That would be an opinion, but I'd say a half step or more below the note supposed to be played/sung is definitely quite flat.
Pentatonic. Penta means 5.
Top number means how many beats in a measure and the bottom number means what note gets the beat. in 6/8 time there are 6 beats in a measure and the eighth note equals one beat.
A quadrilateral has 4 sides ~ please note that quad means 4.
It means 'killer' in Japanese i guess i know from watching Death Note!
hold the string that you're strumming up, it works for me.
A fermata will tell you to hold a note or a chord longer than its regular value It looks like a semicircle with a dot under it and it goes over the note to be held
sorry but you have been misled! beyonce cant hold a candle to jhud when it comes to singing! beyonce couldn't hold a note longer than Jennifer if it would save her life!!
A fermata.
Hold the note longer - if there is a conductor then wait for his/her cut
It means to hold a note for the proper length of time. For example, if you have a quarter note, hold it right up to the next beat; don't cut it short. In music notation, the articulation mark "tenuto" (a straight line over the note) means to hold the note for its full value (or even slightly longer). It often appears over individual notes, but when a phrase is played tenuto, the notes are played to their full length, but still articulated separately (with tonguing, if played on a wind instrument), unlike legato, where the the notes transition smoothly with no stress on any individual note.
It means to pause. Usually, the note with the fermata is sustained for a little longer than the note value itself.
The fermata, an eye-like symbol above a music note means that the note of which it is over is to be held/ played for a prolonged period of time, usually longer than the note's given rhythmic value. For GSN Oodles purposes the answer to the question is: To hold or pause.
The word that means to hold something tightly is "grasp."
Its applicable in all cases, dishonored means not valid or no longer payable.
A fermata (derived from the feminized form of the word "fermare", meaning "to stop") is a musical symbol, resembling a curved line with a dot in the centre, printed above or below a note, indicating that the note is to be sustained for longer than the expected length. Typically, you will hold down a note for around twice as long as you would if there was no fermata sign accompanying the note.
It is called a Beiner Borg