bruit de canon - definitie. Wat is bruit de canon
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Wat (wie) is bruit de canon - definitie

MEDICAL CONDITION
Nun's murmur; Bruit de diable

Canon Yaoundé         
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ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL CLUB
Canon Yaounde; Canon Sportif de Yaoundé
Canon Sportif de Yaoundé, commonly known as Canon Yaoundé, is a Cameroonian association football club based in capital city of Yaoundé. The club was formed in 1930 and play their games at Stade Ahmadou Ahidjo.
Canon (music)         
  • Bach, passage from duet aria "Herr, du siehst statt guter Werke" in Cantata BWV 9
  • Bach, passage from duet aria "Herr, du siehst statt guter Werke" in Cantata BWV 9
  • Beethoven Symphony No. 4, first movement, canonic passage
  • Beethoven Symphony No. 4, canonic passage from the 1st movement
  • Beethoven, canonic passage from the second movement of Piano Sonata Op. 101
  • Beethoven canon from piano sonata in A, Op. 101
  • From Brahms Intermezzo Op. 118, no. 4
  • Brahms Intermezzo Op. 118, no. 4
  • "Wann?", canon for soprano and alto by Brahms[[File:Brahms Wann puzzle canon.mid]]
  • Beginning of psalm [[motet]] ''De profundis'' by [[Josquin des Prez]], featuring a canon at the fourth between the two upper voices in the first six bars.[[File:De Profundis (Josquin).mid]]
  • Dufay, "Resvelons nous"
  • Dufay, "Resvelons nous amoureux"
  • loc=29}}[[File:Ernst Friedrich Richter canon no. 39.mid]]
  • loc=38}}
  • Handel, final variation (no. 62) from Chaconne in G major, HWV 442
  • Handel Chaconne HWV 442, variation 62
  • Haydn, Minuet from Quartet in D minor, Op. 76
  • Minuet from Haydn, String Quartet in D minor, Op. 76, No. 2
  • Jacob de Senleches, "La harpe de melodie"
  • "La harpe de melodie"
  • Schumann, "Vogel als Prophet"
  • Schumann, "Vogel als Prophet" from Waldszenen
  • Example of a canon in three voices at the unison sung with a text of a German poem, four beats apart.
CONTRAPUNTAL FORM OF MUSIC INVOLVING A SELF-HARMONIZING THEME WITH IMITATIONS OFFSET IN TIME
Canon music; Caccia (music); Puzzle canon; Accompanied canon; Tempo canon; Musical canon; Circular canon; Finite canon; Riddle canon; Enigma canon; Canon: Two in One; Comes (music); Dux (music); Double canon (music); Cantanti enigmatici; Simple canon; Interval canon; Strict canon; Free canon; Canon by inversion; Inversion canon; Al rovescio; Canon al rovescio; Rhythmic canon; Rovescio
In music, a canon is a contrapuntal (counterpoint-based) compositional technique that employs a melody with one or more imitations of the melody played after a given duration (e.g.
Prolation canon         
  • Dodekachordon]]'', [[Glareanus]], p 442
  • Missa l'homme armé super voces musicales]]'', by [[Josquin des Prez]]
Mensuration canon; Proportional canon; Augmentation canon; Canon by augmentation; Canon per augmentationem; Sloth canon; Diminution canon; Canon by diminution; Canon per diminutionem
In music, a prolation canon (also called a mensuration canon or proportional canon) is a type of canon, a musical composition wherein the main melody is accompanied by one or more imitations of that melody in other voices. Not only do the voices sing or play the same melody, they do so at different speeds (or prolations, a mensuration term that dates to the medieval and Renaissance eras).

Wikipedia

Venous hum

Venous hum is a benign auscultatory phenomenon caused by the normal flow of blood through the jugular veins. At rest, 20% of cardiac output flows to the brain via the internal carotid and vertebral arteries; this drains via the internal jugular veins. The rush of blood from these veins to the brachiocephalic vein can cause the vein walls to vibrate, creating a humming noise which can often be heard by the subject.

Typically, a peculiar humming sound is heard in the upper chest near the clavicle, emanating from the supraclavicular fossa just lateral to the sternocleidomastoid muscle, usually more obviously on the right side than on the left. The sound may radiate to the upper sternal border on either side. Though the exact mechanism is still unclear, it has been suggested that the hum occurs when otherwise silent laminar flow through the internal jugular vein is disturbed by deformation of this vessel at the level of the transverse process of the atlas during head rotation.

The venous hum is heard throughout the cardiac cycle, though is typically louder during diastole. It may be easier to hear when sitting, when the chin is elevated, or when the head is rotated contralaterally (away from the location of the sound); deep inspiration and hyperkinetic circulatory states (e.g. hyperthyroidism) can also increase its intensity. It may be loud enough to result in audible pulsatile tinnitus. It is by far the most common type of normal continuous murmur, universal in healthy children, and frequently present in healthy young adults, especially during pregnancy.

The humming may be confused with a heart murmur, which may be a symptom of a potentially serious condition. The difference is easily detected by placing light pressure on the internal jugular vein when listening to the heart, which will immediately abolish or change the venous hum, whereas a true heart murmur will be unaffected by this maneuver. The murmur also disappears when the patient is in the supine position or may disappear if the subject turns their head to one side. It is also known by the names "nun's murmur" and "bruit de diable" (noise of devils).

While a venous hum may provoke consultation with a healthcare professional, the hum itself is entirely harmless and is the product of ordinary cardiac physiology. Abnormal and potentially serious conditions such as thyrotoxicosis and anemia, by augmenting blood flow through the jugular veins, can nonetheless initiate or reinforce the venous hum, making it more noticeable, and manipulation of the sound with various maneuvers has often helped physicians discover and diagnose cardiovascular disorders.