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Page "Glossary of musical terminology" ¶ 51
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Some Related Sentences

nessuna and cosa
* 1965-Tu non potrai capire / Una cosa di nessuna importanza-Jolly J 20280

nessuna and works
The first of his two comic works, Lo sposo di tre e marito di nessuna, premiered at a Venetian theater in November 1783.

cosa and ;
:" It is not Cosa Nostra that contacts the politician ; instead a member of the Cosa Nostra says, that president is mine ( è cosa mia ), and if you need a favor, you must go through me.
After lampooning Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi, she was sued by Silvio Berlusconi's Mediaset lawyers ( notably Cesare Previti's law firm ) for " lies and insinuation " and the show was pulled amid controversy ; in the suing document Previti defined satire as " that thing which tends to minimize and to make a politician likeable, to diminish the social tensions " (" quella cosa che tende a sdrammatizzare e a rendere simpatico un politico, a diminuire le tensioni sociali ") as the basis to accuse the show of not being satirical but a direct political attack.

cosa and with
* Giovanni Fasanella and Alberto Franceschini ( with a postface from judge Rosario Priore, who investigated on Aldo Moro's death ), Che cosa sono le BR I Miserabili ( " BRIGADES ROUGES.

cosa and which
Eyewitnesses including Rudolf Bing report that Warren had completed La Forza's Act III aria, which begins Morir, tremenda cosa (" to die, a momentous thing "), and was supposed to open a sealed wallet, examine the contents and cry out " E salvo, o gioia " ( He is safe, oh joy ), before launching into the vigorous cabaletta.
" Cosanti " fuses two Italian words, " cosa " ( which means " things ") and " anti " (" against ").
It seems likely that Storace had been working on an " English " version of Vicente Martín y Soler's ( known as Martini ) comedy Una cosa rara-an opera which had already been cited by Mozart in the final scene of Don Giovanni.

nothing and ;
On the truck bed there was nothing smaller than a piece of rusty machinery ; ;
In a bold, sometimes careless, form there is nothing academic ; ;
He was a big man, and he wanted nothing little, squeezed ; ;
True reality, of course, is the ideal, and the poet knows nothing of this ; ;
Clifford D. Simak's `` How-2 '' ( 1954 ) tells of a future when robots have taken over, leaving men nothing to do ; ;
Central Asia is sunk in a somnolence from which nothing can awaken it ; ;
There is nothing new in this ; ;
And some, which are suitable for tree growing and for other National Forest purposes, are unmanaged or in need of expensive rehabilitation, and are contributing nothing to the economy ; ;
But as all understand who have eyes to see, nothing of the kind has happened ; ;
It is true, that nothing has been found comparable with electricity by communication ; ;
Hell's own amount of chaulmoogra oil did nothing to alleviate their torment ; ;
nothing evil was happening when that pain was being endured ; ;
It is curious that at its best, the work of this school of painting -- Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Clyfford Still, Robert Motherwell, Willem De-Kooning, and the rest -- resembles nothing so much as the passage painting of quite unimpressive painters: the mother-of-pearl shimmer in the background of a Henry McFee, itself a formula derived from Renoir ; ;

nothing and indication
However, these arguments may be anachronistic — half-finished lines might equally, to Roman readers, have been a clear indication of an unfinished poem and have added nothing whatsoever to the dramatic effect.
The observed " tissue splash ," usually referred to as " temporary cavitation ," is not an indication of terminal performance in an animal, as gelatin has a much lower elastic limit than most living tissues ; a force which tears a gelatin block in half may result in nothing more than slight bruising if applied to living flesh.
Self-organization as a word and concept was used by those associated with general systems theory in the 1960s, but did not become commonplace in the scientific literature until its adoption by physicists and researchers in the field of complex systems in the 1970s and 1980s .< ref > As an indication of the increasing importance of this concept, when queried with the keyword < tt > self-organ *</ tt >, Dissertation Abstracts finds nothing before 1954, and only four entries before 1970.
He told Hall: " Consider, here are 2000 people sitting still, absolutely declining to give me any indication of where they belong to ; they will sit still where they are and do nothing else.
* a niente: to nothing ; an indication to make a diminuendo which fades to pppp
In a title search, someone looking up Atwood's name in the grantor index would find no indication that Atwood conveyed the property, and nothing would lead the searcher to Cooper's deed.
It is also mentioned that in later times, fishermen sailing over drowned Ys " sometimes glimpsed the wonderful structures of marble, where nothing moved but schools of fish "; but there is no clear indication of how many generations of fishermen would have this experience before Joald finally broke loose and the whole land shared Ys ' fate.
In Daubert, the Court ruled that nothing in the Federal Rules of Evidence governing expert evidence " gives any indication that ' general acceptance ' is a necessary precondition to the admissibility of scientific evidence.
On modern systems this may not make a noise, it may instead make a visual indication such as flashing the screen, or do nothing at all.

nothing and hold
Donald Kruger would like nothing better than to hold him as hostage, and I wouldn't entrust a snake to his tender care.
The store was their marriage, and when Alfred had to leave it there was nothing to hold them together.
To her partisan audience, such picayune haggling would have seemed nothing more than a critic striving to hold his franchise ; ;
We hold safe little jobs illustrating tooth-paste ads or the salacious incidents in trivial novels, and most of our easel painting is nothing but picking the fluff out of the navel so it can be contemplated in greater purity.
The skiff was headed for the very center of the nebula -- toward that place which, Jack knew now, could hold nothing less important than the very core of the Angel's life and religion.
This form of argument often provides evaluative judgments on social change: once an exception is made to some rule, nothing will hold back further, more egregious exceptions to that rule.
He had the police and the army on his side and nothing could have prevented him from achieving his ambition to hold on to power, but he chose not to and called for a free and fair elections
This is because they quickly disarticulate ( disconnect from each other ) once the encompassing skin rots away, and in the absence of tissue there is nothing to hold the plates together.
This theory also assumes that causality must be constant: i. e. that nothing can occur in the absence of cause, whereas some theories hold that an event may remain constant even if its initial cause was subsequently eliminated.
At an officers conference in Berlin, December 1941, Canaris is quoted as saying " Abwehr has nothing to do with persecution of Jews .... no concern of ours, we hold ourselves aloof from it " ( MI6 Sub-section Vf files NA HW 1 / 327 ).
The Germans were determined to hold, and terrain and weather reduced the usual American advantages in armor and air support to almost nothing.
Modern logic made it possible to articulate these points coherently as intended, and many philosophers hold that the word " nothing " does not function as a noun, as there is no object to which it refers.
" The stories are hard but they are hard because there is nothing harder or less sentimental than Christian realism ... when I see these stories described as horror stories I am always amused because the reviewer always has hold of the wrong horror.
Bow felt Alton had misused her trust ; " She wanted to keep a hold on me so she made me think I wasn't getting over and that nothing but her clever management kept me going ".
If there are no more Jews in Europe, nothing will hold the unification of the European nations ... this sort of people cannot be integrated in the social order or into an organized nation.
Brigham Young sent a scouting party to Uinta Basin in 1861 and received word back the area was good for nothing but nomad purposes, hunting grounds for Indians and " to hold the world together.
Politically, of course, Guthrum ’ s conversion to Christianity did nothing to loosen the Danish hold on the lands that Guthrum had already acquired via conquest.
In non-Orthodox denominations of Judaism most rabbis hold that Jews have nothing to fear from engaging in theological dialogue, and may have much to gain.
To say nothing of minor opponents, such as " Philaretus " ( Gilbert Burnet, already alluded to ), Dr John Balguy ( 1686 – 1748 ), prebendary of Salisbury, the author of two tracts on " The Foundation of Moral Goodness ", and Dr John Taylor ( 1694 – 1761 ) of Norwich, a minister of considerable reputation in his time ( author of An Examination of the Scheme of Amorality advanced by Dr Hutcheson ), the essays appear to have suggested, by antagonism, at least two works that hold a permanent place in the literature of English ethics — Butler's Dissertation on the Nature of Virtue, and Richard Price's Treatise of Moral Good and Evil ( 1757 ).
However, it is easier to manipulate than an open unsink as there is an internal flap to pull to pop the unsink in place ; in an open unsink there is nothing to hold.
The preface reads, textum ergo habes, nunc ab omnibus receptum, in quo nihil immulatum aut corruptum damus, translated as, " so you hold the text, now received by all, in which ( is ) nothing corrupt.
I am honestly against the social intermingling of Negroes and Whites but I hold nothing personal against the Negroes as a race.
Most legal restrictions on Roman Catholics were lifted by the Catholic Relief Act 1829, which, however, provides, " nothing herein contained shall ... enable any Person, otherwise than as he is now by Law enabled, to hold or enjoy the Office of Lord High Chancellor, Lord Keeper or Lord Commissioner of the Great Seal ".
As the host of the party, the seemingly wonderful, tender, and caring April June (" Money and fame mean nothing to me, Lord Havershot ") is difficult to get hold of.
:*... declare that I am completely opposed to the error of the modernists who hold that there is nothing divine in sacred tradition ...'

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