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coda

[ US /ˈkoʊdə/ ]
[ UK /kˈə‍ʊdɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the closing section of a musical composition

How To Use coda In A Sentence

  • The poem, in Italian, is an extended or "tailed" sonnet, with a coda of six lines appended to the standard 14. Archive 2010-01-01
  • The program ended with a free-spirited coda by all the dancers doing this, that, and especially the other, all with happy bravura and to Tchaikovsky.
  • III, by deciding whether a codetta or coda has been added. Lessons in Music Form A Manual of Analysis of All the Structural Factors and Designs Employed in Musical Composition
  • On the whole the maxillopodan groups Ostracoda and Cirripedia and the Malacostraca have left the most significant fossil records.
  • If a note can append a piece of information to a specifically indexable point in a text, the rest of the text must potentially be recodable within a larger system.
  • Exploring this phenomenon, with its ‘un-American’ emphasis on unbranded goods and producer-to-consumer contact, would have been an apt coda to this book.
  • About four thematic ideas appear, and a short coda builds to the final chords.
  • * Note: it seems to me that IE phonology had syllabification rules which favored open syllables, i.e. most consonant clusters would be analyzed as onsets rather than sequences of coda(s)-plus-onset(s). Back to business: emphatic particles and verbal extensions
  • His last years, lived by invitation in cottages in Sussex and Kent, fed and wined by beneficent admirers, provided a sort of rural coda of tranquillity.
  • Of course he'll try to back-pedal, tacking a spectacular cop-out ending that leaves the central family intact and his final upbeat words nonsensically used as a coda.
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