Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Present participle of
prelude .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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They included "preluding" -- that is, offering an improvised beginning to a work or movement.
What Music Has Lost James F. Penrose 2008
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Forth now, Erato! and I will unfold who were the kings, what the tides of circumstance, how it was with ancient Latium when first that foreign army drew their fleet ashore on Ausonia's coast; I will recall the preluding of battle.
The Aeneid of Virgil 70 BC-19 BC Virgil
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But this operation should not be performed in presence of the public; and, moreover, every instrumental noise -- every kind of preluding between the acts -- constitutes
The Orchestral Conductor Theory of His Art Hector Berlioz 1836
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It was one of those brilliant days preluding summer.
New Carpet 2010
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To be fair, the #21 cover is Carlos Pacheco, and the “villains winning” idea fit in pretty thematically with Final Crisis, which it was preluding.
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So she took the lute and, preluding after the goodliest fashion, sang these couplets,
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So I bade the servant bring him a new lute and he tuned it and preluding in a mode I knew not began to sing, improvising these couplets,
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Mr. Hamilton explains that preluding, in a concert hall or salon, had the effect of settling the audience and of reminding it, along the way, that the pianist was a creative artist and not an automaton.
What Music Has Lost James F. Penrose 2008
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Then she took her lute and, preluding thereon in manifold modes, lastly returned to the first and sang these couplets,
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The folk rejoiced in her song with exceeding joy and my gladness redoubled, so that I took the lute from the damsel and preluding after the most melodious fashion, sang these couplets,
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