scherzo

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A piece of music or a movement from a larger piece such as a symphony; especially, a piece of music played in a playful manner

At seven Val knocked – three shorts and one long, out of the scherzo of Beethoven’s Fifth – and I rushed to open.

Italian for "joke " A lighthearted and fast-moving piece of music
{i} light or cheerful musical piece
it began as a lively movement derived from the Minuet, but it developed into an independent genre characterized by a rather free expressiveness
– A musical “joke;” musical marking meaning bright in tempo
A scherzo is a short, lively piece of classical music which is usually part of a longer piece of music. scherzos a happy piece of music that is meant to be played quickly. (Italian; "joke") Musical movement in rapid triple time; it replaced the minuet in genres such as the symphony, sonata, and string quartet in the 19th century. The name was first used for light vocal and instrumental pieces of the Baroque era. It formally often resembles the minuet, being in rounded binary form and having a contrasting trio section between two statements of the scherzo proper, but its tempo is often much faster and its style may range from playful to vehement or grotesque
Composition in A-B-A form, usually in triple meter; replaced the minuet and trio in the nineteenth century
a fast movement (usually in triple time)
"Joke " A piece in a lively tempo A movement of a symphony, sonata, or quartet in quick triple time, replacing the minuet
A playful, humorous movement, commonly in 3-4 measure, which often takes the place of the old minuet and trio in a sonata or a symphony
Italian for "joke " A quick, boisterous movement, usually the third, in a symphony or sonata
Joke " A piece in a lively tempo A movement of a symphony, sonata, or quartet in quick triple time, replacing the minuet
scherzi
plural of scherzo
scherzos
plural of scherzo
scherzo

    Heceleme

    scher·zo

    Telaffuz

    Etimoloji

    [ 'skert-(")sO ] (noun.) 1852. From Italian scherzo "joke, play", from scherzare "to joke, jest" from Old Italian scherzare, of Germanic origin, from Lombardic *skerzan "to jump merrily, enjoy oneself, jest" from Proto-Germanic *skirtanan (“to hop, jump”) from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kerǝd- (“to dance, jump”). Akin to Middle High German scherzen "to frolic, jump merrily, hop up and down" (German scherzen "to joke"; Scherz "joke, sport"), Norwegian skjerta "to joke".