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staccato
[ stuh-kah-toh ]
adjective
- shortened and detached when played or sung:
staccato notes.
- characterized by performance in which the notes are abruptly disconnected: Compare legato.
a staccato style of playing.
- composed of or characterized by abruptly disconnected elements; disjointed:
rapid-fire, staccato speech.
adverb
- in a staccato manner.
noun
- performance in a staccato manner.
- a staccato passage.
staccato
/ stəˈkɑːtəʊ /
adjective
- music (of notes) short, clipped, and separate
- characterized by short abrupt sounds, as in speech
a staccato command
adverb
- (esp used as a musical direction) in a staccato manner
staccato
- A direction in music meaning that the notes should be performed in an abrupt, sharp, clear-cut manner.
Notes
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of staccato1
Example Sentences
I get "why fix it if it isn't broken" and clearly that rapid, staccato, uber-fast speed has done wonders for your traction and your followers.
They were smaller than the smallest peas, but hard enough to make staccato tap-tap-taps as they struck my windshield and melted into tiny droplets of water.
Then her device’s flat staccato sounds out the raunchy rhymes of Sir Mix-a-Lot’s “Baby Got Back.”
Duane Eddy, who broke new ground in pop music in the 1950s with a reverberant, staccato style of guitar playing that became known as twang, died on Tuesday in Franklin, Tenn. He was 86.
“But because of that it’s a more expressive instrument than any other. Do you slide into it, do you play staccato? It’s really what you do in between the notes too.”
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