✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Musical Terminology: A Practical Compendium in Four Languages (English, French, German and Italian Edition)
HomeStore

Musical Terminology: A Practical Compendium in Four Languages (English, French, German and Italian Edition)

Musical Terminology: A Practical Compendium in Four Languages (English, French, German and Italian Edition)

$15.36
Musical Terminology: A Practical Compendium in Four Languages (English, French, German and Italian Edition)
$15.36

The Story

Do you need to know the Italian musical term for dying away? This new conspectus lists Estinguendo, Deficiendo, Diluendo, Mancando, Morendo, Perdendosi, Smorzando, Sperdendosi, and Spirante. This collection of terms most frequently found in music, with counterparts in four languages, derived its definitions and equivalents using The Harvard Dictionary of Music, Bakers Dictionary of Musical Terms, Elsons Dictionary of Musical Terms, The Oxford Companion to Music, and Groves Dictonary of Music and Musicians. The languages dictionaries used for verification were Cassels, Garzanti, Langenscheidt, and Palazzi. The terms were selected as being not only the most important to todays musicians, but those that appear most frequently and are most commonly used. The format consists of four columns with the term in its original language followed by the three other equivalents.

Description

Do you need to know the Italian musical term for dying away? This new conspectus lists Estinguendo, Deficiendo, Diluendo, Mancando, Morendo, Perdendosi, Smorzando, Sperdendosi, and Spirante. This collection of terms most frequently found in music, with counterparts in four languages, derived its definitions and equivalents using The Harvard Dictionary of Music, Bakers Dictionary of Musical Terms, Elsons Dictionary of Musical Terms, The Oxford Companion to Music, and Groves Dictonary of Music and Musicians. The languages dictionaries used for verification were Cassels, Garzanti, Langenscheidt, and Palazzi. The terms were selected as being not only the most important to todays musicians, but those that appear most frequently and are most commonly used. The format consists of four columns with the term in its original language followed by the three other equivalents.