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TEXT DECLAMATION

  • Text declamation
  • Text declamation refers to the manner in which a composer sets words to music. Aesthetically, declamation is conceived of as "accurate" (approximating

    Text declamation

    Text_declamation

  • Declamation
  • Art of public speaking; Roman genre

    articulation, emphasis and gesture the full sense of the text being conveyed. In Ancient Rome, declamation was a genre of ancient rhetoric and a mainstay of

    Declamation

    Declamation

    Declamation

  • Old Dan Tucker
  • Traditional song performed by Virginia Minstrels

    falls into the idiom of previous minstrel music, relying on rhythm and text declamation as its primary motivation. Its melody is simple and the harmony little

    Old Dan Tucker

    Old Dan Tucker

    Old_Dan_Tucker

  • Overtone
  • Tone with a frequency higher than the frequency of the reference tone

    take care of vocal tract shaping, to improve color, resonance, and text declamation. During practice overtone singing, it helps the singer to remove unnecessary

    Overtone

    Overtone

    Overtone

  • Josif Marinković
  • Serbian composer and choral director

    affinity for melodic expression. He invested exceptional attention to the text declamation, which represented a rather novel quality in Serbian music at the time

    Josif Marinković

    Josif Marinković

    Josif_Marinković

  • Josquin des Prez
  • Composer of the Renaissance (c. 1450–1521)

    with block chords and syllabic text declamation; ornate—and often imitative—contrapuntal fantasias in which the text is overshadowed by music; and psalm

    Josquin des Prez

    Josquin des Prez

    Josquin_des_Prez

  • Eye music
  • Music score with unusual graphical features

    practice, particularly with the madrigalists and their focus on text declamation, at a word-by-word basis, was fertile ground for eye music. Words that

    Eye music

    Eye_music

  • Seneca the Elder
  • Roman scholar, writer and historian (c. 54 BC – c. AD 39)

    and Traditional Text". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 106, 229–299. Imber, Margaret. (2008). "Life Without Father: Declamation and the Construction

    Seneca the Elder

    Seneca_the_Elder

  • Conductus
  • Sacred Latin song in the Middle Ages

    organum, in which the voices usually moved at different speeds. The text declamation of the conductus can be either syllabic/neumatic or melismatic. The

    Conductus

    Conductus

    Conductus

  • Cycle for Declamation
  • Song cycle by Priaulx Rainier

    Cycle for Declamation is a song cycle for tenor solo composed in 1954 by Priaulx Rainier (1903–86). The work was commissioned by the tenor Peter Pears

    Cycle for Declamation

    Cycle_for_Declamation

  • Super flumina Babylonis (Nuffel)
  • 1916 musical psalm setting by Jules Van Nuffel

    to text and music from the beginning, ending with "when we remembered Zion". The composer's music has been described as focused on text declamation, with

    Super flumina Babylonis (Nuffel)

    Super flumina Babylonis (Nuffel)

    Super_flumina_Babylonis_(Nuffel)

  • Index of Renaissance articles
  • - Swiss mercenaries Tapestry - Tarot - Teatro Olimpico - Tercio - Text declamation - Theatrum Orbis Terrarum - Themes in Italian Renaissance painting

    Index of Renaissance articles

    Index_of_Renaissance_articles

  • Gilles Binchois
  • Franco-Flemish Renaissance composer (c. 1400–1460)

    Counterpoint was not a priority to Binchois, who instead emphasized text declamation and musical contour. Thus his sacred output is often considered comparatively

    Gilles Binchois

    Gilles Binchois

    Gilles_Binchois

  • Musique mesurée
  • re-create the artistic ethos of Ancient Greece, especially in respect to text declamation, had a strong similarity to contemporary movements in Italy, such as

    Musique mesurée

    Musique_mesurée

  • Socratic method
  • Type of cooperative argumentative dialogue

    "texts" do not have to be confined to printed texts, but can include artifacts such as objects, physical spaces, and the like. Socratic seminar texts are

    Socratic method

    Socratic method

    Socratic_method

  • Conservatoire de Paris
  • Music and dance school in Paris, France

    In June, a class in dramatic declamation was added, and the name was modified to École Royale de Chant et de Déclamation. In 1792, Bernard Sarrette created

    Conservatoire de Paris

    Conservatoire de Paris

    Conservatoire_de_Paris

  • Index of music articles
  • major Terzschritt Tessitura Tetrachord Tetrad (music) Tetratonic scale Text declamation Texture Theatre music Thematic transformation Theorbo Theoretical key

    Index of music articles

    Index_of_music_articles

  • Sub Arturo plebs
  • time, has the same amount of text to convey (i.e. two stanzas in the motetus, three in the triplum). Thus, text declamation becomes progressively much faster

    Sub Arturo plebs

    Sub_Arturo_plebs

  • Annibale Zoilo
  • Italian composer (c.1537–1592)

    Palestrina's in style, using smoothly flowing contrapuntal lines with clear text declamation, with little of the experimental chromaticism and textural elements

    Annibale Zoilo

    Annibale_Zoilo

  • Literary device
  • Literary technique used to persuade

    themselves". Often they relate to how new arguments are introduced into the text or how arguments are emphasized. Amplification/Pleonasm: Amplification involves

    Literary device

    Literary device

    Literary_device

  • Tristis est anima mea (attributed to Kuhnau)
  • Sacred motet attributed to Johann Kuhnau

    with "closely overlapping vocal entries, and both shift to homophonic declamation at the words "Iam videbitis turbam" (You will see the crowd). The composer

    Tristis est anima mea (attributed to Kuhnau)

    Tristis est anima mea (attributed to Kuhnau)

    Tristis_est_anima_mea_(attributed_to_Kuhnau)

  • Jacquet de Berchem
  • Franco-Flemish composer

    syllabic, often with quick text declamation. His preferred subject matter was love, typically unrequited, and he set texts by Petrarch, Ariosto, Luigi

    Jacquet de Berchem

    Jacquet_de_Berchem

  • Quintilian
  • Roman orator and rhetorician (c. 35 – c. 100)

    is some dispute over the real writer of these texts: "Some modern scholars believe that the declamations circulated in his name represent the lecture notes

    Quintilian

    Quintilian

    Quintilian

  • Pledge of Allegiance
  • Loyalty oath to the flag and republic of the U.S.

    wrote an ode for the event: "There was also an oration suitable for declamation." Bellamy held that "Of course, the nub of the program was to be the

    Pledge of Allegiance

    Pledge of Allegiance

    Pledge_of_Allegiance

  • Criticism of the Quran
  • Criticism of Islam's holy book

    book, "From the literary point of view, the Koran has little merit. Declamation, repetition, puerility, a lack of logic and coherence strike the unprepared

    Criticism of the Quran

    Criticism_of_the_Quran

  • Pakistan Air Force Academy Asghar Khan
  • National air force training school

    duties at the mazar on this day. The PAF Academy holds an All-Pakistan Declamation Competition, one of the biggest annual events. Some forty teams from

    Pakistan Air Force Academy Asghar Khan

    Pakistan_Air_Force_Academy_Asghar_Khan

  • Plato's number
  • Unspecified value mentioned by Plato

    muses, Classical Quarterly (New Series) (1986), 36: 407-420 Selectae declamationes. Declamatio de periodis imperiorum, v.3, p. 722, Strasbourg, 1559 Aristotle

    Plato's number

    Plato's_number

  • Die Versuchung Jesu
  • 1968 composition by Gustav Gunsenheimer

    times without indication from the general 4/4 to 5/4 for reasons of text declamation. No tempo marking is given at the beginning, but relative markings

    Die Versuchung Jesu

    Die Versuchung Jesu

    Die_Versuchung_Jesu

  • Suasoria
  • Exercise in rhetoric

    Suasoria is an exercise in rhetoric: a form of declamation in which the student makes a speech which is the soliloquy of an historical figure debating

    Suasoria

    Suasoria

    Suasoria

  • Method of loci
  • Memory techniques adopted in ancient Roman and Greek rhetorical treatises

    Ricci adapted the technique to help memorize Chinese characters, Confucian texts, and Christian teachings while carrying out his missionary activities in

    Method of loci

    Method of loci

    Method_of_loci

  • Visual rhetoric
  • Communication through visual elements

    effective communication through visual elements such as images, typography, and texts. Visual rhetoric encompasses the skill of visual literacy and the ability

    Visual rhetoric

    Visual rhetoric

    Visual_rhetoric

  • Adrianus
  • 2nd-century AD Greek writer

    his friendship: the emperor even condescended to set the thesis of a declamation for him.[citation needed] After the death of Aurelius he became the private

    Adrianus

    Adrianus

  • Public speaking
  • Performing a speech to a live audience

    preliminary exercises (progymnasmata), and preparation of public speeches (declamation) in both forensic and deliberative genres. In Latin, rhetoric was heavily

    Public speaking

    Public speaking

    Public_speaking

  • Sergius Kagen
  • American songwriter

    published. They are written in a chromatic idiom with careful attention to text declamation. His three-act opera Hamlet, in a lyrical style ranging from tonal

    Sergius Kagen

    Sergius_Kagen

  • Messiah (Handel)
  • 1741 sacred oratorio by Handel

    Burney's eyes. It is followed by a quiet chorus that leads to the bass's declamation in D major: "Behold, I tell you a mystery", then the long aria "The trumpet

    Messiah (Handel)

    Messiah (Handel)

    Messiah_(Handel)

  • Eugène Green
  • American screenwriter

    young actors in the revival of French baroque theatre technique and declamation. 2001 : Toutes les nuits; Alexis Loret, Christelle Prot, Adrien Michaux

    Eugène Green

    Eugène_Green

  • Melodramma
  • Italian opera term

    Victorian stage melodrama (drama of exaggerated intensity) or of spoken declamation accompanied by background music (in Italian, melologo). The Harvard Dictionary

    Melodramma

    Melodramma

  • Logos
  • Concept in philosophy, religion, rhetoric, and psychology

    identifies the word closely to the structure and content of language or text. Both Plato and Aristotle used the term logos (along with rhema) to refer

    Logos

    Logos

    Logos

  • The Ballad of Reading Gaol
  • 1897 poem by Oscar Wilde

    reciters and their audiences who have found the entire poem too long for declamation". On 25 May 1895, Wilde was convicted and sentenced to two years' hard

    The Ballad of Reading Gaol

    The Ballad of Reading Gaol

    The_Ballad_of_Reading_Gaol

  • Zibaldone
  • Commonplace book

    Pucci The Annoyances; Aesop Three Fables; Seneca and Pseudo-Quintilian Declamations; Albertano da Brescia The Doctrine of Speaking and Remaining Silent;

    Zibaldone

    Zibaldone

  • Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa
  • German occult writer (1486–1535)

    incertitudine et vanitate scientiarum atque artium declamatio invectiva (Declamation Attacking the Uncertainty and Vanity of the Sciences and the Arts, 1526;

    Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa

    Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa

    Heinrich_Cornelius_Agrippa

  • De doctrina Christiana
  • Theological text by Augustine of Hippo

    Christiana (On Christian Doctrine or On Christian Teaching) is a theological text written by Augustine of Hippo. It consists of four books that describe how

    De doctrina Christiana

    De doctrina Christiana

    De_doctrina_Christiana

  • Busiris (king of Egypt)
  • Mythical king of Egypt

    the central Delta who was killed by Heracles. Isocrates, in his witty declamation Busiris, recounts "the false tale of Heracles and Busiris" (11.30–11

    Busiris (king of Egypt)

    Busiris (king of Egypt)

    Busiris_(king_of_Egypt)

  • Castro Alves
  • Brazilian poet and playwright (1847–1871)

    they effectively relate. Archimimo Ornelas, however, reports as seen in the text of this article that since 1864 the family was already concerned with Alves's

    Castro Alves

    Castro Alves

    Castro_Alves

  • OK gesture
  • Hand gesture

    speech: to open, give warning or praise or accusation, and then to close a declamation. Contemporaneously, the sign appeared throughout the Buddhist and Hindu

    OK gesture

    OK gesture

    OK_gesture

  • Ancient Cappadocian language
  • Unclassified extinct language

    στοιχείων, συστέλλων δὲ τὰ μηκυνόμενα καὶ μηκύνων τὰ βραχέα He delivered his declamations with a heavy accent, as is the way with Cappadocians, making his consonants

    Ancient Cappadocian language

    Ancient_Cappadocian_language

  • François Delsarte
  • French singer, orator, and coach (1811–1871)

    success as a composer, he is chiefly known as a teacher in singing and declamation (oratory). Delsarte was born in Solesmes, Nord. He became a pupil at

    François Delsarte

    François Delsarte

    François_Delsarte

  • Individual events (speech)
  • Overview of individual events in speech

    wordplay) are emphasized in California, although neither are required. Declamation, or memorized speech, is the high-school interpretation and presentation

    Individual events (speech)

    Individual_events_(speech)

  • Antonio Salieri
  • Italian composer and teacher (1750–1825)

    years Metastasio gave Salieri informal instruction in prosody and the declamation of Italian poetry, and Gluck became an informal advisor, friend, and

    Antonio Salieri

    Antonio Salieri

    Antonio_Salieri

  • Gustav Schilling (musicologist)
  • German musicologist

    1832 Briefe über die äußere Canzel-Beredtsamkeit oder die kirchliche Declamation und Action. Stuttgart 1833; 2. verbesserte Auflage 1838, Erster Band

    Gustav Schilling (musicologist)

    Gustav_Schilling_(musicologist)

  • Hymn
  • Religious song for the purpose of adoration or prayer

    measure". And indeed The Singing Master's Assistant has many tunes whose declamation is based on the dactyl in duple time. Boston's Handel and Haydn Society

    Hymn

    Hymn

    Hymn

  • Visual rhetoric and composition
  • and the increasing presence of visual texts. Literacy, they argue, can no longer be limited only to written text and must also include an understanding

    Visual rhetoric and composition

    Visual rhetoric and composition

    Visual_rhetoric_and_composition

  • Il n'y a plus rien
  • 1973 studio album by Léo Ferré

    spoken-word and declamation. This very cohesive album opens with the straightforward manifesto "Preface", a reduction of a much longer text that precisely

    Il n'y a plus rien

    Il_n'y_a_plus_rien

  • List of speeches
  • English Wikisource has original text related to this article: Portal:Speeches This list of speeches includes those that have gained notability in English

    List of speeches

    List of speeches

    List_of_speeches

  • Taal, Batangas
  • Municipality in Batangas, Philippines

    November 11 every year. Celebrations are in the form of prayer, hymns, declamation, flower offerings and big religious processions. Most families celebrate

    Taal, Batangas

    Taal, Batangas

    Taal,_Batangas

  • John Donne
  • English poet and cleric (1572–1631)

    track "Corruption." Prose texts by Donne have also been set to music. In 1954, Priaulx Rainier set some in her Cycle for Declamation for solo voice. In 2009

    John Donne

    John Donne

    John_Donne

  • Kairos
  • Right or opportune moment

    writing, any text must be influenced by the kairos that exists both before the text is created and during the presentation. In addition, each text helps create

    Kairos

    Kairos

    Kairos

  • Siehe, ich will viel Fischer aussenden, BWV 88
  • Church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach

    Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000. The voice presents the text several times in varied declamation. Suddenly the scene changes to a hunting scene, horns join

    Siehe, ich will viel Fischer aussenden, BWV 88

    Siehe, ich will viel Fischer aussenden, BWV 88

    Siehe,_ich_will_viel_Fischer_aussenden,_BWV_88

  • Mikhail Bakhtin
  • Russian philosopher and literary theorist (1895–1975)

    genres are characterized by various types of text such as legal, scientific, etc. "The Problem of the Text in Linguistics, Philology, and the Human Sciences:

    Mikhail Bakhtin

    Mikhail Bakhtin

    Mikhail_Bakhtin

  • Orator (Cicero)
  • Rhetorical work by Cicero

    rhetoric: Inventio, Dispositio, Elocutio, Memoria, and Pronuntiatio. In this text, Cicero attempts to describe the perfect orator, in response to Marcus Junius

    Orator (Cicero)

    Orator (Cicero)

    Orator_(Cicero)

  • Hula
  • Hawaiian traditional dance form

    identified in pitches. It tends to be a more suitable form for recitation and declamation among Olis. olioli: It is regarded as the most commonly used kind of

    Hula

    Hula

    Hula

  • Hymn tune
  • Musical melody of a Christian hymn

    the meter to a text. A meter of few syllables, perhaps with a trochaic stress pattern, fits best an exhortive or forceful declamation of ideas. A stirring

    Hymn tune

    Hymn tune

    Hymn_tune

  • Sophistical Refutations
  • Text by Aristotle on logical fallacies

    Ἔλεγχοι, romanized: Sophistikoi Elenchoi; Latin: De Sophisticis Elenchis) is a text in Aristotle's Organon in which he identified twelve or thirteen fallacies

    Sophistical Refutations

    Sophistical Refutations

    Sophistical_Refutations

  • Lélio
  • Composition by Hector Berlioz

    rooted in the fusion of Romantic aesthetics and the interplay between declamation and music, has, however, led to its perception as dated, thus its infrequent

    Lélio

    Lélio

    Lélio

  • Works of Erasmus
  • mentioned a Greek text. While his intentions for publishing a fresh Latin translation are clear, it is less clear why he included the Greek text. Though some

    Works of Erasmus

    Works of Erasmus

    Works_of_Erasmus

  • Peri Pascha
  • 2nd-century homily of Melito of Sardis

    an example of declamation. Frank L. Cross proposed the idea that it was best read as a Christian Passover haggadah. Accepting the text as representing

    Peri Pascha

    Peri Pascha

    Peri_Pascha

  • Wheel of Fortune (medieval)
  • Symbol of fate in medieval and ancient philosophy

    rolling ball of fortune became a literary topos and was used frequently in declamation. In fact, the Rota Fortunae became a prime example of a trite topos or

    Wheel of Fortune (medieval)

    Wheel of Fortune (medieval)

    Wheel_of_Fortune_(medieval)

  • Kenneth Burke
  • American philosopher and literary critic (1897–1993)

    unorthodox, concerning himself not only with literary texts but also with the elements of the text that interacted with the audience: social, historical

    Kenneth Burke

    Kenneth_Burke

  • Das Rheingold
  • 1869 opera by Richard Wagner

    dwarf's agonised, self-pitying monologue ("Am I now free?") ends with his declamation of the "Curse" motif – "one of the most sinister musical ideas ever to

    Das Rheingold

    Das Rheingold

    Das_Rheingold

  • Rejoice in the Lamb
  • 1943 cantata by Benjamin Britten

    concept of the Music of the Spheres. The chorus climaxes with a final declamation of "and the like", followed by a two-against-three rhythmic passage praising

    Rejoice in the Lamb

    Rejoice in the Lamb

    Rejoice_in_the_Lamb

  • Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin, BWV 125
  • Chorale cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach

    flute and oboe d'amore playing a dotted rhythm to the "almost trembling declamation" of the voice. Hofmann notes the movement's "emotions of grief and lamentation"

    Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin, BWV 125

    Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin, BWV 125

    Mit_Fried_und_Freud_ich_fahr_dahin,_BWV_125

  • Pathos
  • Greek rhetorical term for appeals to emotion

    emotions on the audience. Antoine Braet did a re-examination of Aristotle's text and in this he examined the speaker's goal of the effect on the audience

    Pathos

    Pathos

  • Calpurnius Flaccus
  • 2nd century Roman rhetorician

    Teubner, ISBN 3-519-01130-1 Sussman, L. A. (1994). The Declamations of Calpurnius Flaccus: Text, Translation, and Commentary. Leiden: Brill, ISBN 90-04-09983-2

    Calpurnius Flaccus

    Calpurnius_Flaccus

  • Ovid
  • Roman poet (43 BC – AD 17/18)

    be spurious. The Heroides markedly reveal the influence of rhetorical declamation and may derive from Ovid's interest in rhetorical suasoriae, persuasive

    Ovid

    Ovid

    Ovid

  • Aelius Aristides
  • 2nd century Greek rhetorician and author

    his work—addresses for public and private occasions, polemical essays, declamations on historical themes, and prose hymns to various gods—established him

    Aelius Aristides

    Aelius Aristides

    Aelius_Aristides

  • Al-Kashshaaf
  • Book by al-Zamakhsharī

    for its deep linguistic analysis, demonstrations of the supremacy of declamation of the Qur'an, and the representation of the method the Qur'an uses to

    Al-Kashshaaf

    Al-Kashshaaf

  • I. A. Richards
  • English literary critic (1893–1979)

    movement in literary theory which emphasized the close reading of a literary text, especially poetry, in an effort to discover how a work of literature functions

    I. A. Richards

    I. A. Richards

    I._A._Richards

  • Eratosthenes
  • Greek librarian, mathematician, geographer, and poet

    harmonics A treatise on philosophy (On Good and Bad) A work on rhetoric (On Declamation) A literary critique of the works of the poet Homer An extensive discussion

    Eratosthenes

    Eratosthenes

    Eratosthenes

  • Sexuality in ancient Rome
  • Attitudes and behaviors towards sex in ancient Rome

    532, and "Symbolism in the Costume of the Roman Woman," p. 47. In a declamation attributed to Quintilian, Declamatio minor 340.13 as quoted by Sebesta

    Sexuality in ancient Rome

    Sexuality in ancient Rome

    Sexuality_in_ancient_Rome

  • List of works by Lucian
  • in Ancient Greek. The order of the works is that of the Oxford Classical Texts edition. The English titles are taken from Loeb (alternative translations

    List of works by Lucian

    List of works by Lucian

    List_of_works_by_Lucian

  • Edmonia Lewis
  • American sculptor (1844–1907)

    included Latin, French, grammar, arithmetic, drawing, composition, and declamation. In 1859, when Edmonia Lewis was about 15 years old, her brother Samuel

    Edmonia Lewis

    Edmonia Lewis

    Edmonia_Lewis

  • Fellini Satyricon
  • 1969 film by Federico Fellini

    of Trimalchio, a wealthy freeman, and his wife Fortunata. Eumolpus's declamation of poetry is met with catcalls and thrown food. While Fortunata performs

    Fellini Satyricon

    Fellini_Satyricon

  • Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy
  • Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1530

    Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa. Agrippa dedicated his arguably feminist work "Declamation on the Nobility and Preeminence of the Female Sex" to her. The Governor

    Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy

    Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy

    Margaret_of_Austria,_Duchess_of_Savoy

  • Cicero Minor
  • Roman consul in 30 BC, son of Cicero

    now freedman, of the family. In it, he said that he was practising declamation in Greek with Gorgias but had to let him go, because his father, whom

    Cicero Minor

    Cicero Minor

    Cicero_Minor

  • Mawlid
  • Holiday commemorating the birthday of the Islamic prophet Muhammad

    God… namely by reciting the Quran, the giving of a banquet, almsgiving, declamations of some songs of praise for the Prophet and some ascetic songs of praise

    Mawlid

    Mawlid

    Mawlid

  • Tacitus
  • Roman historian and senator (56–120)

    to Latin text and translations in various languages at ForumRomanum Complete works, Latin and English translation at "The Internet Sacred Text Archive"

    Tacitus

    Tacitus

    Tacitus

  • Mimesis criticism
  • Method of interpreting texts

    Mimesis criticism is a method of interpreting texts in relation to their literary or cultural models. Mimesis, or imitation (imitatio), was a widely used

    Mimesis criticism

    Mimesis_criticism

  • Tempo rubato
  • Musical term

    violinist Joseph Joachim. Some writers compared this type of rubato to declamation in speech. This idea was widely developed by singers. According to Gordon

    Tempo rubato

    Tempo_rubato

  • The Frogs
  • Comedy by Aristophanes

    Euripides quote lines from many of his prologues, each time interrupting the declamation with the same phrase "ληκύθιον ἀπώλεσεν" ("... lost his little flask

    The Frogs

    The Frogs

    The_Frogs

  • Weddings in ancient Rome
  • deprecates an individual who had chosen to wed an older woman, noting in his declamation that, once the wedding couple has entered the bedroom chamber, "how is

    Weddings in ancient Rome

    Weddings in ancient Rome

    Weddings_in_ancient_Rome

  • Silk Road
  • Historical network of Eurasian trade routes

    2010, p. 75. Liu 2010, p. 20. Seneca the Younger (c. 3 BCE – 65 CE), Declamations Vol. I "Sogdian Trade". Encyclopædia Iranica. Archived from the original

    Silk Road

    Silk Road

    Silk_Road

  • Organum
  • Type of plainchant melody

    by Perotin, there is no need to vary from the classical standards for declamation that were a rooted tradition at the time, going back to St. Augustine's

    Organum

    Organum

  • Recitatif
  • 1983 short story by Toni Morrison

    crucial". Récitatif is the French form of recitative, a style of musical declamation that hovers between song and ordinary speech, particularly used for dialogic

    Recitatif

    Recitatif

  • Jerzy Grotowski
  • Polish theatre director (1933–1999)

    groans, animal roars, tender folksongs, liturgical chants, dialects, declamation of poetry: everything is there. The sounds are interwoven in a complex

    Jerzy Grotowski

    Jerzy Grotowski

    Jerzy_Grotowski

  • Sino-Roman relations
  • Bilateral international relationship

    Haven]. Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, (1974). Michael Winterbottom (trans), Declamations, Volume I: Controversiae, Books 1–6. Cambridge: Harvard University Press

    Sino-Roman relations

    Sino-Roman relations

    Sino-Roman_relations

  • Trivium
  • First three liberal arts of traditional education

    Logos Situation Style Grand Sotto voce Topos Genres Apologetics Debate Declamation Controversia Deliberative Demagogy Dialectic Socratic method Dissoi logoi

    Trivium

    Trivium

    Trivium

  • Three Books of Occult Philosophy
  • Book by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim

    Poel, Marc (1997). Cornelius Agrippa: The Humanist Theologian and His Declamations. Brill. p. 44. Paganini, Gianni; Neto, José R. M. (14 November 2008)

    Three Books of Occult Philosophy

    Three Books of Occult Philosophy

    Three_Books_of_Occult_Philosophy

  • Bel canto
  • Italian musical term meaning "beautiful singing"

    La Nación. Accessed 3 November 2008. Traité complet de chant et de déclamation lyrique Enrico Delle Sedie (Paris, 1847) fragment Archived 2011-10-08

    Bel canto

    Bel_canto

  • Memoria
  • Term for aspects involving memory in Western classical rhetoric

    conducted through spoken discourse. Many of the great texts from that age were not written texts penned by the authors we associate them with, but were

    Memoria

    Memoria

    Memoria

  • Đọc kinh
  • "Thánh Vịnh Đáp Ca: Hát, Ngâm, hay Đọc?" [Responsorial Hymns: Song, Declamation, or Recitation?] (PDF). Hương Trầm (in Vietnamese) (11). Archdiocese

    Đọc kinh

    Đọc kinh

    Đọc_kinh

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Online names & meanings

  • Harriet
  • Girl/Female

    Teutonic American French English

    Harriet

    Ruler of the home.

  • Shishira
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Telugu

    Shishira

    A Delicate Flower; Winter; Moon

  • Hujayrah
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Hujayrah

    She was a narrator of hadith

  • Apsavya
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Sanskrit

    Apsavya

    Being in Water; Lord Varuna

  • Ranshaw
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ranshaw

    English : variant of Renshaw.

  • Himavarshni
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Himavarshni

    Manchu

  • Kandarpa | கஂதர்ப
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Kandarpa | கஂதர்ப

    Cupid

  • Hardaway
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hardaway

    English : perhaps a variant of Hadaway, itself a variant of Hathaway. In the U.S., this is name is concentrated in the south, in TX, TN, and GA.

  • Vaidika
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Vaidika

    Knowledge of Ved

  • Prathamay
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Prathamay

    First

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Other words and meanings similar to

TEXT DECLAMATION

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TEXT DECLAMATION

  • Tent
  • v. t.

    To probe or to search with a tent; to keep open with a tent; as, to tent a wound. Used also figuratively.

  • Text
  • v. t.

    To write in large characters, as in text hand.

  • Text
  • n.

    A discourse or composition on which a note or commentary is written; the original words of an author, in distinction from a paraphrase, annotation, or commentary.

  • Test
  • v. t.

    To examine or try, as by the use of some reagent; as, to test a solution by litmus paper.

  • Text
  • n.

    A verse or passage of Scripture, especially one chosen as the subject of a sermon, or in proof of a doctrine.

  • Test
  • n.

    Means of trial; as, absence is a test of love.

  • Test
  • n.

    Examination or trial by the cupel; hence, any critical examination or decisive trial; as, to put a man's assertions to a test.

  • Teat
  • n.

    A small protuberance or nozzle resembling the teat of an animal.

  • Tent
  • v. i.

    To lodge as a tent; to tabernacle.

  • Tent
  • n.

    The representation of a tent used as a bearing.

  • Text
  • n.

    Hence, anything chosen as the subject of an argument, literary composition, or the like; topic; theme.

  • Text-hand
  • n.

    A large hand in writing; -- so called because it was the practice to write the text of a book in a large hand and the notes in a smaller hand.

  • Test
  • v. t.

    To refine, as gold or silver, in a test, or cupel; to subject to cupellation.

  • Test
  • v. t.

    To put to the proof; to prove the truth, genuineness, or quality of by experiment, or by some principle or standard; to try; as, to test the soundness of a principle; to test the validity of an argument.

  • Text
  • n.

    The four Gospels, by way of distinction or eminence.

  • Text
  • n.

    A style of writing in large characters; text-hand also, a kind of type used in printing; as, German text.

  • Next
  • adv.

    In the time, place, or order nearest or immediately suceeding; as, this man follows next.

  • Next
  • superl.

    Nearest in time; as, the next day or hour.

  • Tent
  • n.

    A kind of wine of a deep red color, chiefly from Galicia or Malaga in Spain; -- called also tent wine, and tinta.

  • Next
  • superl.

    Nearest in degree, quality, rank, right, or relation; as, the next heir was an infant.