Scale Definition
- minor-scale
 - chromatic-scale
 - diatonic-scale
 - range
 - melodic scale
 - whole-tone-scale
 - major-scale
 - harmonic scale
 - Danish balance
 - stapel scale
 - Roman balance
 - trebuchet
 - scale-beam
 - balance
 - stilliard
 
(music): tonic, supertonic, mediant, subdominant, dominant, submediant, leading note, octave interval.
- to reduce (or increase), often according to a fixed ratio or proportion
 
- according to established, proportional dimensions 
a toy fighter plane built to scale
 
- Libra, the constellation and seventh sign of the Zodiac
 
- to give an advantage to one possible outcome over another
 
Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Scale
- scale back
 - scale down (or up)
 - to scale
 - the Scales
 - tip the scales
 - tip the scales at
 - turn the scales
 
Origin of Scale
-  
From Middle English scale, from Old French escale, from Frankish or another Old High German source skala /scāla. Cognate with Old English scealu (“shell, husk") (See shale and shell). compare French écale, écaille, Italian scaglia.
From Wiktionary
 From Old Norse skál (“bowl"). Compare Danish skÃ¥l (“bowl, cup"), Dutch schaal; German Schale; Old High German scāla; Gothic skalja (skalja), Old English scealu (“cup; shell"). Cognate with scale, as in Etymology 2.
From Wiktionary
-  
From Latin scāla, usually in plural scālae (“a flight of steps, stairs, staircase, ladder"), for *scadla, from scandō (“I climb"); see scan, ascend, descend, etc.
From Wiktionary
 -  
Middle English from Old French escale of Germanic origin skel-1 in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
 -  
Middle English bowl, balance from Old Norse skāl skel-1 in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
 -  
Middle English from Latin scālae ladder skand- in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
 
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