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This is a list of musical terms that are likely to be encountered in printed scores, music reviews, and program notes
music has no language, you just read it as you always would. however, musical terminology is written in Italian! Additional information: Musical terminology can come from many other European languages other than Italian, such as German, French, etc.
Sweet in musical terms would be Dolce (translating in italian directly to sweetly, and sometimes referring to desserts)
Usually it is called a tone. There may be other terms used for electronic or avant garde musics.A musical sound is a note that is created with an instrument.
In music terminology, ritmo means rhythms. It is frequently used in jazz music. Con ritmo is to play a particular music work 'with rhythm', in other words no tempo alternations as in rubato.
it is a musical instrument!
"Or else" in English means ossia in Italian musical terminology.
I would suppose 'ostinato' or, repeat
There are many musical glossaries that can be found online via google or any other informative website.
The translation of the word "muziek" from the language of Dutch to the language of English is "musical". The word "musical" often refers to a type of play which involves songs.
Some benefits of using a translation site is that it reduces the costs of long term translation projects and ensures that translated documents are consistent including phrasing and terminology.
Usually allegro or allegretto can describe a "very fast" tempo.
Böse is a literal German translation of the musical title 'Wicked'.
Classical music is generally considered to be based on the French language. Most musical terminology is written in french. For example, "Allegro" means "fast" in French, and classical pieces that are meant to be played fast will have "Allegro" written at the top of the score. This is true for virtually all musical terminology
Amo tu lista musical
Translation memories are typically used in conjunction with a dedicated (CAT) tool, computer assisted translation word processing program, terminology management system , multilingual dictionary, or even raw machine translation output.
music has no language, you just read it as you always would. however, musical terminology is written in Italian! Additional information: Musical terminology can come from many other European languages other than Italian, such as German, French, etc.
Tempos such as vivace (Italian), allegro(Italian), or schnell (German) can usually define a "quick tempo."