Definition of Appoggiaturas

1. Noun. (plural of appoggiatura) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Appoggiaturas

1. appoggiatura [n] - See also: appoggiatura

Lexicographical Neighbors of Appoggiaturas

appliqueing
appliques
appliquéed
applistructure
applot
applotment
applotments
applots
applotted
applotting
apply
apply oneself
applyed
applying
appoggiatura
appoggiaturas (current term)
appoint
appointable
appointed
appointee
appointees
appointer
appointers
appointing
appointive
appointment
appointment book
appointment calendar
appointment diary
appointments

Literary usage of Appoggiaturas

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Beethoven's Letters: A Critical Edition : with Explanatory Notes by Ludwig van Beethoven, Alfred Christlieb Kalischer, John South Shedlock (1909)
"In the Dona Nobis instead of quaver appoggiaturas there must always be semiquaver appoggiaturas hi the following passages V•m Imo Allegretto Vivace r— ..."

2. A Study of Modern Harmony: (Étude Sur L'harmonie Moderne) by René Lenormand (1915)
"<3-*- * (1) appoggiaturas without resolutions. (See Chap. VIII, (4) where the complete passage is analysed.) M. RAVEL. ..."

3. A System of Harmony: Founded on Key Relationship, by Means of which a by Hugh Archibald Clarke, Homer Albert Norris (1903)
"appoggiaturas may be taken in different voices at the same time : xx Ex. 127. Certain appoggiaturas, presenting the appearance of chords already known and ..."

4. Modern Harmony in Its Theory and Practice by Arthur Foote, Walter Raymond Spalding (1905)
"It may appear as an altered tone in one voice against the same tone unaltered in another Consecutive oths like the following, produced by appoggiaturas, ..."

5. Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians by George Grove (1907)
"Or, they may take all the notes of a given chord, in succession, in the form of an arpeggio, either with or without appoggiaturas or ..."

6. A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (A.D. 1450-1880) by George Grove, John Alexander Fuller-Maitland (1889)
"Or, they may take all the notes of a given Chord, in succession, in the form of an Arpeggio, either with or without appoggiaturas or ..."

7. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1801)
"The suspensions and anticipations, of which this chapter treats, are but appoggiaturas in the treble or bass, figured ; and the ear disputes whether any ..."

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