syncopation造句1. As in boogie-woogie, the basic vocal syncopation and cross-rhythm.
2. In another context it becomes syncopation and swing.
3. On the latter, she developed a delightful staccato syncopation by regularly hitting the offbeat.
4. Notice syncopation in the second phrase where the accent falls after the first beat.
5. With syncopation the impulse can come suddenly off the beat, and it gives it a little snap or jazzy aspect to the music.
6. This produces an effect called syncopation -- another characteristic of jazz.
7. The syncopation is not in the actual hum, but in the surging of sound.
8. Of course syncopation and blues are only part of the jazz picture.
9. There was some nice syncopation and it had a good swing to it.
10. This produces an effect called syncopation another characteristic of Jazz.
11. Now the master of syncopation, of course, in music was Scott Joplin, African American composer writing a lot around the area of St. Louis in the turn of the twentieth century.
12. Jazz brings together frenetic syncopation with beautiful melodies to create one very cool package.
13. Fingers drummed on his puffed-out cheeks, his tongue clicked in syncopation, eyes bulged.
14. Music by Scott Joplin then helped him to create his light-heartedly comic Elite Syncopations.
15. The experiment indicates that the scheme has prominent advantages compared with the hybrid code and the method which is LFSR reseeding based on syncopation of some test patterns.
16. For decades to come, Brubeck's two-handed chordal playing and sparing use of syncopation would beautifully complement Desmond's floating and lyrical lines.
17. One may also listen to our hum and intend to rotate one's molecular structure in syncopation.
18. In a word, the similarities not only exist in syncopation and syllable structure, but also in the changing trend of inflection.