[f. Gr. εὔφωνος see next + -OUS.] = EUPHONIOUS.
1805. W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., III. 651. He is a great artist full of dexterities, various and euphonous.
1827. Blackw. Mag., XXII. 593. That euphonous compliment devoted by Irish patriots and mob-orators to slavery and oppression.
1834. Sir H. Taylor, Artevelde, Wks. (1864), I. 301, note. I have adopted this very euphonous epithet from a little poem called The Errors of Ecstacie.