I was only able to find; River, Forest, Farms, and countryside.
Narrow describes the river.
Thick describes the forest.
Little describes the farms.
And picturesque describes the countryside.
I will keep looking though, and I'll figure out the rest soon.
In 4/2, there are 4 beats, but the half note gets the beat. instead of four quarter notes, four half notes make up a full measure. each time you tap your foot to the beat, one half note passes. The first example is 4/4 time. In this time signature there are 4 beats possible in each measure, and the quarter note represents one beat. The top number of the time signature tells how many beats are in each measure, and the bottom number tells which note will represent one beat.
Answer:
Explanation:
A diegetic piece of music is meant to characterize or emphasize some part of the film. It should be used sparingly.
A score is a piece of incidental music to act as a background. If it is continuous, it can destroy the mood as it competes with what is going on in the film.
The statement can be true.
Explanation:
In order to determine the absolute threshold, you would go through a number of trials. During each trial, you would signal when you are first able to detect the presence of light. The smallest level that you are able to detect half of the time is your absolute threshold for light detection.
In hearing, absolute threshold is the smallest level of tone you can detect, considering you have normal hearing and there are no interfering sounds. For example, you might not be able to hear someone whispering from 20 feet away, but if that person speaks to a normal voice, it may reach your absolute threshold.
Answer:
During a kayaking exploration, a girl called Melinda took pictures. She spent the majority of the time examining the lighting, angle, or some such thing of her photos, determining if they were worthy to be posted on her social media. She failed to contribute to the experience of being one of the ones propelling the boat forward or interact in any other way than annoyance at being distracted by anything or anyone. It is fair to say that Melinda did not have the optimal experience due to her desire to catalogue the experience that she was hardly a part of.
At his wedding reception the groom, Ben, took shaky photos of himself, his new bride, and his friends and guests. In the vast majority of the photos, his smile could rival the most gleeful known to humankind. When he thought to, he catalogued the details in between the ceremony, the speeches, the first dance, and the send off to the honeymoon. His memories were centered upon the experience and not the pictures he took during his enjoyment of his special day. It is fair to say that Ben had the optimal experience because the process of taking the pictures did not impact the day in any memorably negative way.