释义 |
Definition of fantasia in English: fantasianounˌfantəˈziːəfanˈteɪzɪəfænˈteɪziə 1A musical composition with a free form and often an improvisatory style. 幻想曲 Example sentencesExamples - The fanfare fantasia before the choral entrance even includes clams.
- Though four generations older than Henry Purcell, Orlando Gibbons wrote a body of music for viols that exerts much the same fascination as Purcell's later and more familiar viol fantasias.
- The finale is a joyous fantasia on much of the music deployed earlier with such skill and evident delight.
- Brahms's Violin Concerto begins with a long ritornello, but for most 19th-century composers sonata form and the fantasia were more important than the ritornello principle.
- It falls somewhere between a large symphonic movement and a fantasia.
- 1.1 A musical composition based on several familiar tunes.
集成曲 Example sentencesExamples - Glinka once again established formal and stylistic ground plans for future Russian composers in his orchestral fantasia Kamarinskaya, based on two Russian folk tunes.
- This young Chinese clarinettist's recital of potted fantasias on operas by Verdi, Bellini and Ponchielli is bravura fluff.
- Dowland, of course, had written seven lute fantasias based on his song ‘Break now, my heart, and die’ under the title Lacrimae, or Seven Teares.
- The famous Pye recordings of Vaughan Williams ‘Greensleeves’ and Thomas Tallis fantasias are reproduced in stunning sound and they remain my particular favourite for these overplayed works.
- As with its corresponding number in the first orchestral set, the second movement - depicting a camp meeting - is a fantasia based mainly on ragtime dances Ives wrote for the piano in the early 1900s.
- 1.2 A thing composed of a mixture of different forms or styles.
(由不同形式或风格的混合物构成的)结合体;集成物 the theatre is a kind of Moorish and Egyptian fantasia 这所剧院将摩尔建筑风格和埃及建筑风格融为了一体。 Example sentencesExamples - Perelman's free-associative style spun fantasias out of girdle ads, tabloid tattle, sleazy pulp fiction and recipe prose.
- This re-release of Amadeus, described by Shaffer as ‘a fantasia based on fact’, boasts 20 additional minutes of music and drama.
- Based on Virginia Woolf's glittering fantasia written as a love-letter to Vita Sackville-West, the story covers four hundred years of history.
OriginEarly 18th century: from Italian, 'fantasy', from Latin phantasia (see fantasy). RhymesAnastasia, aphasia, brazier, dysphasia, dysplasia, euthanasia, Frazier, glazier, grazier, gymnasia, Malaysia Definition of fantasia in US English: fantasianounfænˈteɪziəfanˈtāzēə 1A musical composition with a free form and often an improvisatory style. 幻想曲 Example sentencesExamples - Brahms's Violin Concerto begins with a long ritornello, but for most 19th-century composers sonata form and the fantasia were more important than the ritornello principle.
- The finale is a joyous fantasia on much of the music deployed earlier with such skill and evident delight.
- The fanfare fantasia before the choral entrance even includes clams.
- Though four generations older than Henry Purcell, Orlando Gibbons wrote a body of music for viols that exerts much the same fascination as Purcell's later and more familiar viol fantasias.
- It falls somewhere between a large symphonic movement and a fantasia.
- 1.1 A musical composition based on several familiar tunes.
集成曲 Example sentencesExamples - Dowland, of course, had written seven lute fantasias based on his song ‘Break now, my heart, and die’ under the title Lacrimae, or Seven Teares.
- As with its corresponding number in the first orchestral set, the second movement - depicting a camp meeting - is a fantasia based mainly on ragtime dances Ives wrote for the piano in the early 1900s.
- This young Chinese clarinettist's recital of potted fantasias on operas by Verdi, Bellini and Ponchielli is bravura fluff.
- Glinka once again established formal and stylistic ground plans for future Russian composers in his orchestral fantasia Kamarinskaya, based on two Russian folk tunes.
- The famous Pye recordings of Vaughan Williams ‘Greensleeves’ and Thomas Tallis fantasias are reproduced in stunning sound and they remain my particular favourite for these overplayed works.
- 1.2 A thing composed of a mixture of different forms or styles.
(由不同形式或风格的混合物构成的)结合体;集成物 the theater is a kind of Moorish and Egyptian fantasia 这所剧院将摩尔建筑风格和埃及建筑风格融为了一体。 Example sentencesExamples - Perelman's free-associative style spun fantasias out of girdle ads, tabloid tattle, sleazy pulp fiction and recipe prose.
- This re-release of Amadeus, described by Shaffer as ‘a fantasia based on fact’, boasts 20 additional minutes of music and drama.
- Based on Virginia Woolf's glittering fantasia written as a love-letter to Vita Sackville-West, the story covers four hundred years of history.
OriginEarly 18th century: from Italian, ‘fantasy’, from Latin phantasia (see fantasy). |