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fermata

[ fer-mah-tuh; Italian fer-mah-tah ]

noun

, Music.
, plural fer·ma·tas, Italian fer·ma·te [fe, r, -, mah, -te].
  1. the sustaining of a note, chord, or rest for a duration longer than the indicated time value, with the length of the extension at the performer's discretion.
  2. a symbol  placed over a note, chord, or rest indicating a fermata.


fermata

/ fəˈmɑːtə /

noun

  1. See pause
    music another word for pause


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Word History and Origins

Origin of fermata1

1875–80; < Italian: stop, pause, noun use of feminine of past participle of fermare to stop < Latin firmāre to make firm. See firm 1, -ate 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of fermata1

from Italian, from fermare to stop, from Latin firmāre to establish; see firm 1

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Example Sentences

He bounced around between bands for a while before joining a band named Fermata as a bassist.

Dr. Deiters thought that Ries confounded the last with the first movement, in which the clarinet enters after a fermata.

A fermata in the middle of a movement does not constitute a break, neither need it at the end.

In the case of a hold (fermata), the movement for the cut-off depends upon the nature of what follows.

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FermatFermat's last theorem