Ritardando
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo." It is indicated on sheet music by the symbol "<" or the word "cresc."
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo."
The Italian term that means to gradually decrease volume is "diminuendo." This term instructs musicians to gradually play or sing more softly.
The Italian word "vino" translates to "wine" in English.
The Italian word for 'yes' is 'sì'.
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the word in music that means gradually getting louder and louder is a cresendo!
Gradually slower.
gradually getting slower
No, it is not a Latin word.There is a modern Italian word diminuendo, used in music to mean "gradually reducing volume".
"Gradually getting louder" in English is crescendo in Italian.
The term is Ritardando.
Rall is an abbreviation. It stands for Rallentando an Italian word meaning to gradually slow down, or slacken, the tempo.
Neither of them is an indication of absolute speed, so neither of them is slower than the other. They both mean that the music should gradually get slower, but that is all. They indicate a process, not a state.
The Italian term that means to gradually decrease volume is "diminuendo." This term instructs musicians to gradually play or sing more softly.
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo." It is indicated on sheet music by the symbol "<" or the word "cresc."
'Accelerando' isn't Spanish, it's Italian and it's not spelt 'accelerando', it's actually spelt as accerlerando. It means 'gradually get faster.'