partitur

See also: Partitur

English

Etymology

From German Partitur, from Italian partitura (partition, musical score) , from Latin partito, from partīre (divide, partition, share) (Classical Latin partīrī) and -ura.

Noun

partitur (plural partiturs)

  1. (music, rare) A full score, conductor's score (with a separate line for every part).
    • 2011, Steven Suskin, The Sound of Broadway Music: A Book of Orchestrators and Orchestrations:
      The partiturs for the popular shows, though, were apparently sent out one time too many.

Indonesian

Etymology

From Dutch partituur, from German Partitur, from Italian partitura (partition, musical score), from Medieval Latin partitūra, from partiō, partior (to divide, to partition, to share) + -ūra.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [parˈtitʊr]
  • Hyphenation: par‧ti‧tur

Noun

partitur (first-person possessive partiturku, second-person possessive partiturmu, third-person possessive partiturnya)

  1. (music) full score, conductor's score, partitur.

Further reading

Latin

Verb

partītur

  1. third-person singular present passive indicative of partiō
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