The two chords at the end of a musical phrase are called a cadence.
A cadence is a succession of chords that marks the end of a musical phrase.
"A phrase mark, better known as a slur, indicates that a passage of music should be played legato. Legato is an Italian word meaning smooth. Phrase marks play a significant part in musical shape. It is usually placed on the note head side in order to avoid crossing over note stems. A phrase is a section in music that express a complete idea." http://www.treblis.com/Notation/Phrase.html
Clef
Phrases and slurs often look alike in a piece. A slur is the more common marking in pieces, where a curved line is under many notes in a row often multiple measures in length. It is meant to be played without using a tongue in a legato style. A phrase mark looks very identical because they are both curved lines under many notes. However, phrase markings will show articulations under them like accents, legato marks, staccato marks, etc. Also, they show breathe marks afterward so you can breathe. Phrases are used to indicate a player should take any breathes while playing that particular section. Instead, the player should breathe in the indicated rests and breathe marks.
Think of a phrase in music as a sentence. You want it to flow together, fit like a puzzle. If you're playing a wind instrument, you don't want to breathe in the middle of a phrase unless there's a rest. Often phrases are marked by a long curved line (like a slur) or by breath marks which look like this: (')
The first tattoo he got was a treble clef (music note), which is on the back of his neck. Obviously, is marks his musical side :) He got another tattoo of three stars behind his right ear. They mark Oritsé, Marvin, and JB. Shows how much I know. ;D
Musicals are either underlined or italicized. Individual songs from a musical would be surrounded by quotation marks.
To make it into a phrase you really should be using quotation marks: "for the last time" is a phrase.
in 1887
Answer is B: To show that the phrase is unfamiliar and not commonly used APEX
"A phrase mark, better known as a slur, indicates that a passage of music should be played legato. Legato is an Italian word meaning smooth. Phrase marks play a significant part in musical shape. It is usually placed on the note head side in order to avoid crossing over note stems. A phrase is a section in music that express a complete idea." http://www.treblis.com/Notation/Phrase.html
Not usually. Often, it's like the "silence between words" which is more aptly described as "liaison" most of the time. Between phrases, you would "feel" a change, but there isn't necessarily silence.
Put quotation marks around the phrase
Quotation marks need to be placed around text to instruct a search engine to treat the text as a phrase. This lets the computer know to look for only sources that have the entire phrase listed as a prompt.
Putting a phrase in quotation marks when searching a database helps ensure that the search results display pages or records containing that specific phrase as a whole, rather than individual words scattered throughout the text. This can help refine the search results and make them more relevant to what you are looking for.
Clef
No, not all books have quotation marks in the title. Quotation marks are used in book titles to set off a specific phrase or word, and it is not a requirement for all book titles to have them.
Yes, I believe so. If not, you only need to put it into italics.