-
penultimate or the last tone and the
duplum switches back to a
florid cadence, to
conclude on a consonance. Thus, in
organum duplum of Léonin
these compositional...
-
European church music.
Organum at its
roots involves simple doubling (organum
duplum or
organum purum) of a
chant at
intervals of a
fourth or fifth,
above or...
-
doubling or
tripling the contingents. Such
multiples were
called in
Latin the
duplum and the triplum. The
figures for the
contingents to be
supplied by each...
- Bank v Oneanate,
which had
established a
pendente lite
exception to the in
duplum rule. In July 2006, the applicants, André and
Margaretha Paulsen, signed...
- great', and so on.
These are
often used as nouns:
simplum 'the
simple sum',
duplum 'double the
amount of money' and so on.
duplam pecūniam in thēsaurōs repōnī...
- word Alleluia,
which is
repeated throughout in the
tenor voice while the
duplum and
triplum voices sing
lines with
successively longer tropes inserted between...
- multiplied, with the
duplum (the part
above the tenor)
having smaller rhythmic values than the tenor, the
triplum (the line
above the
duplum)
having smaller...
-
Poised for
Peace 92d Air
Refueling Wing (formerly 92d
Bombardment Wing) -
Duplum Incolumitatis (Twofold Security) 94th
Airlift Wing -
Minuteman Wing 95th...
- Il Fuggitivo, Opus 14 for
chorus 1980 Juvenilia, Opus 16 for
piano 1981
Duplum, Op 17 for duo 1983 Cantico, op. 20 for
chamber ensemble 1983 Moods, op...
-
dorsivittatum Kenk, 1978
Dendrocoelum dumitrescuae Gourbault, 1967
Dendrocoelum duplum Harrath & Sluys, 2012
Dendrocoelum findeneggi (Reisinger, 1971) Dendrocoelum...