The term used in music, 'l'istesso tempo', means, in Italian, 'at the same tempo'.
It is used to indicate that the beat will remain constant when the meter changes.
See the link below for expanded details on this term, including a link to other tempo markings, plus a dictionary of musical terms.
It means time.
From Latin, "tempus," meaning "time." From that came the Italian word, "tempo," also meaning time.
no rhythm
Tempo is the rate or speed of motion or activity; pace. In music, tempo is the rate of speed of the musical piece or the timing of music.
Tempo does not have an antonym. It is a rate of speed. For clarification, tempo is often confused with a completely independent concept: rhythm.Rhythm is also referred to as Beat. A Beat, or rhythm, is the steady, regularly repeated pattern of movement or sound in music, the pattern of repeated stressed pulses. Tempo is merely the speed of the Rhythmic beat and is expressed using descriptive words (Allegro, Andante) or in Beats Per Minute (♩=120). Once you have established the beat/rhythm you then decide how fast or slow (tempo) you are going to play that rhythm
"March tempo."
The same tempo.
Tempo primo: first tempo. You changed tempo earlier, now go back to the original tempo
Its not a tempo. Its an Italian word meaning singable, or song-like.
Speed of the music.
Slow
The answer is the "tempo" as in, this tempo is really fast!
The root words tempor and tempo both mean time in Latin.
It means time.
taalam
General Tempo usually refers to the Tempo L (basic model) or it can refer to common aspectsx and similarities between all models.
The speed at which music is played at or should be played at. Source: google :)