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1. (n.) tempo
the rate of speed of a musical passage or work, usu. indicated by printed direction, as largo, or by a metronome setting.
2. tempo
any characteristic rate, rhythm, or pattern:
the tempo of city life.
Etymology: (1680–90; < It < L tempus time)
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| Definition of 'TEMPO' |
Princeton's WordNet |
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1. (noun) tempo, pacing
(music) the speed at which a composition is to be played
2. (noun) tempo, pace
the rate of some repeating event
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| Definition of 'TEMPO' |
Webster Dictionary |
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1. (noun) TEMPO
the rate or degree of movement in time
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Sense: the speed at which a piece of music should be or is played.
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Afrikaans: tempo |
Arabic: سُرْعَة الإيقاع |
Bulgarian: темпо |
Brazilian: andamento |
Czech: tempo |
German: das Tempo |
Danish: tempo |
Greek: ρυθμός |
Spanish: tempo |
Estonian: tempo |
Farsi: سرعت اجرا |
Finnish: tempo |
French: tempo |
Hebrew: קֶצֶב |
Hindi: ताल, गति शैली |
Croatian: tempo, brzina |
Hungarian: tempó |
Indonesian: tempo musik |
Icelandic: (flutnings)hraði |
Italian: tempo |
Japanese: テンポ |
Korean: (음악) 템포 |
Lithuanian: tempas |
Latvian: temps |
Malay: tempo |
Dutch: tempo |
Norwegian: tempo, hastighet |
Polish: tempo |
Portuguese: andamento |
Romanian: tempo |
Russian: темп |
Slovak: tempo |
Slovenian: tempo |
Serbian: tempo |
Swedish: tempo |
Thai: จังหวะ |
Turkish: tempo, vuruş |
Taiwanese: (音樂的)拍子 |
Ukrainian: темп |
Urdu: رفتار، موسيقي کي رفتار |
Vietnamese: tốc độ, nhịp độ |
Chinese: (音乐的)速度,拍子,节奏 |
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