Glissando is a musical term. It means a rapid sequence of rising or falling notes.
I think you mean a glissando.
This is called a glissando although generally a glissando doesn't involve all the keys.
rhapsody in blue
That would be a glissando.
glissando
The pianist performed a beautiful glissando, smoothly sliding their fingers across the keys in a seamless cascade of notes.
Glissando
That is called a "glissando".
On piano and other keyed instruments, this is called a glissando.
I think you mean a glissando.
A glissando is a musical scalelike passage, and could be termed a melodic phrase.
"Changing the subject," "glossing over," "skating over," and "skirting an issue" are English equivalents of the Italian word glissando. The pronunciation of the gerund form of the present infinitive glissare will be "gles-SAN-do" in Italian.
In Classical music rapidly playing a series of notes which is discretely audible is called a glissando. This can be done either on a piano or a harp.
This is called a glissando although generally a glissando doesn't involve all the keys.
i am notsure
A gliding effect; gliding.
A slide, for example on a trombone, is called a glissando. I guess you could use the same term on a stringed instrument like guitar.