0 the regular rise and fall of the voice -- (嗓音的)抑扬顿挫,起落
1 a set of chords (= different notes played together) at the end of a piece of music -- (乐曲的)收束,终止
Moreover, the occasional odd extra semibreve in all parts is accepted editorially into a bar so that cadences always fall at the beginning of a bar.
In the perfect and deceptive cadences it appears as a resolution of the leading-tone to the tonic.
Such was his genius in his embellishments and cadences, that their variety was inexhaustible...
Men occupied with the cares of keeping house for that swarm of salaried beings whose entire property consists of capital sunk into their cadences and their roulades?
We could see the usual parade of talking heads; we could listen to their familiar cadences as they deployed all the predictable arguments for their own sectional interests.
The chapter deals extensively with tonal relationships between phrases and the ways in which cadences can be used both to tie together and articulate these phrases.
The lines are punctuated by structural cadences, presenting the text in a temporary repose.
After the main orchestral cadence, the organ continues after the orchestra stops, adding a timbral cadence after the tonal cadence.