Yes yes it is
Mezzo Forte is a musical term that means medium loud.
mf - mezzo forte
In music, there are several notations that are used to indicate the volume or dynamics of a particular section of music (or even the whole work).mf, or mezzo-forte, means "moderately loud".Relatively, on a scale from 1 to 7 (pp to ff), mezzo-forte would be a 4.
mezzo forte, or moderately ( 'medium') loud.
Mezzo-forte is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "medium loud." The phrase translates literally as "half-strong" in English. The pronunciation will be "MED-dzo-FOR-tey" in Pisan Italian.
Pianissimo (pp) = very soft. Piano (p) = soft. Mezzo-piano (mp) = moderately soft. Mezzo-forte (mf) = moderately loud. Forte (f) = loud. Fortissimo (ff) = very loud. There are also pianississimo (ppp) and fortississimo (fff), which are "the softest possible" and "the loudest possible" respectably, but those are uncommon.
The Italian terms for dynamics are: piano (quiet), mezzo-piano (medium-quiet), mezzo-forte (medium-loud), and forte (loud). There are more terms in either direction, but those are the main four.
no, in order it goes from quietest to loudest : pianissimo (pp) very quiet piano (p) quiet mezzo piano (mp) medium quiet mezzo forte (mf) loud forte (f) very loud
Mezzo Forte (mf) is an Italian dynamic in music which litteraly means erately loud or half loud.
The letters mf on an Italian violin refer to mezzo forte, an Italian musical term for "medium loud."
mf stands for mezzo forte, or in english: moderately loud
Mezzo forte e mezzo piano is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "moderately loud and moderately quiet." The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "half strong and half soft" in English. The pronunciation will be "MED-dzo FOR-tey MED-dzo PYA-no" in Pisan Italian.