I dont know! lol
Divide the number of seconds by 60 seconds/minute, stopping at the decimal point. The whole number is the number of hours, and the remainder is the number of seconds.
Yes, Jesus was jewish---therefore, the music had to be respectful to him, plus a whole new religion. It's a combination with a new point of worship.
"Rests" are places of silence in a piece of music and are notated with a symbol that tells the musician the duration of the rest. Rests have the same length as notes do; so there is a whole note and a whole rest, half note and half rest, etc. If silence in all parts is required- that's notated "GP" which means Grand Pause. This results in the music totally stopping. In western music having multiple movements, such as a symphony, a string quartet, or a song cycle, it's customary to pause between movements unless the score is notated otherwise.
The whole rest symbol in music notation indicates a complete silence or pause for the duration of a whole measure in the music.
decimal point
You don't! That's the whole point of a d.c. transmission line.
When multiplying a WHOLE number by a power of ten, write the same number of zeros (0) after the number as the power, eg:123 x 102 = 12300 (two 0s as the power is 2)123 x 106 = 123000000 (six 0s as the power is 6)If the power of 10 is written in full (eg 102 = 100), write the same number of zeros after the number as in the power of 10, eg:123 x 100 = 12300123 x 1000000 = 123000000NOTE:It is better to not think in terms of adding zeros, but to think in terms of moving (or jumping) the decimal point (over digits).For a whole number, the decimal point is "hiding"* after the last digit. When multiplying by a power of 10, the decimal point is jumped the power (or number of zeros in the power of 10) digits to the right; if there are no digits to the right of the decimal point when it needs to jump, a zero is placed after the decimal point so that it can then jump over that zero.*the decimal point is "hiding" as it is not normally written if there are no non-zero digits after it.
To identify scales in music, look for patterns of whole and half steps. Scales typically follow a specific sequence of intervals, such as whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half. By recognizing this pattern and starting on a specific note, you can identify different scales in music.
A whole note in music notation gets 4 counts.
Actually it is the music that is made before the music video so your real question should be why does the music video have to relate to the music. The answer to your question though is because if it didn't relate it wouldn't make any sense at all. They want to kind of give you the feel of the song that is the whole point of a music video. Some music videos don't really relate to the music at all.
A parabola is NOT a point, it is the whole curve.
The best site for Arabic music is www.yallatunes.com, it has an awesome media player that displays the videos non stop till you find a song that you like at which point you can click on it and watch the whole thing