Online Google Dictionary

arpeggio 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ärˈpejēˌō/,
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arpeggios, plural;
  1. The notes of a chord played in succession, either ascending or descending


  1. a chord whose notes are played in rapid succession rather than simultaneously
  2. In music, an arpeggio (plural arpeggi or arpeggios, or known as a broken chord) is Italian for broken chord where the notes are played or sung in sequence, one after the other, rather than ringing out simultaneously. ...
  3. This is a list of characters in the Sly Cooper video game series.
  4. The notes of a chord played individually instead of simultaneously, usually moving from lowest to highest
  5. A broken chord, usually played evenly low to high and back again.
  6. The playing of the tones of a chord separately, rather than simultaneously.
  7. Notes of a chord played in succession
  8. A chord played one note at a time.
  9. A chord that is spelled out note by note. Philip Glass makes heavy use of steady streams of arpeggios:
  10. A chord whose notes are presented one at a time successively instead of as a stack of notes sounding at the same time. Also called broken chord.
  11. An Italian term for a chord which is performed with the notes played one-by-one rather than at the same time
  12. Broken chord in which the individual tones are sounded one after another instead of simultaneously.
  13. (it.) - In the Style of a harp. The notes of a chord are struck consecutively one after the other.
  14. Playing a chord's notes one at a time, rather than simultaneously with a single stroke to all the strings. Sweep picking is recommended when playing arpeggios.
  15. From the verb meaning “to play the harp” (arpeggiare), this term indicates to a player that notes must be strummed or plucked in succession, not simultaneously.
  16. A method used by synthesisers that did not have enough voices to constantly have chords playing (like the SID which only had three voices). Instead, it would rapidly play the notes in sequence by taking the instrument and sliding it past the three notes rapidly. ...
  17. literally, like a harp. Used to indicate that the notes of a certain chord are to be played quickly one after another (usually from lowest to highest) instead of at the same moment. In piano music this is sometimes a solution in playing a wide-ranged chord whose notes cannot be played otherwise. ...
  18. "Ain't he that storybook kid with the big nose that grows?"
  19. a chord that is performed "spread out" ie. one note after the other
  20. Plucking hand technique where strings are played one after the other, generally with fingers. A standard arpeggio is payed with the thumb plucking a bass strings, than index, middle and ring fingers plucking treble strings one after the other.
  21. A series of harmonically pleasant-sounding notes played individually one after the other - particularly effective on Piano or similar sustained instruments.
  22. A sequence of notes based on a chord, usually arranged in thirds, played in quick succession across the strings.
  23. notes of a chord played consecutively; a broken chord
  24. The word arpeggio comes from the Italian word “arpeggiare” , which means “to play on a harp”: it means you play (or sing) the notes in a chord not together, but one after each other. ...
  25. Chord in which the notes are separated to produce a broken effect.