We have no meanings for "whole opera" in our records yet.
1 Then they went back, and went through the whole opera .
2 By April 1856, the whole opera was finished and sent to Liszt for his opinion.
3 The whole opera is exceedingly characteristic and impressive.
4 I encore the whole opera , and in the mean while let us applaud it as it deserves.
5 The whole opera is admirable, delightful, enchanting!
6 The whole opera being one indivisible wonder, I cannot stop to point out any particular passage, combination, or effect.
7 Sandy says he's right; that it's got to be a whole opera with words and music for them mules.
8 The principal motive is the love-motive, its strains which run through the whole opera are not only charming but original.
9 The Hawaiian baritone gave the young singers a tour of the whole opera house including the vast stage and orchestra pit.
10 Thus in one of his great fantasias, that from Mozart's "Don Giovanni," the sentiment of the whole opera was reproduced.
11 But she would have consented if he had proposed to sing a whole opera , and warbled away, blissfully regardless of time and tune.
12 The whole opera is essentially French in the best sense of the word and we scarce can find a more graceful and witty composition.
13 The whole opera teems with bright and merry melodies, wrought-in with consumateart,andthe text,thoughsomewhatfrivolousisartisticallyadaptedto themusic.
14 Oratorios, cantatas, serenades, whole operas , were spinning out of him.
15 Lynch, it is said, could sit down at the keyboard and play whole operas from memory.
16 "You've done all that, a whole opera , since the fourteenth of May?"
Other examples for "whole opera"
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This collocation consists of: Whole opera through the time
Whole opera across language varieties