See also: Partitur

English

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Etymology

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

Noun

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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

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Indonesian Wikipedia has an article on:
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Etymology

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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

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

Noun

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

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

Further reading

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Latin

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Verb

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partītur

  1. third-person singular present passive indicative of partiō