The word "chant" means a rhythmic, repeated phrase or incantantion. It could only have an antonym that meant unstructured speech, such as babble.
Allahu Akbar is a religious chant of 2 words! PS: I answered this pretty fast from when you posted the question :D
"Oyaheya" is a Lakota Sioux word that translates to "to win, conquer, or to go towards victory." It is commonly used as a chant or prayer in Lakota religious ceremonies to seek strength and success.
Suddenly everyone began to CHANT my name...
Plainchant or Gregorian chant are synonymous terms for liturgical chant in music.
gregorian chant
The word you are looking for is "disciple."
The phrase 'marche religieuse' means religious march. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'marche' means 'march'. And the adjective 'religieuse' means 'religious'.
My family and I love to chant in front of crowds everywhere.
The cheerleaders broke into a chant, cheering the team on.
Yes, the word 'chant' is both a noun (chant, chants) and a verb (chant, chants, chanting, chanted). Examples:Noun: He recited a chant his mother would say to put him to sleep as a child.Verb: The crowd began to chant, 'Go, Jimmy, go!".
chant