If any modification is made, take the rondo faster, say about eighty-four.
2
The old practice had a rondo for the final movement of the sonata.
3
This rondo in B flat is the weakest of Chopin's muse.
4
Flicks and tricks and roulettes and rondo after rondo, all soft-shoed and swift.
5
The rondo was no wonderful piece of intricacy, such as a professional might choose.
Ús de rondeau en anglès
1
The rondeau-rondeau redoublé-the rondel-the roundel-the rondelet-the roundelay-the triolet and the kyrielle
2
So let us now meet some of the rondeau's hopeful progeny.
3
We'll have that in a rondeau or something, next week, if you don't hobble the muse!
4
The first four lines of rondeau redoublé.
5
Now let's play this rondeau of Marais.
6
He can turn a rondeau or a triolet as gracefully as a paying teller can roll Durham cigarettes.
7
But it is a rondeau.
8
An ugly chill creeps up his back, and he rises, stretches himself, whistles a stave of rondeau, and inspects the outer room.
9
At a later stage the more settled poetic forms, the ballade, the sonnet, the rondeau, for example, should afford a good practice in handling language.
10
Victor the poet, the fashionable Villon, with his ballade, his rondeau, his triolet, his chant-royal!-Victor ,whohad put his own breast before his at Lens!
11
Perrine Rondeau had entered the castle with the company of Jean Labbé.
12
Immerman was also the grandfather of Dr. Hogan Rondeau Caird, Jefferson's father.
13
The clerk handed him two letters, both of which Rondeau eyed sharply.
14
Rondeau is there with his crew-andhe has orders to stop you.
15
His name is Jules Rondeau, and he's top dog among the lumberjacks.
16
I wouldn't let that big Canadian Jules Rondeau quit for a farm.