prelude
noun /ˈpreljuːd/
/ˈpreljuːd/
- a short piece of music, especially an introduction to a longer piece
前奏曲 - the prelude to Act II
第二幕的前奏 - J S Bach’s preludes and fugues
巴赫的前奏曲和赋格
Topics Musicc2- ‘The Magnificat’ opens with a long organ prelude.
《尊主颂》以一段长长的管风琴序曲开始。 - The theme recalls the prelude to Wagner's ‘Lohengrin’.
主题曲使人想到了瓦格纳的《罗恩格林》序曲。 - seven preludes for piano
7 首钢琴前奏曲
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- instrumental
- orchestral
- organ
- …
- open with
- prelude for
- prelude to
- the prelude to Act II
- prelude (to something) an action or event that happens before another more important one and forms an introduction to it
序幕;前奏;先声 - This is just a prelude to a larger attack.
这仅仅是更大规模攻击的前奏。 - Every life is but a prelude to a death.
每个生命都只不过是死亡的前奏。 - He considered the strikes a prelude to the great socialist revolution.
他认为这些罢工拉开了伟大的社会主义革命的序幕。 - This analysis will serve as a prelude to a more extended examination.
此项分析将作为进行更广泛检查的序幕。 - a necessary prelude to privatization
私有化必要的序幕 - events held as a prelude to the Christmas festivities
作为圣诞节庆典前奏的一些活动 - the fear that any peace was merely a prelude to war
认为任何和平只是战争的序幕的恐惧
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- essential
- inevitable
- necessary
- …
- serve as
- consider something
- see something as
- …
- as a prelude
- prelude for
- prelude to
- …
- a prelude to war
- be but a prelude to something
- be just a prelude to something
- …
- This is just a prelude to a larger attack.
词源mid 16th cent.: from French prélude, from medieval Latin praeludium, from Latin praeludere ‘play beforehand’, from prae ‘before’ + ludere ‘to play’.