avere il tempo di - перевод на Английский
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avere il tempo di - перевод на Английский

FRENCH FOLK DANCE
Tempo di gavotta
  • ''A Tempo di Gavotti'' by [[George Frideric Handel]]
  • A gavotte in Brittany, France, 1878
  • isbn= 0-415-97439-9}}</ref>
  • Music and choreography of a gavotte, by Vestris
  • Gavotte rhythm

avere il tempo di      
have time to, get the time to
the Barber of Seville         
OPERA BY GIOACHINO ROSSINI
Barber of Seville; The Barber of Sevilla; Barber of Sevilla; Il Barbiere di Siviglia; The barber of seville; Barbiere di siviglia rossini; Una voce poco fa; Barber of seville; Il barbiere di Siviglia; Barber of Saville; The Barber Of Seville, Or The Useless Precaution; The Barber Of Seville; Il barbiere di siviglia; Il barbieri di Siviglia; The Useless Precaution; Barbiere di Siviglia; Rosina (The Barber of Seville); Il Barbieri di Seviglia; The Barber of Sevile
il Barbiere di Siviglia (opera comica di Rossini)
Sandro Botticelli         
  • Engraving by [[Baccio Baldini]] after Botticelli
  • ''The Mystical Nativity'']] (c.&nbsp;1500–01) [[National Gallery, London]].
  • ''[[Punishment of the Sons of Corah]]'', Sistine Chapel
  • ''[[Madonna of the Pomegranate]]'' (''Madonna della Melagrana''), c.&nbsp;1487
  • ''San Barnaba Altarpiece'', c. 1487, Uffizi, 268 x 280 cm
  • Flora]], [[Chloris]], [[Zephyrus]]
  • ''Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist'', c. 1470–1475, [[Louvre]]
  • One of the few fully coloured pages of the [[Divine Comedy Illustrated by Botticelli]], illustrating canto XVIII in the eighth circle of Hell.  Dante and Virgil descending through the ten chasms of the circle via a ridge.
  • ''[[Youth of Moses]]'', [[Sistine Chapel]]
  • ''[[Pallas and the Centaur]]'', c. 1482. [[Uffizi]], Florence.
  • ''[[The Birth of Venus]]'', c. 1485. [[Uffizi]], [[Florence]]
  • ''[[Magnificat Madonna]]'', c. 1483
  • The ''Bardi Altarpiece'', 1484–85, 185 x 180 cm
  • ''[[Madonna of the Book]]'', c.1480–3.
  • Lamentation of Christ]]'', early 1490s, [[Alte Pinakothek]], Munich.
  • Calumny of Apelles]]'' (c. 1494–95). [[Uffizi]], Florence.
  • ''[[Portrait of a Man with a Medal of Cosimo the Elder]]'', 1474; the medal is an inserted [[gesso]] cast of a real medal.
  • The Story of Lucretia]]'', c. 1500. [[Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum]], [[Boston, Massachusetts]].
  • Portrait, probably imagined, of Botticelli from Vasari's ''Life''
  • abbr=on}}, [[National Gallery, London]]
  • 1484–1486}})
  • Via Borgo Ognissanti in 2008, with the eponymous church halfway down on the right. Like the street, it has had a Baroque makeover since Botticelli's time.
  • Adoration of the Magi]]'', 1475, 111 cm × 134&nbsp;cm (44 in × 53 in)
ITALIAN PAINTER (1445-1510)
Botticelli; Sandro Filipepi; Alessandro Botticelli; Bottichelli; Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi; Boticelli; Filipepi; Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi; Il Botticello; Alessandro Di Mariano Del Filipepi; Allessandro Botticelli; Alessandro Di Mariano; Alessandro Di Mariano Filipepi; Alessandro Filipepi
n. Sandro Botticelli, (1444-1510) nato col vero nome di Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi, grande pittore del Rinascimento italiano autore fra l"altro della "Nascita di Venere"

Определение

DI
Destination Index [Additional explanations: register] (Reference: CPU, Intel, assembler)

Википедия

Gavotte

The gavotte (also gavot, gavote, or gavotta) is a French dance, taking its name from a folk dance of the Gavot, the people of the Pays de Gap region of Dauphiné in the southeast of France, where the dance originated, according to one source. According to another reference, the word gavotte is a generic term for a variety of French folk dances, and most likely originated in Lower Brittany in the west, or possibly Provence in the southeast or the French Basque Country in the southwest of France. It is notated in 4
4
or 2
2
time and is usually of moderate tempo, though the folk dances also use meters such as 9
8
and 5
8
.

In late 16th-century Renaissance dance, the gavotte is first mentioned as the last of a suite of branles. Popular at the court of Louis XIV, it became one of many optional dances in the classical suite of dances. Many were composed by Lully, Rameau and Gluck, and the 17th-century cibell is a variety. The dance was popular in France throughout the 18th century and spread widely. In early courtly use the gavotte involved kissing, but this was replaced by the presentation of flowers.

The gavotte of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries has nothing in common with the 19th-century column-dance called the "gavotte" but may be compared with the rigaudon and the bourrée.