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a fermenta
Yes, just get a car and drive over it.
zigzag lines, vertical lines, horizontal lines, right curve, over curve,left curve, under curve, scallop lines, left slanting lines, right slanting lines
she failed to do something
The intersection.
A melody which is repeated over and over and over again throughout a piece of music.
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First sprinkle iron filings on a glass plate well scattered. Now place a bar magnet under the surface of the glass plate and give light jerks continuously to the plate. Gradually the iron filings would be arranged in curved lines. More filings are found concentrated near by the poles. These curved strutures stand for the magnetic lines in the vicinity of the magnet. Actually magnetic lines of force are only imaginary lines.
The voice melody is the memorable part of the song. Like when you think of "Somewhere over the rainbow" you think of the vocal line.
They don't always become a curved shape. A SFD will only become a curved shape if you have a distributed load that is changing over time. A BMD will only become a curved shape if the related shear force diagram is changing over time (not a flat line) however because the SFD is the integral of the force applied and the BMD is the integral of the SFD, generally as you keep going to a higher order, you will start getting more curvy lines.
Conjunct - it is within scalar movement.
There are two curved lines. One is called a "tie", which joins two notes (on the same line or space) together to add their times together. For example, two quarter notes tied together equal one half note. The other curved line is called a "slur". It means to play the notes legato (smoothly). It is often over a number of notes, rather than two, like a tie.
i believe the melody was taken from an Elgar piece. Elgar died in 37 so preceeded Gershwin.
centrieital force
condensation
Friction. A+
Yes, just get a car and drive over it.