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psalm (n.)

Old English psealm, salm, partly from Old French psaume, saume, partly from Church Latin psalmus, from Greek psalmos "song sung to a harp," originally "performance on stringed instrument; a plucking of the harp" (compare psaltes "harper"), from psallein "play on a stringed instrument, pull, twitch" (see feel (v.)).

Used in Septuagint for Hebrew mizmor "song," especially the sort sung by David to the harp. Related: Psalmodize; psalmody. After some hesitation, the pedantic ps- spelling prevailed in English, as it was in many neighboring languages (German, French, etc.), but English is almost alone in not pronouncing the p-.

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Definitions of psalm from WordNet
1
psalm (v.)
sing or celebrate in psalms;
He psalms the works of God
2
psalm (n.)
any sacred song used to praise the deity;
3
Psalm (n.)
one of the 150 lyrical poems and prayers that comprise the Book of Psalms in the Old Testament; said to have been written by David;
From wordnet.princeton.edu