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Pianoforte is an instrument whose name comes from the Italian equivalents of the English words "soft" and "loud." The masculine singular noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or indefinite un, uno ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "PYA-no-FOR-tey" in Italian.
English. It is the full word for piano. (Like telephone is the full word for phone)
The Italian Dynamic Markings Traditionally Used To Indicate Very Soft And Very Loud Are Respectively what?
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.
That language is Italian, still the language for most What_language_is_pianoterms.What we know as a piano was once called a piano-forte which is Italian forsoft-loud.
Pianoforte is an instrument whose name comes from the Italian equivalents of the English words "soft" and "loud." The masculine singular noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or indefinite un, uno ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "PYA-no-FOR-tey" in Italian.
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.
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.
The Italian Dynamic Markings Traditionally Used To Indicate Very Soft And Very Loud Are Respectively what?
The S means subito which in Italian means suddenly and the p means piano which means soft. The z is wrong. So it is either Spp which means suddenly soft or sfz which is a subito fortepiano which means a sudden accent immediately followed by piano (soft). There is also rfz which is rinforzando indicating that several notes, or a short phrase, are to be emphasized.
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.
That language is Italian, still the language for most What_language_is_pianoterms.What we know as a piano was once called a piano-forte which is Italian forsoft-loud.
In music words MP means music player. In sheet music (music scores in notation), mp means mezzo piano (moderately soft). In Italian, mezzo means literally half-way, or in the sense of moderately (in-between, neither soft nor loud). Piano, in Italian, means soft. So, mezzo-piano would mean something like moderately soft.
The word 'Piano' means soft :D
It means play loudly on the piano.
It is a dynamic marking, indicating that a passage should be played very quietly.A brief lesson in music dynamic markings:Fortissimo (ff) = Very LoudForte (f) = LoudMezzo-forte (mf) = Medium LoudMezzo-piano (mp) = Medium SoftPiano (p) = SoftPianissimo (pp) = Very Soft