It is not actually a part of speech. The term "part of speech" refers to a single word. For example, "hills" is a noun, and "are" is a verb.
"The hills are alive with The Sound of Music" is a complete sentence.
A phrase is a group of words that make sense as a group but have no verb; an example is "with the sound of music".
The phrase 'dance music' is a noun phrase. I cannot think of one example where it could possibly be a verb or a verbal phase. Consider these sentences: They enjoyed the dance music. He tapped his foot to the dance music. The dance music got louder after dark.
The correct spelling is the phrase "a cappella" (sung without music).
The musical Wicked is a proper noun. All proper nouns should be capitalised.
Repetition that resembles a chorus of a song
NO! A song has lyrics set to music. A monologue is s speech with no music.
The hills are alive . . . . with the sound of music.
Theme song of the play- and later movie- The Sound of Music.
Vienna, Austria
Music in the Hills was created in 2007.
there are loads the hills are alive, favorite thing, do re mi fa so lat ti millions! its a musical farewell good by so long
popular music
The is an article; music is a noun.
An antecedent phrase is a phrase that comes before a pronoun and gives context to what the pronoun refers to. It helps avoid confusion by clarifying the reference of the pronoun in a sentence.
You obviously have never been to Austria, its beauty will simply take your breath away. No wonder Mozart composed so many beautiful pieces!
A Phrase
La musica è vita is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Music is life." The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which does not translate la ("the") for musica and does not include it for vita -- will be "la MOO-zee-ka eh VEE-ta" in Italian.
Expression is the key to making music come alive. It is the heartbeat of music.