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sing (v.)

Old English singan "to chant, sing, celebrate, or tell in song," also used of birds (class III strong verb; past tense sang, past participle sungen), from Proto-Germanic *sengwan (source also of Old Saxon singan, Old Frisian sionga, Middle Dutch singhen, Dutch zingen, Old High German singan, German singen, Gothic siggwan, Old Norse syngva, Swedish sjunga), from PIE root *sengwh- "to sing, make an incantation." The criminal slang sense of "to confess to authorities" is attested from 1610s.

No related forms in other languages, unless perhaps it is connected to Greek omphe "voice" (especially of a god), "oracle;" and Welsh dehongli "explain, interpret." The typical Indo-European root is represented by Latin canere (see chant (v.)). Other words meaning "sing" derive from roots meaning "cry, shout," but Irish gaibim is literally "take, seize," with sense evolution via "take up" a song or melody.

sing (n.)

"act of singing," especially collective, 1850, from sing (v.).

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Definitions of sing from WordNet

sing (v.)
deliver by singing;
sing (v.)
produce tones with the voice;
She was singing while she was cooking
My brother sings very well
sing (v.)
to make melodious sounds;
The nightingale was singing
sing (v.)
make a whining, ringing, or whistling sound;
the bullet sang past his ear
the kettle was singing
Synonyms: whistle
sing (v.)
divulge confidential information or secrets;
Synonyms: spill the beans / let the cat out of the bag / talk / tattle / blab / peach / babble / babble out / blab out
From wordnet.princeton.edu