octave$54539$ - translation to greek
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octave$54539$ - translation to greek

THE EIGHTH DAY AFTER A RELIGIOUS FEAST, OR THE WHOLE 8-DAY PERIOD WITHIN
Octave of the Nativity; Octave of Christmas; Octave of Pentecost; Privileged Octave; Liturgical Octave; Octave (liturgical)

octave      
n. διατονική κλίμακα, οκτώηχος, οκτάβα, οκτάστιχο
half tone         
  • Augmented unison on C
  • suspension]] of the ''B'' resolving into the following ''A minor seventh'' chord.
  • The melodic minor second is an integral part of most cadences of the [[Common practice period]].[[File:Cadence minor second V65-I.mid]]
  • 250px
  • diatonic semitone]]
  • 16:15 diatonic semitone[[File:Just diatonic semitone on C.mid]]
  • Transcendental Étude]], measure 63
  • 'Larger' or major limma on C[[File:Greater chromatic semitone on C.mid]]
  • Dramatic chromatic scale in the opening measures of [[Luca Marenzio]]'s ''Solo e pensoso'', ca. 1580.[[File:Marenzio solo e pensoso opening.MID]]
  • Song Without Words]]'' Op. 102 No. 3, mm. 47–49.[[File:Mendelssohn dominants.mid]]
  • 90px
  • 90px
  • Relationship between the 4 common 5-limit semitones
BASIC MUSICAL INTERVAL
Minor second; Half step; Halfstep; Half tone; Half-step; Semi-tone; Pythagorean limma; Semitones; Diatonic semitone; Minor Second; Just diatonic semitone; Just chromatic semitone; Pythagorean chromatic semitone; Pythagorean diatonic semitone; Demiton; Semitone maximus; Pythagorean apotome; Pythagorean major semitone; Pythagorean minor semitone; Major chroma; Major semitone; Octave and minor second; Larger limma; Larger chromatic semitone; Greater chromatic semitone; Pythagorean apotomē; Major diatonic semitone; Minor semitone; Pythagorean minor second; Just minor second; Just minor semitone; Apotome (music)
ημιτόνιο μουσικής

Definition

Octave
<language> A high-level interactive language by John W. Eaton, with help from many others, like MATLAB, primarily intended for numerical computations. Octave provides a convenient command line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems numerically. Octave can do arithmetic for real and complex scalars and matrices, solve sets of nonlinear algebraic equations, integrate functions over finite and infinite intervals, and integrate systems of ordinary differential and differential-algebraic equations. Octave has been compiled and tested with g++ and libg++ on a SPARCstation 2 running SunOS 4.1.2, an IBM RS/6000 running AIX 3.2.5, DEC Alpha systems running OSF/1 1.3 and 3.0, a DECstation 5000/240 running Ultrix 4.2a, and Intel 486 systems running Linux. It should work on most other Unix systems with g++ and libg++. Octave is distributed under the GNU {General Public License}. It requires gnuplot, a C++ compiler and Fortran compiler or f2c translator. Latest version: 2.0.16 (released 2000-01-30), as of 2000-06-26. home (http://che.wisc.edu/octave). ftp://ftp.che.wisc.edu/pub/octave/ or your nearest {GNU archive site}. E-mail: <bug-octave@bevo.che.wisc.edu>. (2000-06-27)

Wikipedia

Octave (liturgy)

"Octave" has two senses in Christian liturgical usage. In the first sense, it is the eighth day after a feast, reckoning inclusively, and so always falls on the same day of the week as the feast itself. The word is derived from Latin octava (eighth), with dies (day) understood. In the second sense, the term is applied to the whole period of these eight days, during which certain major feasts came to be observed.

Octaves, not being successive, are quite distinct from eight-day weeks and simply refer to the return of the same day of a seven-day week in the inclusive counting system used in Latin (just as the ninth day was a return to the same day of a nundinal cycle, the eight-day week of the pre-Christian Roman calendar).