Respuesta :
Answer:
1. (e) Antecedent and consequent
2. (f) Binary form
3. (a) Bridge
4. (b) Contrasting verse-chorus form
5. (g) Form
6. (d) Introduction
7. (c) Simple verse form
Explanation:
I used some simple reasoning here since I'm not 100% familiar with these terms. Here are the steps I used in my reasoning:
- (d) is defined by the 6th definition. "Introduction" refers to a beginning, as when someone introduces a person to someone else. It can refer to the beginning of a textbook that precedes all the material. The 6th definition uses the word "precedes," which matches with the meaning of "Introduction."
- (g) is defined by the 5th definition. "Form" can refer to a physical appearance, and the verb "forms" means, amongst other definitions, to make or create something. In addition, I'd already seen the term used to describe musical structure.
- (a) is defined by the 3rd definition. I know the bridge of a song connects two different sections, just as a bridge over a river connects the two sides, and crossing a bridge leads you to a new section or place.
- (b) is defined by the 4th definition. The reasoning here was rather simple: the definition says the verse and chorus have different tunes/melodies. This means they contrast. From this, (b) is self-explanatory.
- (f) is defined by the 2nd definition. "Binary" contains the prefix "bi" meaning "two" and the 2nd definition describes a two-part structure.
- (c) is defined by the 7th definition. It describes everything as sung to the same tune... that's rather "simple" (no pun intended), and it uses only verses.
- (e) is defined by the 1st definition. I know this because there is only one term left, hahaha.
I hope this helps! Have a good day!