释义 |
Definition of crescendo in English: crescendonoun krɪˈʃɛndəʊkrəˈʃɛnˌdoʊ 1Music A gradual increase in loudness in a piece of music. each time the key changes, there is a gradual crescendo Example sentencesExamples - Instead, it had more of a gradual crescendo, a spirit to it that demanded a faster movement.
- As Sora walked further down the hall, the redhead's sensitive ears picked up a gradual crescendo of a beautifully played piano.
- The music rose in a whirling crescendo as the tempo got faster.
- The second is a three-part lullaby and the finale a moto perpetuo in gradual crescendo.
- Each piece has multiple tension points and crescendos to keep your ear engaged for a hard listen, but it honestly works best as background music.
- 1.1 A passage of music marked or performed with a crescendo.
Example sentencesExamples - The musical phraseology was convincing, and the crescendos and decrescendos were accurately measured and performed.
- As crescendo after crescendo uplifts the piece, the group becomes more and more abrasive and unforgiving.
- The final crescendo was stunningly articulated!
- I was dissatisfied with my execution of the crescendos and decrescendos in the ‘A Section’ of the work's scherzo movement.
- 1.2 The loudest point reached in a gradually increasing sound.
the port engine revs rose to a crescendo Example sentencesExamples - The piano music rose to a crescendo, the pianist pounding on the keys so loudly Jane covered her ears.
- Forty male voices sang in spell-binding chorus, softening at moments and then rising, fortified, to a crescendo.
- The background music swells to a crescendo of heavenly orchestration in a moment intended to make audiences feel proud.
- The music hit a crescendo as the dancers beneath the brightly lit lanterns increased the momentum of the dance.
- The atmosphere in the stadium was fantastic, and with the roof closed, and the sound reaching a crescendo, it made the hairs on my neck stand up.
- The applause rose to a crescendo when four white doves were freed and flew into the night sky.
- The music reaches a crescendo, and their eyes meet.
- They had scrambled almost back to the road as the band's cacophony rose to a crescendo.
- Cicadas start to shrill, building to a crescendo that threatens to rupture eardrums.
- The two embraced as the applause grew to a crescendo.
- She began cursing with bitter vehemence and knocked the remaining pots around to a crescendo of reverberating noise.
- It breaks and builds to a crescendo, the classic flute section floating over the top.
- Each song starts slowly then builds up to a crescendo.
- It began as an almost pleasant noise, but then grew to a crescendo.
- Excited chattering rose to a crescendo in the auditorium as the sound of the fast-moving convoy fell upon the ears of those at the back of the crowd.
- A great babble of voices all rose to a crescendo of sound that could only be the prelude to panic.
- As the engine races to a crescendo, we head off along what appears to be a new-mown field, then just as it dawns on me that this is the airstrip, we are airborne.
- The shouting grew louder and to a crescendo as a door opened.
- Comedy sound effects come to a crescendo as the abused machine finally collapses in a heap of scrap metal.
- Soon the wind rose to a crescendo as it tore through trees and over roof tops.
2A progressive increase in intensity. Example sentencesExamples - What followed was a rising crescendo in which he saw glorious opportunities for the future, the future in particular of left-of-centre politics.
- It was a fitting crescendo to a remarkable exhibition.
- They believe that if you try hard enough there's a steady crescendo of improvement and your fate is in your own hands.
- I think both clubs felt it worked very well but that should not build into a crescendo of rumours that the rugby club are moving in with us.
- Although many speakers struck bland notes individually, together these became a crescendo of shared concern.
- His sluggish response kicked off a crescendo of criticism, prompting calls for him to resign from within his own coalition.
- That crescendo builds up, you are on your own and think you have to do something.
- 2.1 The most intense point reached.
the hysteria reached a crescendo around the spring festival Example sentencesExamples - These ideas come to a crescendo in the book's final collection of essays.
- All this is happening all at the same time, and it's all working up to a crescendo where there is going to be a sudden shift.
- As the vocal chords stretched, the cheering reached a crescendo.
- His eyes widened as the pain reached a crescendo.
- The sudden ending, while building up to a crescendo, leaves you thinking, ‘What if?’
- As minutes ticked by, excitement reached a crescendo.
- They talk about how you build up your script to a crescendo, how you develop subplots, and all sorts of other mechanical rules.
- In early April, this propaganda campaign reached a crescendo.
- This is bad news for a company which depends so highly on retail sales which should rise to a crescendo in the run-up to Christmas.
- Occasionally, when he's reaching the crescendo of his argument, he runs off to grab a placard and brandishes it to drive home his point.
- The sandstorm hit us that day and built to a crescendo during the next day.
- But the excitement reached a crescendo when the dance floor was thrown open.
- After Augustine had become a bishop, the theme of man's absolute need for grace rose to a crescendo.
- This kind of criticism reached a crescendo in the summer of 1862.
- It was during this time that the lobbying reached a crescendo, and it paid off.
- The reasons did come to a crescendo in the end and referred to discretion.
- The careful selection and placement of each noise and voice ensures that as each amplifies the other, they remain distinct, and build to a crescendo of emotion.
- The storm reached a crescendo as they crossed the stream, Plum Run.
- Anti-immigrant propaganda has reached a crescendo over the past month, as both parties compete to prove they are harsher on immigration.
Synonyms peak, pinnacle, height, high point, highest point, summit, top
adverb & adjectivekrɪˈʃɛndəʊ Music With a gradual increase in loudness. as adjective a short crescendo kettledrum roll Example sentencesExamples - Reversing the crescendo pattern used by so many instrumental bands, the song begins with booming drums and layers of distorted bass, high-end guitars, and uplifting piano.
- Each goal is honoured with the crescendo beat of drums and the noise is increased by the cheers of the successful party.
verbcrescendoed, crescendoes, crescendoingkrɪˈʃɛndəʊkrəˈʃɛnˌdoʊ [no object]Increase in loudness or intensity. the reluctant cheers began to crescendo Example sentencesExamples - The drums boomed, the bass often got lost in the mix under dueling guitars, and the dueling guitars crescendoed.
- This will be almost falsetto but will have enough heaviness to enable the singer to crescendo smoothly.
- Soon, the faint pitter-patter crescendoed into the staccato of heavy drops falling on Heinrich's poncho.
- It's also there in the way he ends notes in the verses, crescendoing and pitching up and then choking them off suddenly, cutting the sound short.
- The drumming of his fingers matched the rain in a crescendoing concerto.
- Her voice started low, hardly audible, but slowly crescendoed as the temperature of the room dropped.
- It crescendoed and tipped off at an intensely sharp note.
- More laughter from the audience, which crescendoed as Kelly began actually discussing the things, in terms of their visual history and morphology.
- When motorized sounds roared and heavy gunfire crescendoed, he ran, so I ran too.
- The advisor started chuckling softly to himself, and it grew and crescendoed into the same maniacal laughter that was coming out of the priestess's mouth far away.
- She heard voices crescendo until the words were finally understandable.
- Jonas's voice crescendoed steadily with every word.
- As the music evolved, each harmonic would crescendo but no harmonic would crescendo any louder than another.
- My voice crescendoed into a yell slowly throughout my speech, bringing up memories of events that I'd overcome.
- Murmuring broke out and crescendoed into pandemonium.
- We waited a few seconds in silence, before we heard rhythmic footsteps crescendoing as a dim, short outline approached the door.
- The song crescendoed, and they both closed their eyes.
- His voice, at first, had been soft but soon crescendoed into a bellow.
- A chorus of male voices rose above the din, crescendoing, singing ‘Jezebel’ in ringing tones that deafened the room with awe.
- The horse's gait changed to a gallop, and the muffled rhythm of the hoof beats crescendoed until they were uncannily loud and hollow.
Origin Late 18th century: Italian, present participle of crescere 'to increase', from Latin crescere 'grow'. Rhymes diminuendo, innuendo, kendo Definition of crescendo in US English: crescendonounkrəˈʃɛnˌdoʊkrəˈSHenˌdō Music 1A gradual increase in loudness in a piece of music. Example sentencesExamples - Each piece has multiple tension points and crescendos to keep your ear engaged for a hard listen, but it honestly works best as background music.
- The second is a three-part lullaby and the finale a moto perpetuo in gradual crescendo.
- The music rose in a whirling crescendo as the tempo got faster.
- As Sora walked further down the hall, the redhead's sensitive ears picked up a gradual crescendo of a beautifully played piano.
- Instead, it had more of a gradual crescendo, a spirit to it that demanded a faster movement.
- 1.1 A passage of music marked to be performed with a gradual increase of loudness.
Example sentencesExamples - The musical phraseology was convincing, and the crescendos and decrescendos were accurately measured and performed.
- As crescendo after crescendo uplifts the piece, the group becomes more and more abrasive and unforgiving.
- The final crescendo was stunningly articulated!
- I was dissatisfied with my execution of the crescendos and decrescendos in the ‘A Section’ of the work's scherzo movement.
- 1.2 The loudest point reached in a gradually increasing sound.
Debra's voice was rising to a crescendo Example sentencesExamples - The music hit a crescendo as the dancers beneath the brightly lit lanterns increased the momentum of the dance.
- It breaks and builds to a crescendo, the classic flute section floating over the top.
- The atmosphere in the stadium was fantastic, and with the roof closed, and the sound reaching a crescendo, it made the hairs on my neck stand up.
- Each song starts slowly then builds up to a crescendo.
- Comedy sound effects come to a crescendo as the abused machine finally collapses in a heap of scrap metal.
- The background music swells to a crescendo of heavenly orchestration in a moment intended to make audiences feel proud.
- As the engine races to a crescendo, we head off along what appears to be a new-mown field, then just as it dawns on me that this is the airstrip, we are airborne.
- The piano music rose to a crescendo, the pianist pounding on the keys so loudly Jane covered her ears.
- The shouting grew louder and to a crescendo as a door opened.
- Excited chattering rose to a crescendo in the auditorium as the sound of the fast-moving convoy fell upon the ears of those at the back of the crowd.
- A great babble of voices all rose to a crescendo of sound that could only be the prelude to panic.
- The music reaches a crescendo, and their eyes meet.
- She began cursing with bitter vehemence and knocked the remaining pots around to a crescendo of reverberating noise.
- It began as an almost pleasant noise, but then grew to a crescendo.
- Soon the wind rose to a crescendo as it tore through trees and over roof tops.
- Cicadas start to shrill, building to a crescendo that threatens to rupture eardrums.
- The applause rose to a crescendo when four white doves were freed and flew into the night sky.
- Forty male voices sang in spell-binding chorus, softening at moments and then rising, fortified, to a crescendo.
- They had scrambled almost back to the road as the band's cacophony rose to a crescendo.
- The two embraced as the applause grew to a crescendo.
- 1.3 A progressive increase in force or intensity.
Example sentencesExamples - Although many speakers struck bland notes individually, together these became a crescendo of shared concern.
- His sluggish response kicked off a crescendo of criticism, prompting calls for him to resign from within his own coalition.
- I think both clubs felt it worked very well but that should not build into a crescendo of rumours that the rugby club are moving in with us.
- It was a fitting crescendo to a remarkable exhibition.
- What followed was a rising crescendo in which he saw glorious opportunities for the future, the future in particular of left-of-centre politics.
- They believe that if you try hard enough there's a steady crescendo of improvement and your fate is in your own hands.
- That crescendo builds up, you are on your own and think you have to do something.
- 1.4 The most intense point reached in this; a climax.
the negative reviews reached a crescendo in mid-February Example sentencesExamples - They talk about how you build up your script to a crescendo, how you develop subplots, and all sorts of other mechanical rules.
- This kind of criticism reached a crescendo in the summer of 1862.
- As minutes ticked by, excitement reached a crescendo.
- This is bad news for a company which depends so highly on retail sales which should rise to a crescendo in the run-up to Christmas.
- Anti-immigrant propaganda has reached a crescendo over the past month, as both parties compete to prove they are harsher on immigration.
- It was during this time that the lobbying reached a crescendo, and it paid off.
- The careful selection and placement of each noise and voice ensures that as each amplifies the other, they remain distinct, and build to a crescendo of emotion.
- These ideas come to a crescendo in the book's final collection of essays.
- Occasionally, when he's reaching the crescendo of his argument, he runs off to grab a placard and brandishes it to drive home his point.
- After Augustine had become a bishop, the theme of man's absolute need for grace rose to a crescendo.
- The sandstorm hit us that day and built to a crescendo during the next day.
- In early April, this propaganda campaign reached a crescendo.
- The sudden ending, while building up to a crescendo, leaves you thinking, ‘What if?’
- All this is happening all at the same time, and it's all working up to a crescendo where there is going to be a sudden shift.
- As the vocal chords stretched, the cheering reached a crescendo.
- But the excitement reached a crescendo when the dance floor was thrown open.
- His eyes widened as the pain reached a crescendo.
- The reasons did come to a crescendo in the end and referred to discretion.
- The storm reached a crescendo as they crossed the stream, Plum Run.
Synonyms peak, pinnacle, height, high point, highest point, summit, top
adjective & adverbkrəˈʃɛnˌdoʊkrəˈSHenˌdō Music With a gradual increase in loudness. as adjective a short crescendo kettledrum roll Example sentencesExamples - Reversing the crescendo pattern used by so many instrumental bands, the song begins with booming drums and layers of distorted bass, high-end guitars, and uplifting piano.
- Each goal is honoured with the crescendo beat of drums and the noise is increased by the cheers of the successful party.
verbkrəˈʃɛnˌdoʊkrəˈSHenˌdō [no object]Increase in loudness or intensity. the reluctant cheers began to crescendo Example sentencesExamples - A chorus of male voices rose above the din, crescendoing, singing ‘Jezebel’ in ringing tones that deafened the room with awe.
- It crescendoed and tipped off at an intensely sharp note.
- When motorized sounds roared and heavy gunfire crescendoed, he ran, so I ran too.
- As the music evolved, each harmonic would crescendo but no harmonic would crescendo any louder than another.
- The drumming of his fingers matched the rain in a crescendoing concerto.
- Soon, the faint pitter-patter crescendoed into the staccato of heavy drops falling on Heinrich's poncho.
- The horse's gait changed to a gallop, and the muffled rhythm of the hoof beats crescendoed until they were uncannily loud and hollow.
- She heard voices crescendo until the words were finally understandable.
- Jonas's voice crescendoed steadily with every word.
- My voice crescendoed into a yell slowly throughout my speech, bringing up memories of events that I'd overcome.
- Her voice started low, hardly audible, but slowly crescendoed as the temperature of the room dropped.
- More laughter from the audience, which crescendoed as Kelly began actually discussing the things, in terms of their visual history and morphology.
- This will be almost falsetto but will have enough heaviness to enable the singer to crescendo smoothly.
- Murmuring broke out and crescendoed into pandemonium.
- It's also there in the way he ends notes in the verses, crescendoing and pitching up and then choking them off suddenly, cutting the sound short.
- The advisor started chuckling softly to himself, and it grew and crescendoed into the same maniacal laughter that was coming out of the priestess's mouth far away.
- The drums boomed, the bass often got lost in the mix under dueling guitars, and the dueling guitars crescendoed.
- We waited a few seconds in silence, before we heard rhythmic footsteps crescendoing as a dim, short outline approached the door.
- The song crescendoed, and they both closed their eyes.
- His voice, at first, had been soft but soon crescendoed into a bellow.
Origin Late 18th century: Italian, present participle of crescere ‘to increase’, from Latin crescere ‘grow’. |