different between quieter vs decrescendo

quieter

English

Etymology

quiet +? -er

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?kwa?.?.t?/

Adjective

quieter

  1. comparative form of quiet: more quiet

Noun

quieter (plural quieters)

  1. One who quiets.
    • 2001, Robert Faggen, Robert Frost and the Challenge of Darwin (page 269)
      The motives that were previously so powerful now lose their force, and instead of them, the complete knowledge of the real nature of the world, acting as a quieter of the will, produces resignation []

Anagrams

  • requite

Latin

Verb

qui?ter

  1. first-person singular present active subjunctive of qui?tor

quieter From the web:

  • what quiet means
  • what quiets noisy lifters
  • what quiets down the myometrium
  • what quiet place 2
  • what quieted mrs. schächter
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  • what quiets tinnitus


decrescendo

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian decrescendo.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /di??k?????nd??/

Noun

decrescendo (plural decrescendos)

  1. (music) An instruction to play gradually more softly.

Verb

decrescendo (third-person singular simple present decrescendos, present participle decrescendoing, simple past and past participle decrescendoed)

  1. (music) To gradually become quieter

Adjective

decrescendo (comparative more decrescendo, superlative most decrescendo)

  1. becoming quieter gradually.

Synonyms

  • diminuendo

Antonyms

  • crescendo

Anagrams

  • crescendoed

Italian

Verb

decrescendo

  1. gerund of decrescere

Latin

Verb

d?cr?scend?

  1. dative gerund of d?cr?sc?

Portuguese

Verb

decrescendo

  1. gerund of decrescer

decrescendo From the web:

  • what decrescendo mean
  • what does crescendo mean
  • what is decrescendo in music
  • what does decrescendo
  • what does crescendo mean in english
  • what does a crescendo look like
  • what does crescendo mean in band
  • what do crescendo mean
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