Noun
A few measures added beyond the natural termination of a composition.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe film's coda provides a vision of an afterlife, a desolate landscape on which quiet people solemnly recognize and greet one another, and all is understood in the fullness of time. Roger Ebert
Bimoraic syllables are now written with two letters, as in Japanese: diphthongs are written with the help of V or hV glyphs, and the nasal coda is written with the glyph for ŋ, which can form a syllable of its own in Vai. Source: Internet
Both approaches conceal the fact, though, that many consonant-based katakana signs, especially those canonically ending in u, can be used in coda position, too, where the vowel is unvoiced and therefore barely perceptible. Source: Internet
Apocalypse of John p. 8 Torrey showed how the three major songs in Revelation (the new song, the song of Moses and the Lamb and the chorus at 19: 6–8) each fall naturally into four regular metrical lines plus a coda. Source: Internet
A hard rock part follows this and it concludes with a coda. Source: Internet
And as a coda, the book’s final illustration is also a round landscape, blue and green. Source: Internet