Rondo forms in the classical period are most often found in option (d) i.e, final movements.
A rondo is an instrumental form in music that consists of the initial articulation and subsequent restatement of a particular subject or piece, separated by opposing material.
A sonata, concerto, symphony, or another multi-movement piece typically ends with a rondo as the final movement. Although the structure of a rondo is quite simple, the variations that composers choose to employ that form in are frequently complex. A melody is repeated in each rondo, with contrasting musical passages in between.
The two most common forms of a rondo are the 5-part version and the 7-part form. The 5-part form generally uses the pattern ABACA, but the 7-part form typically uses the pattern ABACABA.
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You click on the image and got up to the top of the screen and click on "object - arrange - send to back" NOT "SEND BACKWARD".
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Answer:
Literature was created in the process of work and had a syncretic form. Syncretism is still around and is common in the permeation of two or more arts. Here are some examples: Theatrical art. This involves acting, literature and music. Literature is also seen in theatre, film, television as well as music and sculpture. Poetry is also about music since its the very being of poetry. Originally it was sung with a lyre and had a rhythmic organisation in the verse and sometimes becomes very famous. The link between music and literature is even more common in world classics. Many works have even served at operas such as Byron's, one of Shakespeare's works. Literature inspires art but at the same time, art inspires the birth of amazing poetic works. Paul Gustave Dora took motifs from the Bible as inspiration for his achievements. He translated almost the whole Bible into the language of painting and this inspired many other artists.