Crossword clues for musically
musically
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Musically \Mu"sic*al*ly\, adv. In a musical manner.
Wiktionary
adv. In a musical manner
WordNet
adv. in a musical manner; "She sang very musically" [ant: unmusically]
in a musical manner; "musically gifted"
Usage examples of "musically".
We cannot freely mix verses and choruses from different songs and get a musically satisfactory result.
In the direction of the musically elaborative element we have the schools of the Netherlands and of Italy, in which absolutely everything of this kind was realized which modern art can show, saving perhaps the fugue, which involved questions of tonality belonging to a grade of taste and harmonic perception more advanced and refined than that as yet attained.
Rameau is entitled to having developed his operas more musically than those of Lulli, and the later ones became still richer upon the orchestral side.
Afterward he was back again upon the continent, living for some years with Prince Louis Ferdinand, and having right good times with him, both musically and festively.
Few operatic works are musically more important, and yet less pretentious.
The Beatles knew it would work musically because they had played with him in Hamburg, and he was already regarded as one of the top drummers in Liverpool for his work with Rory Storm and the Hurricanes.
We never interacted musically, she was a little too old for our generation, not much probably, but it seemed like an eternity, so I never took her seriously musically.
Of all the Beatles, George Harrison had always been the one most attracted to Eastern ideas, both musically and philosophically.
The Mazurs are musically a highly gifted nation, and Chopin was impressed early in life with the quaint originality of their melodies.
I leave my Eastern subject I wish to recall some of the celebrated singers and organists whom I had an opportunity to hear, at their best, and with many of whom I passed happy hours musically and in pleasant companionship.
It will in a measure, I hope, be an incentive for those who are musically inclined to pursue with energy, enthusiasm and faithful work the delightful task which music brings to us like other lines of education.
I first saw Miles play live, as far as I was concerned, he could do no wrong musically or socially.
Miles was now into musically, since its release had been some months earlier.
The large number of settings of the 18th century, by such men as Arne, though interesting musically, have nothing whatever to do with the student of Shakespeare and the circumstances of his time.
There was a strong tendency last century to revive the notion, and even to our modern ideas, with our Copernican astronomy, there remains at least the possibility of drawing fantastical analogies between the proportionate distances of the planets and the proportionate vibration numbers of the partial tones in a musically vibrating string or pipe.