It's called an instrumental version.
'Mondegreen' is the term for misheard or misinterpreted song lyrics. It was coined by Sylvia Wright after a line in a song she misheard when she was young: "They hae slain the Earl o' Murray, and laid him on the green" was heard as "They have slain the Earl o' Murray and Lady Mondegreen".
Song with no musical instruments is called "a cappella".
i don't know for 1 song, but for like a performance it's called a dress rehearsal Answer Del Capo
The correct term is Lacrimosa and it means "weeping". Some people call it Lacrymosa because of the song by Evanescence called Lacrymosa, which has a similar feel to Mozart's Lacrimosa.
To find the lyrics to Young Jeezy I Love It, you can enter the term 'Yount Jeezy I Love It' into google. From here you can either select a you tube video which both shows you the music video, or you can also enter a website called metro lyrics and find the words to the song there.
a moment of forgetfulness, suddenly going blank, a senior moment, a brain fart. It all means that for some reason you forgot the words, but kept on going anyway!
Well when you remake a song and and or change the lyrics it is called a Parody.
Its because that's the poetical term for a sung poem, "Lyrics"
the term is called a chott
Explicit Answer this question…
Words that describe people, places and things (nouns) are called adjectives. Words that describe actions (verbs) are called adverbs. A general term for describing words is modifier.
The term for when the middle of words rhyme is called "internal rhyme." It occurs when words within the same line of poetry rhyme with each other.
It's called "syntax".
When particles leave the cell is is either through a passive process such as diffusion or an active process called exocytosis.
There is no collective term for words which do not have an opposite. They constitute the vast majority of words in the English language.
The term for words that are the same in both singular and plural forms is "unchanged plural." Examples include "sheep," "deer," and "fish."
Songwriter, or composer. If you write just the words, you're the lyricist.