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[French cadence, from Italian cadenza stands for ending] |
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[Italian cambiare stands for change, substitute] | [Italian campanelli] |
[Greek canon stands for regulation, example] | [Italian cantata, from cantare stands for sing] |
[Italian cantilena, Latin cantilena stands for melodious singing, crooning, humming] | [Latin cantus firmus, abbr. ņ. f. stands for unflinching, inviolable canto] |
[Italian canzone stands for a song] | [Italian canzonetta stands for ditty] |
[Italian cappella stands for chapel] | [Italian capriccio stands for caprice, whim] |
| [Italian castagnetti, Spain castanā stands for chestnut] |
[Italian cavatina] | Latin caesura stands for dissection |
Italian ciaccona, French chaconne | [Italian camera stands for room, chamber] |
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| [Italian ņāmpanå] |
Greek choros |
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Latin choral, Greek choros stands for choir |
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(Italian accordo, French accord stands for harmony) |
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| Greek chroma stands for color; ancient Greeks assimilated 7 degrees of a diatonic scale to 7 colors of the rainbow, and halftones nuances of these m |
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[Italian clarinetto] | [French clavecin] |
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[Italian coda stands for tail, end, train] | [Italian coloratura stands for color, decoration] |
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| [Latin concursus stands for encounter] |
[Latin compositor stands for compiler, composer] | [Latin corapositio stands for creation, arrangement] |
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| [Italian concertino] |
[Latin concertare stands for compete or Italian concerto consent, harmony] | [Italian concerto grosso, literally stands for big concerto] |
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