appoggiatura उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- From left to right : dominant seventh, dominant ninth, dominant thirteenth, dominant seventh with raised fifth, dominant seventh with a rising chromatic appoggiatura on the fifth, and dominant seventh flattened fifth.
- A couple of nights ago, I was cruising right through a light, entertaining science fiction paperback when I had to slam on the brakes to keep from running right over " appoggiatura ."
- He is a pragmatist when it comes to performing Mozart : Aside from his use of contemporary instruments, he shies away from appoggiaturas and lavish vocal ornamentation, countenances some cuts and opposes supertitles as crutches for the operatically illiterate.
- William Mitchell, from a Schenkerian perspective, does not see the G as an appoggiatura because the melodic line ( oboe : G-A-A-B ) ascends to B, making the A a passing note.
- This ascent by minor third is mirrored by the descending line ( cello : F-E-D, English horn : D ), a descent by minor third, making the D, like A, an appoggiatura.
- :" the voice moves over a series of scales, played by all the strings, so that the singer at each note which he has to utter, hears an appoggiatura of a minor second from the orchestra.
- Traits characteristic for composers of this school are a particular fondess for Adagio movements and precise attention to ornaments and dynamics, as well as the liberal use of appoggiaturas ( " sigh " figures ) and frequent melodic and harmonic chromaticism.
- The Squids evolved from the " Appoges " ( after " appoggiatura ", a grace note ) of the 1980s and 1990s, who handled props but also carried their own " instruments " ( frisbees, stuffed giraffes, lounge chairs ).
- Essential considerations of a style such as Charlie Parker's, including " rhythm, phrase shape and length, dynamics, and tone color, " as well as " passing tones, appoggiatura, and'blue notes'" are unaddressed.
- The Adagietto's theme " is classically balletic, with supple rhythms, graceful turns, sighing fourths, and sweet appoggiaturas and suspensions . " The movement consists of " quasi-variations that . . . are organized according to the sonata principle ."