprisingly the climax is an inconclusive, haunting coda, with little explained or resolved.
  • make: Two very short chapters make a coda with an account of Gregory's death, and a general assessment.

Preposition: at

  • end: He always got the complicated little codas at the end of pieces - so much better than the cop-out fade!

Adjective modifier

  • final: There is a final coda to this strange tale.
  • extended: The weird bits ( Easy, Love Is the New Feel Awful, complete with extended saxophone coda ) are more experimental.
  • short: A short coda brings the movement to a close in a bright B major.
  • long: But no - there was the " scream and shout " crescendo, and the band blasted out the long coda.
  • instrumental: Just the two vocals tunes here and one of those contains a six minutes instrumental coda, but we don't mind too much.
  • little: But Miles added his own little coda which went: ETH is a well out of date 70s concept anyway.

Modifies a noun

  • consonant: Which coda consonant is used in any particular word, however, is difficult to pin down.
  • section: The work finally come to a close with an frenzied coda section.

Noun used with modifier

  • guitar: And ' 14:53 ' could tug at even the most stale of hearts, with it's simple, pleading guitar coda.
  • piano: There's a sublime piano coda at the heart of the piece, strange voices and gentle electronic flutters.

Possessives

  • track: Both musicians were incredibly special, and the piano part Quinn slips into as the track's coda is out of this world.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.