The word for how loud or soft something is is "volume."
The Esperanto word for "loud" is "laŭta" and the word for "soft" is "mola."
Antonyms for the word loud: inaudible, low, quiet, soft, subdued
Loud: deafening, cacophonous, thunderous. Soft: gentle, muffled, muted.
The opposite of a soft voice is a loud voice.
I am not absolutely certain, but if you are referring to the word "piano" then I believe it is Italian. Most of the words used in the language such as "fortissimo" or "allegretto" are Italian words. Therefore, I believe "piano" is Italian.
When you bang something soft the sound will be soft and when you bang something hard the sound will be loud.The same with talking, if you talk loudly the sound will be loud and when you talk quietly the sound will be soft.
The word 'Piano' means soft :D
When you bang something soft the sound will be soft and when you bang something hard the sound will be loud.The same with talking, if you talk loudly the sound will be loud and when you talk quietly the sound will be soft.
Antonyms for the word loud: inaudible, low, quiet, soft, subdued
Calmly
Hard, loud, rough.
English. It is the full word for piano. (Like telephone is the full word for phone)
The word "piano" comes from the Italian word "pianoforte," which means "soft-loud" in English. The piano was named this way to describe its ability to produce both soft and loud sounds depending on how the keys are played.
Loud
The word Piano in sheet music is derived from the Italian language, and the word meaning softly. Just as pianoforte means soft and loud, and the word meaning that there is variation between loud and soft noise levels.
Loud may be twice as loud than moderately loud.
the two kinds of dynamics are: soft loud kinds of soft are: kinds of loud are: piano- soft forte- loud pianissimo- very soft fortissimo- very loud pianississimo- very very soft fortississimo- very very loud mezzo piano- moderately soft mezzo forte- moderately loud