Crescendo
the word in music that means gradually getting louder and louder is a cresendo!
louder* Chowder * Louder * Prouder
louder = mas fuerte (pronounce mass fwert-er)
A frog?
Loud in spanish could have many significations but this is it: fuerte estridente duro of course this is referring to sounds
"Gradually getting louder" in English is crescendo in Italian.
the word in music that means gradually getting louder and louder is a cresendo!
"Growing very much (louder)" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase cresc assai. The masculine singular gerund/noun and adverb represent the short form of crescendo assai in such music terminology's and theory's practical application as piano-playing. The pronunciation will be "KREY-shas-SEYE" for the short form and "krey-SHEN-do as-SEYE" for the long form in Italian.
Crescendo means getting louder.
Crescendo. It is an Italian term mark that means gradually getting louder. As we can notice a crescendo (abbreviated as cresc.) is a horizontal mark with an opening angle (like so:
Crescendo means gradually getting louder, in music terms.
That is 'crescendo'
decresendo is where the music becomes softer. It is an Italian word meaning growing softer. hope that helpedIt means gradually getting quieter (diminuendo means the same). Crescendo means gradually getting louder.
Crescendo means that the sound of the music is gradually getting louder and louder. Decrescendo is the opposite meaning of Crescendo.
Getting louder and louder is an Englislh equivalent of 'crescendo'. It's the present participle of the infinitive 'crescere', which means 'to grow, to increase'. The present participle is pronounced 'KREH-sheh-doh'.Getting softer and softer is an English equivalent of 'diminuendo'. It's the present participle of the infinitive 'diminuire', which means 'to decrease'. The present participle is pronounced 'dee-mee-noo-EHN-doh'.
This is music terminology, and it is Italian, but it means get gradually louder little by little.
Well i guess the noise starts getting louder and louder as the train is coming?