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Cultural landscape
a geographic area (including both cultural and natural resources and the wildlife or domestic animals therein), associated with a historic event, activity, or person or exhibiting other cultural or aesthetic values. There are four general types of cultural landscapes, not mutually exclusive: historic sites, historic designed landscapes, historic vernacular landscapes, and ethnographic landscapes. |
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Ethnographic landscape
a landscape containing a variety of natural and cultural resources that associated people define as heritage resources. Examples are contemporary settlements, sacred religious sites, and massive geological structures. Small plant communities, animals, subsistence and ceremonial grounds are often components. |
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Component landscape
A discrete portion of the landscape which can be further subdivided into individual features. The landscape unit may contribute to the significance of a National Register property, such as a farmstead in a rural historic district. In some cases, the landscape unit may be individually eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, such as a rose garden in a large urban park. |
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Accelerando
Accelerando (Italian: becoming faster) is a term in general use to show that the music should be played at an increasing speed. |
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Allegro
Allegro (Italian: cheerful, lively) is generally taken to mean fast, although not as fast as vivace or presto. Allegretto is a diminutive, meaning slightly slower than allegro. These indications of speed or tempo are used as general titles for pieces of music (usually movements within larger works) that are headed by instructions of this kind. The first movement of a Classical sonata, for example, is often ‘an Allegro’, just as the slow movement is often ‘an Adagio’. |
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Burlesque
A burlesque (= Italian: burlesca; German: Burleske) is, in its earlier meaning, a comic piece for the theatre, often including an element of parody or caricature. The word is derived from the Italian burlare (to make fun of) and performances of this kind were often used in seasonal festivities to mock more serious theatrical works. In the United States of America the term took on a markedly less respectable meaning from the later 19th century onwards. |
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Clavichord
The clavichord is a small early keyboard instrument with a hammer action. The strings are struck by a ‘tangent’: a small oblong strip of metal, eliciting a soft sound. The limited dynamic range of the clavichord makes it unsuitable for public performance, but it was historically much favoured by composers such as Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, second son of Johann Sebastian Bach and a leading keyboard player in the mid-18th century. |
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Wardriving-searching wifi..bukn pndu pi wad
also called access point mapping, is the act of locating and possibly exploiting connections to wireless local area networks while driving around a city or elsewhere |
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The theory that only the self exists, or can be proved to exist.
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Sweetly or smoothly flowing; sweet-sounding.
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A lover of rain, someone who finds joy and peace of mind during rainy days.
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Category: Belia & Informasi
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