This time we are looking on the crossword puzzle clue for: Finale.
it’s A 6 letters crossword definition.
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Possible Answers:
End.
Last seen on: –The Telegraph – QUICK CROSSWORD NO: 30,020 – Jun 22 2022s
–Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jun 16 2022
–Premier Sunday – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – May 22 2022s
–L.A. Times Daily Crossword – May 11 2022
–Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Apr 5 2022
–USA Today Crossword – Feb 1 2022
–NY Times Crossword 10 Jan 22, Monday
–The Telegraph – QUICK CROSSWORD NO: 29,864 – Dec 21 2021
–Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Dec 13 2021
–Universal Crossword – Nov 11 2021
–Newsday.com Crossword – Sep 28 2021
–USA Today Crossword – Feb 11 2021
–Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 23 2021
–Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 21 2021
–USA Today Crossword – Jan 2 2021
–Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 24 2020
–Premier Sunday – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 8 2020
–Universal Crossword – Sep 12 2020
–The Washington Post Crossword – Jul 29 2020
–LA Times Crossword 29 Jul 20, Wednesday
–Newsday.com Crossword – Mar 25 2020
Daily Celebrity Crossword – 6/1/19 Smartypants Saturday
Random information on the term “Finale”:
A finale is the last movement of a sonata, symphony, or concerto; the ending of a piece of non-vocal classical music which has several movements; or, a prolonged final sequence at the end of an act of an opera or work of musical theatre.
Michael Talbot wrote of the finales typical in sonatas: “The rondo is the form par excellence used for final movements, and … its typical character and structural properties accord perfectly with those thought desirable in a sonata finale of the early nineteenth century.” Carl Czerny (1791–1857) observed “that first movements and finales ought to—and in practice actually do—proclaim their contrasted characters already in their opening themes.”
In theatrical music, Christoph Willibald Gluck was an early proponent of extended finales, with multiple characters, to support the “increasingly natural and realistic” stories in his operas that “improved continuity and theatrical validity” beyond the earlier works.
Random information on the term “End”:
Instrumental and intrinsic value are classic names scholars use to identify two ways humans think about what makes anything good. Instrumental value is the criterion that a means is good if it “works” efficiently in certain conditions to achieve its intended end. It is recognized inductively by experiencing successful consequences. Intrinsic value is the criterion that an end is good if it is “right” in itself, legitimate in all conditions. It is recognized deductively by revelation or intuition or politically-correct social prescription. Scholars use these names to explain good social action or institutions—prescribed patterns of correlated behavior—that maintain all human societies.
The classic names instrumental and intrinsic were coined by sociologist Max Weber, who spent years studying good meanings people assign their actions and beliefs. Here are Weber’s original definitions with a comment showing his doubt that conditionally efficient means can achieve unconditionally legitimate ends, followed by three modern definitions from the Oxford Handbook of Value Theory.