preludes

listen to the pronunciation of preludes
Englisch - Englisch
third-person singular of prelude
prelude
an introductory or preliminary performance or event; a preface
prelude
an introductory or opening performance
prelude
{n} an introduction
prelude
{v} to serve by way of introduction
prelude
Range of 650 watt lanterns by Strand Lighting
prelude
in instrumental movement that precedes another movement, a group of movements, or a large-scale work
prelude
especially Mus
prelude
"Play before " An introductory movement or piece
prelude
(it) - A piece to be played as an introduction or opening piece but often also a single romantic piece, following no sepcific form [back]
prelude
a strain introducing the theme or chief subject; a movement introductory to a fugue, yet independent; with recent composers often synonymous with overture
prelude
a piece of music sung or played before the start of the service
prelude
music that precedes a fugue or introduces an act in an opera
prelude
serve as a prelude or opening to
prelude
something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows; "training is a necessary preliminary to employment"; "drinks were the overture to dinner"
prelude
To introduce with a previous performance; to play or perform a prelude to; as, to prelude a concert with a lively air
prelude
to introduce something, as a prelude
prelude
(or preludium)A short piece of music used as an introduction to a larger musical work or an event, such as a mass
prelude
To serve as prelude to; to precede as introductory
prelude
play as a prelude
prelude
"Play-before" An introductory movement or work
prelude
An introductory movement
prelude
a work preceding something but the term is also used for a short self-contained work
prelude
music that precedes a fugue or introduces an act in an opera play as a prelude serve as a prelude or opening to
prelude
An introductory performance, preceding and preparing for the principal matter; a preliminary part, movement, strain, etc
prelude
{i} opening; introduction; overture, introductory musical piece (Music); short musical composition (Music)
prelude
You can describe an event as a prelude to a more important event when it happens before it and acts as an introduction to it. Most unions see privatisation as an inevitable prelude to job losses
prelude
{f} serve as an opening, precede; serve as a preface or introduction; serve as an introduction to a musical composition (Music); begin with an introductory piece (Music)
prelude
A prelude is a short piece of music for the piano or organ. the famous E minor prelude of Chopin. Musical composition, usually brief, generally played as an introduction to another piece. The prelude originated as short pieces that were improvised by an organist to establish the key of a following piece or to fill brief interludes in a church service. Their improvisatory origins were often reflected in rhythmic freedom and virtuosic runs. A section in this style would often lead to a closing fugal section; in time this turned into a separate movement, and preludes came to be paired with fugues. In the 17th century, preludes began to be frequently written for lute or harpsichord. In later years the term came to be used for short piano pieces, often in sets, by composers such as Frédéric Chopin, Aleksandr Scriabin, and Claude Debussy
prelude
the instrumental introduction to an individual act within an opera
prelude
To play an introduction or prelude; to give a prefatory performance; to serve as prelude
prelude
Prelayout delay estimation program A submicron gate-array program that reads the netlist and any user timing constraints from the design GOOD and updates the design GOOD with estimated net timing (TI*)
prelude
a short piece of music that acts as an introduction to a longer piece
prelude
In music, a short piece that precedes a large-scale composition
prelude
the marketing audit
preludes

    Türkische aussprache

    preyludz

    Aussprache

    /ˈprāˌlo͞odz/ /ˈpreɪˌluːdz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'prel-"yüd, 'prAl-; 'pre- ] (noun.) 1561. Middle French, from Medieval Latin praeludium, from Latin praeludere to play beforehand, from prae- + ludere to play; more at LUDICROUS.
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