Search for crossword answers and clues
Something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows
Answer for the clue "Something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows ", 7 letters:
prelude
Alternative clues for the word prelude
Word definitions for prelude in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A Prelude (music) is a musical form. Prelude may also refer to:
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 An introductory or preliminary performance or event; a preface. 2 (context music English) A short piece of music that acts as an introduction to a longer piece. vb. 1 To introduce something, as a prelude. 2 To play an introduction or prelude; to give ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Prelude \Pre*lude"\, v. t. To introduce with a previous performance; to play or perform a prelude to; as, to prelude a concert with a lively air. To serve as prelude to; to precede as introductory. [Music] preluding some great tragedy. --Longfellow
Usage examples of prelude.
Strophes and Antistrophes as in the Prelude, but the Evolutions now leading them from the central Altar to the extreme Right and Left of the Orchestra.
He took a step forward and made a movement that Routh momentarily interpreted as the prelude to an ironical handshake.
As you know, much of the poetry in the Bible, especially of such as was meant for music, is composed in stanzaic form, or in strophe and anti-strophe, with prelude and conclusion, sometimes with a choral refrain.
French and Spanish navies off Cadiz in the prelude to one of the biggest naval battles the world has ever known.
PRELUDE CHAPTER I The fatigue caused by a rough sea journey, and, perhaps, the consciousness that she would have to be dressed before dawn to catch the train for Beni-Mora, prevented Domini Enfilden from sleeping.
The dullest could perceive that such a registration and resettlement within the Six Duchies could easily be a prelude to a wide-scale massacre.
The females of the ancipital species have a one-day flow of menses from the uterus as a prelude to the oestral cycle, when they go into rut.
The sermon was to be preached on Sexagesima Sunday, a prelude to the solemn season of Lent.
I experienced the complete cessation of volition, the ineluctable sensation of total disembodiment which all aberrants will recognize as the prelude to a trip.
Mrs Leslie again took her departure, leaving them together, and Lizzie allowed her friend to go, although the last words that Lopez had spoken had been, as he thought, a fair prelude to the words he intended to speak today.
She played Chopin--studies, waltzes, mazurkas, preludes, a polonaise or two.
The mother said that we would settle it after supper, and I made no objection, not liking to tell her that in my house the supper would be more succulent, and a better prelude for the kind of exercise I expected to enjoy.
If I depart here for a brief space from my announced purpose not to analyze the music in the manner of the Wagnerian commentators, it will be only because the themes of the prelude are the most pregnant of those employed in the working out of the drama, because their specific significance in the purpose of the composer is plainly set forth by their association with scenes and words, and because they are most admirably fitted by structure and emotional content to express the things attributed to them.
The prelude is built out of a few themes which are associated with some of the most significant elements of the play.
Simply for the sake of identification hereafter names will be attached to the themes out of which the prelude is constructed and which come from the chief melodic factors of the opera.