The same as with any other instruments. Forte(f) meaning loud, Piano(p) meaning quiet, Fortissimo(ff) meaning very loud and Pianissimo(pp) meaning very quiet and various variations of these 4 dynamics! Hope this helps!!
No, "piano" is not plural. "Piano" is the singular form, and "pianos" is the plural form
No, a piano is an instrument, a beautiful and complicated instrument, part of the strings section.yes a piano is a piece of furniture because it is in your housea piano is not a piece of furniture!!! if "a piano is a piece of furniture because it is in your house" that would mean anything in your house is a piece of furniture! (cups, plates, tv controls, books etc.) DUUUUHHHH! I agree with the thing the first person who answered this question said. (No, a piano is an instrument, a beautiful and complicated instrument, part of the strings section.) sincerely, 1s2y3l4v5i6e.
The genitive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: piano's
Billy Joel plays the harmonica as well as the piano in Piano man.
in music, pp means "very soft" or "pianissimo"; ff means "very loud" or "fortissimo"
piano piano or pp and ff forty forty is the highest
"pp" can stand for "pages" in document formatting. So, "60 pp" would mean 60 pages.
In hockey statistics, the PP stands for Power Play.
pp means private parts.
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
"Piano" is the most common word for "softly." It is written in a musical composition with the letter "p." The word "pianissimo" means very softly, and it is written in a piece as "pp." [minor edit. Footnote in discussion.]
It means play loudly on the piano.
Unthinkable and Have you ever tried to sleep with a broken heart. Both of which are my favorite songs.
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.
Pages.
In music notation, there are several: p means "piano", literally, or to play soft. mp is mezzo-piano, or medium soft pp symbolizes pianissimo, or very soft.