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A direction in music; to be played very softly.
very softly
fortissimo
Pianissimo.
soft
piano
1
This is precisely what Rubinstein did, and his
pianissimo
was a whisper.
2
She has an astonishing gift for singing
pianissimo
,
and she can act.
3
To mark your own 'March Wind'
pianissimo
and then play it fortissimo.
4
He played the octaves in the A flat Polonaise with infinite ease but
pianissimo
.
5
The band is playing a passage in the middle of Mendelssohn's Dead March
pianissimo
.
6
When her last
pianissimo
has faded, she turns to watch Daysmoor play the end.
7
To which Mr. MacDowell answered: Did I mark that
pianissimo
?
8
Forget about
pianissimo
's
complexity; only at Alexa's top volume can the notes even be heard.
9
Armande de Fleury, the young
pianissimo
danseuse from the Folies Bergère is about to sing.
10
Again it subsides into
pianissimo
,
and again the crescendo.
11
His speciality was extreme delicacy, and his
pianissimo
extraordinary.
12
The theme, which occurs three times, should first be piano, then
pianissimo
,
and lastly forte.
13
She could rise from a dark, chocolatey sound to a threadbare
pianissimo
or a siren.
14
Was there ever in a musical composition a more startling change from fortissimo to
pianissimo
?
15
Forget about all those dirty hippies on MySpace; they wouldn't know
pianissimo
from a glissando.
16
Singing
pianissimo
in the beginning is another fallacy.
pianissimo
close pianissimo
doloroso pianissimo
finest pianissimo
forget about pianissimo
get a pianissimo