Intent in choreography refers to the intent of the choreographer and what he or she wants the dance to convey.
A stimulus can be something visual, auditorial, tactile, ideational and kinaesthetic for eg. the roughness of a jumper, which will assist you by giving you an ideal perception for your intent and movement when composing a dance :) i owned the last answer woot woot!
A dance action which is held without moving
It is the same as in English; they both represent the style of classical dance. 'Ballet' is originated from the word ballare in Latin, meaning 'dance'.
A contrast in dance is similar to the meaning everywhere else. That is for the movement to be completely different form another to show the variation.
Intent in choreography refers to the intent of the choreographer and what he or she wants the dance to convey.
A stimulus can be something visual, auditorial, tactile, ideational and kinaesthetic for eg. the roughness of a jumper, which will assist you by giving you an ideal perception for your intent and movement when composing a dance :) i owned the last answer woot woot!
the word dance means move in a slow form with music!
No. It does not. THe Hebrew word for dance is rikkud (ריקוד)
Ernest is an old word for males called vigor or intent.
A dance action which is held without moving
It is a dance group that won ABDC.
The word "intent" can function as both a noun and an adjective.
I think it means dance
Tanzen means to dance in English.
Rikud - Dance (Noun)
lirkod (לרקוד) = "to dance"