an incomplete cadence
To downplay
No. Ending is a verb form, or a noun, and may be an adjunct (e.g. ending credits). It can create a participial phrase, but it is not a preposition.
"Fat fat the water rat, fifty bullets in your hat."
Ending a phrase with the term 'good luck' does not require the use of an exclamation mark. The use of an exclamation mark is dependent on the meaning or tone of the sentence, not the use of any particular word or phrase. There are instances in which the use of an exclamation mark after the phrase 'good luck' may distort the intended meaning, such as, 'I have not had good luck'.
Gerund phrase talks about noun while participial phrase is about the adjective.
The authentic cadence is commonly harmonized on the tonic scale degree at the end of a melodic phrase.
The answer is :- riff Jake Knowit-trail
A glissando is a musical scalelike passage, and could be termed a melodic phrase.
In every city there are a group of buildings downtown that are called the "expectations" the phrase refers to living as if you and that part of the city are connected.
Within a period of a melodic line, the antecedent phrase usually ends on a pitch other than the tonic and the consequent phrase usually ends on the tonic note.
surpass expectations
LEITMOTIF - see Wikipedia
Complex Harmonic ideasLong melodic Phrase's using odd intervalsIt was built on the extension of chords
Who are you with
is?
The chorus of a song can usually be identified by listening for a lyrical phrase or melodic being repeated. Normally the Chorus will follow the verse.
Rabbit, or any other phrase ending in 'it'