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common and musical
In reality, the terms ' Scots / Scottish ' and ' Irish ' are purely modern geographical references to a people who share a common Celtic ancestry and consequently, a common musical heritage.
However, it is increasingly common to separate user interface and sound-generating functions into a music controller ( input device ) and a music synthesizer, respectively, with the two devices communicating through a musical performance description language such as MIDI or Open Sound Control.
In leisure time, singing and playing musical instruments were common forms of entertainment and history-telling — even more common than today, when electrically enabled technologies and widespread literacy make other forms of entertainment and information-sharing competitive.
In Japan, it has long been common to provide musical entertainment at a dinner or a party.
Music and theatre scholars studying the history and anthropology of Semitic and early Judeo-Christian culture have discovered common links in theatrical and musical activity between the classical cultures of the Hebrews and those of later Greeks and Romans.
By the end of the 1970s, electronic musical devices were becoming increasingly common and affordable in North America, Europe and Japan.
MIDI over USB is increasingly common on musical instruments.
These are available for almost every musical instrument. One common way to mark progress is to have graded examinations, for example from grade 1 ( beginner ) to grade 8 ( ready to enter higher study at music school ).
Typically, rock is song-based music usually with a 4 / 4 time signature utilizing a verse-chorus form, but the genre has become extremely diverse and common musical characteristics are difficult to define.
From this changing society emerged a common, unifying musical language, in particular the polyphonic style of the Franco-Flemish school.
Bandas are samba musical bands, also called " street carnival bands ", usually ( but not necessarily ) formed by enthusiasts in the same neighborhood or common musical back-ground.
However, the four did not have enough in common regarding their musical interests.
It is common to score music for the whistle using standard musical notation.
Although almost all whistles have some musical character, common whistles are not usually considered musical instruments, since they cannot play a melody, unless used as a – very shrill and loud – noise and rhythm instrument.
The slide whistle ( or swanee whistle ) was a common instrument in some types of music, including being used at times in early Jazz, and was popular as a musical effect in the early days of radio and television.
Pitch pipes are reed whistles used to help in tuning musical instruments and have been common since the 1850s.
Musical hallucinations are also relatively common in terms of complex auditory hallucinations and may be the result of a wide range of causes ranging from hearing-loss ( such as in musical ear syndrome, the auditory version of Charles Bonnet syndrome ), lateral temporal lobe epilepsy, arteriovenous malformation, stroke, lesion, abscess, or tumor.
Events like these became all too common in his later life, as his continued isolation from the musical scene increased as the focus shifted to Germany.
In an interview he gave to Global Bass magazine, Jones remarked on this common musical interest:
Exercises in touch-typing have used pangrams to reach every common key on a keyboard, similar to exercises using musical scales which include every common note in a particular musical key.

common and threads
In 1908, he commissioned ( at no pay ) Napoleon Hill, then a journalist, to interview more than 500 wealthy achievers to find out the common threads of their success.
Originally presented with an opportunity to rock out Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 " From the New World " by their new stereophonic label, the band instead forged ahead to unify their own orchestral-based threads of a day in the life of a common man.
Modern reloading dies are generally standardized with 7 / 8-14 ( or, for the case of 50 BMG dies, with 1-1 / 4x12 ) threads and are interchangeable with all common brands of presses, although older dies may use other threads and be press-specific.
While this is common in modern systems, Mach was the first system to define tasks and threads in this way.
The most common example is in measuring the pitch diameter of screw threads ( which is also done with conical anvils or the 3-wire method, the latter of which uses similar geometry as the pair-of-balls approach ).
A satin weave, common for silk, each warp thread floats over 16 weft threads.
Though the practitioners of necromancy were linked by many common threads, there is no evidence that these necromancers were ever organized as a group.
Some common threads run through these shows.
The most common approach is for the events of the second work to directly follow the events of the first, either picking up dangling plot threads or introducing a new conflict to drive the events of a second story.
With soft or average hardness materials, such as plastic, aluminum or mild steel, the common practice is to use an intermediate ( plug ) tap to cut the threads.
Because they have access to all posts and threads in their area of responsibility, it is common for a friend of the site owner to be promoted to moderator for such a task.
Coarse-grain multithreading is more common for less context switch between threads.
In regions with a tropical climate, coffee, cocoa, sugar cane, bananas, oranges, cotton and jute ( a soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse, strong threads ), are common cash crops.
However, one of the common threads between his world and ours is that the agents of execution need not be " smart " to execute their tasks.
Some would argue the communities of Saint-Laurent, Lachine and LaSalle, in addition to the Western off-island communities, such as Vaudreuil-Dorion, Hudson and the four communities of Île Perrot should be included in which communities define the West Island, given the common threads of settlement and factors determining their development.
Beyond these common threads, the sport is structured according to the idiosyncrasies of individual leagues.
The body also incorporates a removable barrel thread adapter, allowing the marker to change it's barrel threads to any major type ( Spyder and Autococker being the most common ).
Cooper interviewed the users of his client ’ s products and discovered the common threads that made these people happy.
For example, it has been shown that the widely available atomic conditional primitives, CAS and LL / SC, cannot provide starvation-free implementations of many common data structures without memory costs growing linearly in the number of threads.
Pre-dyed warp threads are a common item in traditional markets-saving the weaver much mess, expense, time and labour.
The finer and better qualities form a kind of common sheeting, and the various kinds may contain from 20 to 36 threads per inch and 10 to 15 picks per inch.
There are however many common threads, such as the theme of subterranean descent and the consistent Ligne claire drawing style.
I was intrigued by the similarities between folk music of divergent cultures, and decided to write a piece that celebrates these common threads as well as the sudden improvement in international relations that was occurring.

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