Subgenre

Synonyms for "subgenre"

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

2 relation types

derived from

1 entries

related to

2 entries

Translations

16 translations across 15 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Catalan

1 entries
  • subgènere noun (category within a particular genre)

Dutch

1 entries
  • subgenre noun (category within a particular genre)

Estonian

1 entries
  • alaliik noun (category within a particular genre)

French

1 entries
  • sous-genre noun (category within a particular genre)

Galician

1 entries
  • subxénero noun (category within a particular genre)

Georgian

1 entries
  • ქვეჟანრი noun (category within a particular genre)

German

2 entries
  • Subgenre noun (category within a particular genre)
  • Untergenre noun (category within a particular genre)

Hungarian

1 entries
  • alműfaj noun (category within a particular genre)

Irish

1 entries
  • fosheánra noun (category within a particular genre)

Italian

1 entries
  • sottogenere noun (category within a particular genre)

Polish

1 entries
  • podgatunek noun (category within a particular genre)

Portuguese

1 entries
  • subgénero noun (category within a particular genre)

Russian

1 entries
  • поджа́нр noun (category within a particular genre)

Spanish

1 entries
  • subgénero noun (category within a particular genre)

Swedish

1 entries
  • subgenre noun (category within a particular genre)

Sample sentences

3 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

He thinks he listens to phonk music, but in reality he only listens to a subgenre of phonk, called drift phonk.

Source: tatoeba (10802146)

You have to give director Colm McCarthy, a Scottish TV veteran making his feature film debut, and writer Mike Carey, adapting his own novel, credit for attempting the seemingly impossible task of doing something new with the zombie subgenre.

Source: wiktionary

Black metal is a subgenre of heavy metal music that typically takes on anti-Christian, satanic and pagan themes.

Source: wiktionary

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.