The coda makes use of octaves and large chords, which may cause difficulty for smaller hands. |
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Because an S-wave arrives in the P-wave coda, the coda interferes with the S-wave. |
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To alter the coda of that final movement is thus, by implication, to change the character of the entire work. |
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This third section has already incorporated material from earlier in the movement and the coda extends this process. |
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A 16-year-old from North Carolina danced the variation and coda from the Don Quixote pas de deux. |
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For example, the coda of the great Schubert B flat sonata was played at a breakneck pace and was technically perfect. |
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The short coda was another aerial ballet, after which the couple, yielding to the laws of gravity, returned to earth. |
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The extended coda to that scene and its aftermath was very well played, showing earlier events from a different perspective. |
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The theme returns at the conclusion in its original scoring and a short, violent coda ends the piece. |
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The sad coda to this event is that, a mere five months later, this disaster is already a fading memory. |
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The foreign minister added a coda to his colleague's remarks by urging a spirit of compromise in accession negotiations. |
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At times, as in the coda of the first movement, the emotional release is transcendental. |
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About four thematic ideas appear, and a short coda builds to the final chords. |
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The entertainment correspondent is one of 12 climbers setting their sights on conquering the summit as a dramatic coda to a gruelling expedition. |
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After its eight-bar introduction, the movement divides into three distinct sections plus a coda. |
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Sometimes there's a climax, or a point of culmination, and usually the coda or peroration that ends the piece decisively. |
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A five-minute coda tries to wrap up, while leaving nearly all the narrative threads hanging. |
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The Tam O'Shanter theme heard earlier is treated imitatively, building up to an impressive coda. |
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We added an opening to include angels, and the hoops and Russian dance were also added, along with a closing coda. |
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This leads to an extended coda, also in C minor, which gradually works its way back to the G minor key. |
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Not content with that, Malkmus will often tack on a coda that draws on ragtime, rap and showtunes in equal measure. |
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Allusion to the trio, as in some of Beethoven's symphonic scherzos, briefly turns up in the coda. |
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The song picks up for its coda, breaking into a steady waltz beneath cleanly strummed guitars and theremin. |
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With the coda taken at a fierce clip, the brilliant concluding string flourishes were like musical sunshine greeting the joy of spring. |
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The intoxicating brio of the coda capped a performance that approached that rarified aura of perfection! |
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No such requirement holds if the first of the coda consonants is not an obstruent. |
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Of course, you can read this just as a brilliant, subversive coda to a horror movie. |
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The coda quietly presents a new theme for the unlikely combination of piccolo and horns. |
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The coda rounds off a movement by repeating themes or developing them further. |
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In a bleakly appropriate coda, just as we finished discussing the rehabilitation of mined lands, a one-legged man on a bicycle pedaled gamely past our car. |
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The scene serves as the coda to The Last of the Unjust, and it ranks as one of the most splendid closing sequences in cinema. |
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And then the joke in the last verse of watching Walter Cronkite deliver the coda. |
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The film, opening on December 17, has turned out to be a coda to the man's incarceration. |
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They projected the first movement with energy, with an eerie second section of pizzicati textures and augmented harmonies leading to the powerful coda. |
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She completed the difficult series of fouettes in the coda of the Black Swan pas de deux which even more senior ballerinas sometimes cannot manage as well. |
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The program ended with a free-spirited coda by all the dancers doing this, that, and especially the other, all with happy bravura and to Tchaikovsky. |
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His last years, lived by invitation in cottages in Sussex and Kent, fed and wined by beneficent admirers, provided a sort of rural coda of tranquillity. |
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The author takes the coda of the Chopin F Minor ballade as an example. |
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It starts off folk rock in feel, and builds up to a cosmic funk coda! |
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Far from having the character of final coda, the added six months would, if he got them, be anticlimactic, detracting a bit from the beauty of his life as a whole. |
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There isn't even a moment's coda acknowledging the generosity of his act. |
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It can occur in syllable coda position, but only after a short vowel. |
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The first movement, 'Conflict', unfolds as follows: statement, development, counterstatement, cadenza, coda. |
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For the coda, they strip down and revert to being screens for more projections. |
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Alone in the graveyard, the feckless groupie cleared his throat for the inevitable what-a-bastard coda. |
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There may also be an introduction, usually in slow tempo, and a coda, or tailpiece. |
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The cymbals are heard twice again, but pianissimo, just prior to the grand coda. |
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In the coda, the girl beseeches the wolf, but the piece ends as it began, with two growls and a snapping of the jaws. |
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A bitter and spectacular cadenza is introduced in the coda, crystallizing the desperate character of the entire piece. |
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Data were categorized as accurately produced, produced with modifications, or absent, which meant that one or more of the consonants in the coda were not produced. |
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The Davies brothers' latest disagreement is an unfortunate coda to a summer in which they seemed primed to reconcile. |
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The coda offers a brief reminiscence of the trio before the abrupt but decisive ending. |
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The grim tale now turns out to have a horrible coda. |
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A coda is a short pattern of 3 to 20 clicks that is used in social situations. |
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The rime or rhyme of a syllable consists of a nucleus and an optional coda. |
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Just as the rime branches into the nucleus and coda, the nucleus and coda may each branch into multiple phonemes. |
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The name is a metaphor, based on the nucleus or coda having lines that branch in a tree diagram. |
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The coda comprises the consonant sounds of a syllable that follow the nucleus. |
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Some syllables consist only of a nucleus or an onset and a nucleus with no coda. |
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It has also, sadly, turned out to be the coda for its director's career. |
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Tremendous energy and nervous tension are further distinguishing features, as is the enormous coda that accounts for something like one third the length of the movement. |
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After a clangorous tussle of ideas at the heart of the central development section, an extended coda ultimately returns the music to its unassuming roots. |
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Under an incandescent shower of high trills, the coda states just the first sunny half of the theme, before dissolving into some of the figurations used in the fourth variation. |
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In the end, the book is a late, graceful coda to the literature of venery. |
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The finale is based on the initial theme with surging lyrical passages alternating with moments of reverie, right up until the coda which plays out the theme one last time in a very grand style. |
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It is followed by an Andantino in A major, an extended, glowingly lyrical meditation with an expressive second strain in the minor and a berceuse-like third theme, all three ideas being woven together in the coda. |
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But the epilogue to that story has the makings of a historic coda. |
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Startling harmonic sidesteps, a short fugal development, a brief cadenza and a presto coda all contribute to the sustained interest in this movement, one imbued throughout with verve, vigor and rhythmic energy. |
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Starting bitterly, it gradually becomes ecstatic and leads us to the coda, which now remains in D major, at first reflectively and poignantly, and eventually building up to a heroic, exultant finish. |
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All the same, the film's coda focuses on the character of Vesper, to whom it does, after all, owe its interesting beginning before it relegated him, as History did, to a secondary role. |
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The onset str in strengths does not appear as a coda in any English word, and likewise the coda ngths does not appear as an onset in any word. |
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For some unknown reason, Mozart made a few changes to Zach's composition and through the addition of the coda extended the work by twenty measures. |
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One hierarchical model groups the syllable nucleus and coda into an intermediate level, the rime. |
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If the coda consists of a consonant cluster, the sonority decreases from left to right, as in the English word help. |
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She was a wonderfully campy, vampy siren, and her double fouettes in the coda were breathtaking. |
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Thankfully, Younger doesn't feel the need for a sugarcoated, fairy-tale ending but his ponderous, wintry coda is surplus to requirements. |
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Whether to take an accelerando before the coda was clearly secondary. |
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Many of these phonemes have quite different allophones in onset and coda. |
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Languages vary greatly in the restrictions on the sounds making up the onset, nucleus and coda of a syllable, according to what is termed a language's phonotactics. |
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Vowel phonemes are realized as longer vowel allophones before voiced consonant phonemes in the coda of a syllable, meaning vowels are lengthened before a voiced consonant. |
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The song's coda features the first recording of stereo phasing. |
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