Examples of using Rhythmic patterns in English and their translations into Arabic
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Colloquial
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Political
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Enjoy rhythmic patterns in rhymes and stories.
It is a good online ear trainer, it develops ability to identify single pinches and chords, recognizedifferent melodic and harmonic intervals, remembering different rhythmic patterns.
Enjoy rhythmic patterns in rhymes and stories.
These are very interesting circuits in the spinal cord of vertebrate animals that can generate, by themselves,very coordinated rhythmic patterns of activity while receiving only very simple input signals.
Rhythmic patterns which are homorhythmic are also called unison.[1].
Our genetic program continues producing these rhythmic patterns of fluorescent proteins as the colony grows outwards.
Features * Recognize melodic and harmonic intervals * Compare interval sizes * Sing the intervals the computer asks for * Identify chords * Sing chords *Scales * Dictation * Remembering rhythmic patterns.
Just body movements and physiology synched to rhythmic patterns. You know, I am well aware that with your knowledge of kinesiology and biology, you could be as strong as Tim if you wanted to be.
Dr. Sohal's research focuses on parvalbumin(PV) interneurons(which transmit signals between other neurons)and gamma-oscillations(rhythmic patterns in the brain that are thought to arise from interactions between excitatory and inhibitory neurons).
If you connect a few neurons together into a simple circuit,you can generate rhythmic patterns of activity, feedback loops that ramp up or shut down a signal, coincidence detectors, and disinhibition, where two inhibitory neurons can actually activate another neuron by removing inhibitory brakes.
The milonga has a rhythmic pattern that we musicians call 3-3-2.
It has many faces and diverse, but thanks to the melodious, uncomplicated melodies, combined with a complex,whimsical rhythmic pattern, it is unmistakably recognized from the first bars in all corners of the globe.
Tresillo(/trɛˈsiːjoʊ/ tres-EE-yoh; Spanish pronunciation:[tɾeˈsijo]) is a rhythmic pattern(shown below)[1][2] used in Latin American music. It is a more basic form of the rhythmic figure known as the habanera.
In a ritualised movement,the noisy miner flies out from a perch across an open area, in a rhythmic undulating pattern, usually calling in flight.
This second phrase serves as an introduction to a solo part, where a takht musician starts improvising to the phrase's maqām, or sometimes inspired by it, then relays to the band the same phrase in a dialogue relying on the ability of the dialogists to receive then relay(tasallum and taslīm) flawlessly in an improvised way. The musician takes the band to another phrase,and the same dialogue is performed between him and the ensemble to the rhythmic pattern of this phrase.