The Italian Dynamic Markings Traditionally Used To Indicate Very Soft And Very Loud Are Respectively what?
Italian.
Tempo. Italian for Time and is used to indicate the speed in music.
A Christmas carol is a song or hymn whose lyrics are on the theme of Christmas, or the winter season in general and which are traditionally sung in the period before Christmas and celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.
The tempo marking is written above the very first measure of the piece. Typically the tempo marking will be an Italian word, sometimes followed by an indication that tells you how many beats per minute. For example - (Quarter note = 96) A quarter note symbol will be used rather than the word.
Not close. Musical tempo is sometimes indicated by a metronome setting which is beats per minute. Often it is only indicated by an Italian word to indicate speed, such as scherzo, presto, allegro, moderato, lento, largo and so forth.
Italian.
Italian.
It is traditionally sung in Latin, not in Italian.
italian
Most pasta's were created in Italy.
JOH-nee is an Italian pronunciation of 'Joni'. The equivalent in Italian is 'Gianna', which is a diminutive of 'Giovanna' ['Joanne', 'Joanna', 'Joan']. The Italian names respectively are pronounced 'JYAHN-nee' and 'jyoh-VAHN-nah'.
Tempo. Italian for Time and is used to indicate the speed in music.
Pollo is the general Italian equivalent of 'chicken'. It's a masculine gender noun. The term for 'chick' or 'young chicken' is the masculine gender noun 'pulcino'. The words 'pollastra' and 'pollastro' specify the fowl respectively as the female hen and the male of the species, respectively.
The term used in music, 'l'istesso tempo', means, in Italian, 'at the same tempo'.It is used to indicate that the beat will remain constant when the meter changes.See the link below for expanded details on this term, including a link to other tempo markings, plus a dictionary of musical terms.
Sig. is an Italian equivalent of the English word "Mr." The abbreviated title respectively stands for signore("gentleman," "mister," "Mr.," "sir") in Italian and "Mister" in English. The respective pronunciation will be "seeg" for the abbreviation and "see-NYO-rey" for the masculine singular noun in Pisan Italian.
Italian most likely
"-ess" is an English equivalent of the Italian abbreviation or ending -ssa. The letters serve to indicate that a professional position is being staffed by a female. The pronunciation will be "sa" in Italian.