How to Use fugue in a Sentence

fugue

noun
  • Flavin Judd, the artist’s son, has compared it to a Bach fugue.
    Roberta Smith, New York Times, 26 Mar. 2020
  • That golden tone drew you in at the start of the fugue in the No. 1 in C Major.
    Peter Dobrin, Philly.com, 14 Jan. 2018
  • Knauss is a master of the organ — the baroque pipes, the swelling fugue soaring in a church nave.
    Petula Dvorak, Washington Post, 29 May 2017
  • The chorus, in the old musical forms of canon and fugue, demands light.
    Mark Swed, Los Angeles Times, 20 June 2023
  • The Simpsons, Snoopy and the Smurfs are all here, floating through a fugue state that refuses to lift.
    New York Times, 24 Feb. 2021
  • The Minuet movement took the very unusual form of a fugue.
    Christian Hertzog, San Diego Union-Tribune, 16 June 2023
  • The brassy, flashy American auteur has made a movie in a fugue state about the world's current state.
    Steven Zeitchik, latimes.com, 13 Sep. 2017
  • And maybe all of this will lead to stopping Bob and waking Cooper up from his Dougie fugue state.
    Matt Miller, Esquire, 10 July 2017
  • In March, Melnikov will perform the complete preludes and fugues by Dmitri Shostakovich in one gulp.
    Patrick Neas, kansascity, 2 June 2018
  • For a stretch, without losing its pulse, the song became a string-quartet fugue.
    Larry Blumenfeld, WSJ, 1 Feb. 2023
  • Sri spent the next days in a knotted fugue of grief, grappling with the paradox that Mama was everywhere and nowhere.
    Noy Thrupkaew, Washington Post, 6 Oct. 2021
  • The first play is built around a Bach fugue, which DeBoard described as melodic and cohesive in style.
    San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Mar. 2022
  • For Bartók, the universe is a structural masterpiece to be represented in the fugue and dance.
    Los Angeles Times, 22 Feb. 2022
  • A gray still life of a dead, trussed heron is paired with a painting of the same bird by Sisley, as well as a portrait by Renoir of Bazille at work on his avian death fugue.
    Jason Farago, New York Times, 15 June 2017
  • The fugue of religion and superstition sounds over these mise en scènes.
    Doreen St. Félix, The New Yorker, 8 Aug. 2019
  • Only in the concluding fugue did the piece lose some of its lucidity.
    Rick Schultz, Los Angeles Times, 14 Aug. 2019
  • Djokovic's double-fault in the next game helped Federer break back, and the ensuing changeover was filled with a fugue of fans' voices chanting the first names of both.
    Howard Fendrich, baltimoresun.com, 14 July 2019
  • Sit in the sun somewhere and think about what’s happening without rushing to your laptop to read stroller reviews in a fugue state.
    Meaghan O'Connell, The Cut, 21 June 2017
  • Vampyr opens in a wild fugue, as Reid's bloodlust forces him to murder his own sister, and then finds himself on the run from vampire hunters out for revenge.
    Julie Muncy, WIRED, 7 June 2018
  • In the fugue state of the past five-and-a-half-but-who’s-counting months, snacks—salty or sweet, big or small, homemade or store-bought—break up the sprawling hours and motivate me to get through my to-do list.
    Sarah Jampel, Bon Appétit, 20 Aug. 2020
  • The Sopranos paid homage with Agent Cooper–esque fugue states and shots of trees blowing in the wind, rippling in their fullness and strangeness.
    James Parker, The Atlantic, 13 May 2017
  • The twists and turns make for a fantastic read, but there is also the underlying fugue of displacement.
    Karin Slaughter, chicagotribune.com, 23 May 2018
  • Highlights were a haunting prelude and fugue of Shostakovich’s and a powerhouse performance of Prokofiev’s Sonata No.
    Olin Chism, star-telegram.com, 26 May 2017
  • Trifonov chose five of Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues and revealed an affinity for their rich layers of mood and meaning.
    Tim Smith, baltimoresun.com, 14 June 2017
  • Beyond that, the pianist also a proved a digital wizard, voicing lines in his one hand the way Baroque masters play fugues with two.
    Zachary Lewis, cleveland.com, 23 Feb. 2018
  • This is theater as a fugue state where your vision is dominated by a huge half cube whirling above the stage, lit by dreamy projections.
    Karen D'souza, The Mercury News, 12 Apr. 2017
  • There was even an organ-like quality to his account of Beethoven’s Sonata No. 31, particularly to the fugue in the third movement.
    Zachary Lewis, cleveland, 25 Apr. 2022
  • The piece offered many charming moments (the fugue at the breakfast table rose to a delightful roar) but maybe there were simply too many moments.
    BostonGlobe.com, 28 Sep. 2019
  • Deeply involving were the periods of eeriness and unrest in the first two movements, while the finale was the first real adrenalin rush of the evening, a conflagration of fiery fugues.
    Rob Hubbard, Twin Cities, 8 Nov. 2019
  • For something a little more avant-garde, try K. 30, a fugue built on a motif that Scarlatti allegedly heard when his cat strolled across his keyboard.
    Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 25 May 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'fugue.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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