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Definition of Middle c
1. Noun. The note designated by the first ledger line below the treble staff; 261.63 hertz.
Definition of Middle c
1. Noun. (music) A specific musical note, particularly the note C4, at approximately 261.6 hertz, appearing at the middle of the alto staff and directly between the treble and bass staves. ¹
2. Noun. (music) The key on a piano or other keyboard instrument corresponding to this note. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Middle C
Literary usage of Middle c
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1814)
"When two or more parts are wanted, two lines are used; and die bass-notes below
middle C are printed in Italics. The bars are expressed by commas, or, ..."
2. The Christian Remembrancer by William Scott (1843)
"They are placed on the lines on which the note С (i,e. middle С), the note F, a
fifth below middle C, and the note G, a fifth above middle C, ..."
3. Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic by William Hamilton (1860)
"For we predicate either [the extreme] A of [the middle] C, and [the middle] C
of [the extreme] B ; or [the middle] C of both [extremes] ; or both [extremes] ..."
4. A First Course in Physics by Robert Andrews Millikan, Henry Gordon Gale (1906)
"Standard middle C forks made for physical laboratories all have the vibration
number 256. The term "middle C" then means one of these vibration numbers, ..."
5. The Musical World (1853)
"I propose that the scale should be divided into two parts—grave and acute, that
middle C should form the division, and become the standard note from which ..."
6. The Miscellaneous and Posthumous Works of Henry Thomas Buckle by Henry Thomas Buckle (1872)
"... from a naval classification made by King Alonzo in the middle c the thirteenth
century," &c., &c. ..."
7. The Mentor (1893)
"Thus c^e means middle c and first line <r, but c^c^ means middle c and the fourth
space ... Again, c^ g means g below, while ^4 £-5 means g above middle c. ..."
8. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"Tune middle C to desired pitch, then tune F — fifth below — sharp of C, ...
Next tune G — fourth below middle C — flat of C, by one teat a second; ..."