a. [f. as prec. + -IST + -IC.] Chosen with regard to euphony; aiming to be euphonious.
1837. Lytton, E. Maltrav., IX. iv. [Her] words were not euphonistic, nor her voice mellifluous.
1856. Sat. Rev., II. 220/2. Among the Greeks, the Furies had an especially euphonistic appellative.
1876. Mrs. Hopkins, Rose Turq., I. i. 3. The euphonistic but somewhat fictional language of domestic life.