The manner of half sung and half spoken is known as recitative, which is a vocal style often used in Opera and oratorio. It is used to convey dialogue or narrative in a more speech-like manner than traditional singing.
The function of pronounce is to articulate or declare a word, phrase, or sound in a spoken or spoken-like manner in a specific language in a way that reflects its correct pronunciation.
No, "has spoken" is a verb phrase consisting of the auxiliary verb "has" and the main verb "spoken." An adverbial is a word or phrase that modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb to provide more information about time, place, manner, etc. For example, in the sentence "She has spoken confidently," "confidently" is an adverbial modifying how she spoke.
No, "she has spoken" is a verb phrase. An adverb phrase modifies a verb, adjective, or adverb by providing additional information about time, manner, place, or degree. For example, "quietly in the park" or "very quickly."
The beginning of "Circle of Life" from The Lion King is sung in Zulu, a language spoken by the Zulu ethnic group in South Africa.
There are approximately 7,000 languages spoken worldwide. However, many of these languages are endangered, with more than half at risk of becoming extinct in the next century.
what is thr manner of performing a song half sung & half spoken
No.
Musically is not usually spoken it is sung.
Basically - Grand opera contains no spoken dialogue, every thing is sung; a Light Opera contains both sung and spoken dialogue
This depends on the form the opera is in. For example, Italian operas are usually completely sung. German operas in the style of singspiel are mostly sung with some spoken dialogue in between. Singspiel operas do not contain recitative, conversational singing. Then there are operettas which are mostly sung but contain spoken dialogue as well.
"The Lord be with you." - "And also with you."
Yes, in the Broadway/ Musical version...If anything is spoken its a line here and a word there. Like 99.9% of the show is sung.
Acapella is music sung without accompaniment. Spoken word is verse (poetry, etc.) spoken without music.
No it is not sung in japanese, it is sung in latin. You can learn a lot about Smash Bros. on The Smash Wiki at http://super-smash-bros.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
(Sung)Martha was an average dog. She went -(Bark). And- (Woof). And- (Grrrrrr).(Sung)But when she ate some alphabet soup, then what happened was bizarre.(spoken)On the way to Martha's stomach, the letters lost their way. They travelled to her brain and now-(Sung)She's got a lot to say. Now she speaks.(Spoken)How now brown cow?(Sung)Martha Speaks. Yeah, she speaks and speaks and speaks and speaks and speaks...(Spoken)What's a caboose? When are we eating again?(Sung)Martha speaks...(spoken) Hey Joe, what d'ya know!(spoken) My name's not Joe.(Sung)She's not always right but still that Martha speaks.(spoken) Hi there!(Sung mildly fast)She's got a voice; she's ready to shout. Martha will tell you what it's all about. Sometimes wrong, but seldom in doubt. Martha will tell you what it's all about. That dog's unique...(spoken) Testing, one, two!(Sung)Hear her speak! Martha Speaks and speaks and speaks and speaks and...(spoken) Communicates, enumerates, elucidates, exaggerates, indicates, and explicates, bloviates, and overstates and (pant, pant, pant) hyperventilates!Martha...to reiterate,(spoken in joyful sing-song voice)Martha speaks!
That is the correct spelling of "eloquently" (spoken well, or in a grand manner).
No.Lyrics are words that are spoken, or more usually sung, to the accompaniment of music.A dialogue is words spoken between two (or more) people; a conversation.