crescendo is an Italian word. It means "growing" in English.
The Italian term for "crescendo poco a poco" is "crescendo gradually."
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo."
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo." It is indicated on sheet music by the symbol "<" or the word "cresc."
The plural of crescendo is crescendos. As in "the crescendos in these musical pieces are stunning". I'm not convinced adding 's' make crescendo plural! In English, with borrowed words, we often simply add 's' to make a plural like: 'piano/pianos'. Whereas normally, when a word ends in 'o' we add 'es' like 'potato/potatoes'. There is no definite rule. With other Italian words, we often follow the Italian rule by changing the 'o' to 'i' as in 'Paparazzi/Paparazzo', 'graffiti/graffito'. Therefore, I'd say the plural of crescendo is crescendi. As it is a borrowed word, I'd say it could be acceptable to use 'crescendos', (it is now acceptable to use 'stadiums' rather than 'stadia' to make stadium plural. Or referendums/referenda etc) but a purist wouldn't.
The Italian word for dynamics is "dynamics" and the Italian word for tempo is "tempo".
The Italian term for "crescendo poco a poco" is "crescendo gradually."
Crescendo in Italian means "growing" in English.
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo."
"Gradually getting louder" in English is crescendo in Italian.
A musical term from the Italian Crescendo meaning increasing. From Latin Crescere also meaning to increase. Adopted as a musical term about 1770
The Italian term for gradually increasing volume is "crescendo." It is indicated on sheet music by the symbol "<" or the word "cresc."
In music crescendo mean to get gradually louder.
The finale came to rousing crescendo.
Crescendo is the Italian music word. It is represented in sheet music by a symbol underneath a bar that looks like a mathematical "less than" sign.
Crescendo
"crescendo" in Italian means "growing". In music, what is "grows" is the volume. Therefore the antonym is "diminuendo", meaning "lowering" (the volume).
Crescendo. It is an Italian term mark that means gradually getting louder. As we can notice a crescendo (abbreviated as cresc.) is a horizontal mark with an opening angle (like so: