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coda 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ˈkōdə/,
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codas, plural;
  1. The concluding passage of a piece or movement, typically forming an addition to the basic structure

  2. The concluding section of a dance, esp. of a pas de deux or the finale of a ballet in which the dancers parade before the audience

  3. A concluding event, remark, or section
    • - his new novel is a kind of coda to his previous books

  1. finale: the closing section of a musical composition
  2. Co-Dependents Anonymous (CoDA) is a twelve-step program for people who share a common desire to develop functional and healthy relationships. CoDA was founded in 1986 in Phoenix, Arizona. CoDA is active in more than 40 countries, with approximately 1200 groups active in the United States.
  3. Coda is the ninth and final studio albumWhile some external sources categorise Coda as a compilation album, Led Zeppelin's official album label, Atlantic Records, categorises it as studio album. See for example the liner notes for the Led Zeppelin Box Set, Vol. ...
  4. Ballet is a formalized type of dance; ballet dance is usually performed on stage as part of a ballet dance work which includes mime, acting, and is set to music. Dancers can perform either en pointe or demi-pointe; in ballet class, the dancers work either at the barre or in centre floor.
  5. Coda is a Rock en Español band from Mexico, formed in 1989. The band had much of success in the early 1990s, releasing four albums. In the late 1990s, the band had several line-up changes; the band disbanded in 2000, but resurfaced in 2002 with a new line-up.
  6. Coda is a code-breaking board game for two to four players, invented by Eiji Wakasugi. The objective is to guess the code of other players while preventing the discovery of your own code.
  7. CODA plc is a mid-sized international financial software company based in the United Kingdom. Founded in 1979, it was purchased in 2008 by Unit 4 Agresso, a supplier of Enterprise Resource Planning software, based in the Netherlands. ...
  8. A passage which brings a movement or piece to a conclusion through prolongation; The optional final part of a syllable, placed after its nucleus, and usually composed of one or more consonants; In seismograms, the gradual return to baseline after a seismic event. ...
  9. (1) A portion of a tune which seems like a tail, or extra measures, added to the last A section. It is repeated for every chorus, however. (2) An ending for a tune, used only once after the final chorus. ...
  10. The Coda is a series of emphatic cadences that create a sense of finality in the movement. In Beethoven's Ninth, Coda's also act as "Second Developments" whose lengths sometimes rival or even exceed the other sections.
  11. A few measures or a section added to the end of a piece of music to make a more effective ending.
  12. A section of an arrangement that follows the last performance of the head and serves to conclude the piece
  13. defined and discussed in lecture 3, parts 1 and 2: Binary Form: The Key to Music in the Classic Era and in Expanding the Binary Form: Coda, Rondo, Theme and Variation. Here's the Short Cut.
  14. A section sometimes added on to the end of a song; in sonata form, added after the recapitulation to conclude the sonata form movement.
  15. Some pieces of music finish with a coda. (e.g. The Hebrides Overture) This final section can be thought of as a tail, which brings the music to an end.
  16. Italian for 'tail', the end section of a piece of music, common in some large-scale orchestral music
  17. 1) Short section at the end of a piece of music, 2) By extention of 1, the last part of something such as a meeting, a letter, a career, as in "The graduation ceremony provided an emotional coda to Eglundtine’s high school years."
  18. a musical piece at the end of a selection to give a sense of finality. In folk arrangements, it s not uncommon for the coda to be a repetition of the verse melody, or part of it, on instruments only, and is generally known as a tag. In classical arrangements, the coda is somewhat more complex. ...
  19. [ˈkodə] -the part of the syllable that comes after the nucleus, e.g., [nd] in [ɡɹajnd].
  20. the last musical thoughts in a composition; instrict formal terms, a piece might contain exposition (which sets forth the principal themes of the work), development (which uses that material in new and varied fashions), recapitulation (where the principal material is restated almost verbatim), ...
  21. the concluding train of seismic waves that follows the principal part of an earthquake.
  22. A Coda (from the Italian word meaning 'tail') is an ending added at the finish of a tunes' performance. This can replace the usual changes of a tune, or can be in addition to these chords. It is usually cued using a traditional coda sign and is found at the bottom of a leadsheet.
  23. The last section of a piece, usually added to a standard form bringing the music to a close.
  24. Optional ending music that comes after the last chorus (see ending)
  25. A tail;hence , a passage ending a movement.