Grave, Largo, Lento and Larghetto are all tempos slower than andante
Allegro
Minuet: Slow and stately dance music written in triple time. Largo ... slower than Adagio and with great dignity. A Minuet is
Here are many different types of tempo:Prestissimo - extremely fast (more than 200bpm)Vivacissimamente - adverb of vivacissimo, "very quickly and lively"Vivacissimo - very fast and livelyPresto - very fast (168-200 bpm)Allegrissimo - very fastVivo - lively and fastVivace - lively and fast (about 140 bpm)Allegro - fast and bright or "march tempo" (120-168 bpm)Allegro moderato - moderately quick (112-124 bpm)Allegretto - moderately fast (but less so than allegro)Allegretto grazioso - moderately fast and gracefullyModerato - moderately (108-120 bpm)Moderato espressivo - moderately with expressionAndantino - alternatively faster or slower than andanteAndante Moderato - a bit faster than andanteAndante - at a walking pace (76-108 bpm)Tranquillamente - adverb of tranquillo, "tranquilly"Tranquillo - tranquilAdagietto - rather slow (70-80 bpm)Adagio - slow and stately (literally, "at ease") (66-76 bpm)Larghetto - rather broadly (60-66 bpm)Grave - slow and solemnLento - very slow (40-60 bpm)Lento Moderato - moderately slowLargo - very slow (40-60 bpm), like lentoLarghissimo - very very slow (20 bpm and below)
I know coyote can run at 43 mph and wolf is bigger and slower then a coyote and a fox should be faster than a coyote because it is smaller than 1 so probely fox Sorry i cant answer it Hannah
Grave, Largo, Lento and Larghetto are all tempos slower than andante
Adagio means "to play slowly". This tempo marking is slower than andante, but a bit faster than largo.
Allegro: quick, lively Adagio e sempre: slow tempo throughout Allegro con spirito: quick, lively, with spirit Andante: moderately slow (a bit faster than adagio) Menuetto: minuet: social dance piece usually in 3/4 time and usually short Presto: Fast tempo Allegro marcato: quick, lively, played with strong accentuation Adagio: slow Giuoco delle coppie: literally "game of the couples"- this is a title, not a musical direction Allegro giocoso: Quick, lively, happily, merrily
Lively, quick ... faster than allegrettobut slower than presto.A brisk and livelytempo.
Yes.Grave - Very SlowLargo, Lento - SlowLarghetto - A little faster than LargoAdagio - Moderately SlowAndante - "Walking" TempoAndantino - A little faster than AndanteAllegretto - A little slower than AllegroAllegro - FastVivace - LivelyPresto - Very FastPrestissimo - Very Very FastModerato - Moderate(ly) FastMolto - Very
'Presto' is one such term. There are others.
Kinds of tempo: presto (very fast) allegro (fast) moderato (moderate) andante (moderate, literally a "walking" tempo) lento (slower than adagio) largo (very slow) accelerando (increasing the speed) ritardando (slowing down).
The English definition of allegretto is a reasonably quick tempo. Allegretto is considered to be faster than the pace of allegro but slower than the pacing of andante.
Allegro
You don't have 'a Allegro'- I'm assuming you meant 'What does the word Allegro (that you might see at the top of a piece of music) mean?' That I can tell you. Allegro is Italian for (according to ABRSM Grade 1 Music Theory) quick, literally "cheerful". I hope I helped! x
Allegretto means "Moderately Fast" slower than allegro but faster than andante...con moto means "with movement" so "Moderately fast with movement" Hope that Helps :)
nothing. that is impossible because if it is faster than a bird, then it isn't slower than a snail. and if it is slower than a snail, then it isn't faster than a bird.