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largo
1[lahr-goh]
adjective
slow; in a broad, dignified style.
noun
plural
largosa largo movement.
Largo
2[lahr-goh]
noun
a town in W Florida.
largo
/ ˈɑːɡəʊ /
adjective
to be performed slowly and broadly
noun
a piece or passage to be performed in this way
Word History and Origins
Origin of largo1
Example Sentences
The music, like the story, became more openly emotional; for every cunning rondo, there was a doleful largo.
The score is rangy and spatial, the tempo largo to larghissimo.
Even Elham, her W’s no longer sounding like V’s, and her tempo improved from largo to allegretto, is eventually able to pose a challenge to Omid’s fluency.
Now he is showing a series of politically oriented prints in his solo exhibition “Along the Border / A lo largo de la frontera” at Avenue 50 Studio in Highland Park.
They say the gulf side of largo is dry.
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