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  • coda
    coda
    noun
    a more or less independent passage, at the end of a composition, introduced to bring it to a satisfactory close.
  • CODA
    CODA
    abbreviation
    child of deaf adultadults: a hearing person with a deaf parent or parents.
Synonyms

coda

1 American  
[koh-duh] / ˈkoʊ də /

noun

  1. Music. a more or less independent passage, at the end of a composition, introduced to bring it to a satisfactory close.

  2. Ballet. the concluding section of a ballet, especially the final part of a pas de deux.

  3. a concluding section or part, especially one of a conventional form and serving as a summation of preceding themes, motifs, etc., as in a work of literature or drama.

  4. anything that serves as a concluding part.

  5. Phonetics. the segment of a syllable following the nucleus, as the d- sound in good.


CODA 2 American  
[koh-duh] / ˈkoʊ də /

abbreviation

  1. child of deaf adultadults: a hearing person with a deaf parent or parents.


coda British  
/ ˈkəʊdə /

noun

  1. music the final, sometimes inessential, part of a musical structure

  2. a concluding part of a literary work, esp a summary at the end of a novel of further developments in the lives of the characters

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

coda Cultural  
  1. An ending to a piece of music, standing outside the formal structure of the piece. Coda is the Italian word for “tail.”


Etymology

Origin of coda1

First recorded in 1745–55; from Italian, from Latin cauda “tail”; cf. queue

Origin of CODA2

First recorded in 1990–95

Explanation

A coda is a concluding segment of a piece of music, a dance, or a statement. It's usually short and adds a final embellishment beyond a natural ending point. Like this. Coda comes from the Latin word cauda, meaning "tail," and it's good to think of it as a tail tacked onto something that in and of itself is already a whole. If you tell a story about your crazy experience getting lost in the country and sleeping at a farmer's house, you might add, as a coda, that the farmer ended up visiting you too, a year later.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing coda

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

And an unnecessary coda that comes after the curtain call never should have made it out of rehearsals.

From Los Angeles Times • May 1, 2026

The Netflix series gets a feature-film coda starring Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan, following the Shelby family as it becomes entangled in a German plan to destabilize the British economy.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 19, 2026

In a fitting coda, a torrential downpour in the final session -- "the wonderful noise of an Amazon rain," in Correa do Lago's words -- left parts of the carpet soaked.

From Barron's • Nov. 22, 2025

A poetic coda read by Mr. Hopkins brings yet more depth to this superb recording.

From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 7, 2025

It seemed innocuous, a soft coda to the storm of the morning.

From "Breadcrumbs" by Anne Ursu