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- From: prener@watson.ibm.com (Dan Prener)
- Subject: Re: Is there an actor
- Sender: news@watson.ibm.com (NNTP News Poster)
- Message-ID: <PRENER.93Jan24015149@prener.watson.ibm.com>
- In-Reply-To: pelton@ecf.toronto.edu's message of Sun, 24 Jan 1993 00:20:59 GMT
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 06:51:49 GMT
- Disclaimer: This posting represents the poster's views, not necessarily those of IBM
- References: <1993Jan15.111356.25678@rose.com> <EMCOOP.93Jan22112609@bcars148.bnr.ca>
- <C1C0z0.1tu@ecf.toronto.edu>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: prener.watson.ibm.com
- Organization: IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, New York
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- In article <C1C0z0.1tu@ecf.toronto.edu> pelton@ecf.toronto.edu (PELTON MATTHEW ALAN) writes:
-
- > Doesn't anybody think that the stage direction "beat" is related to the
- > expression "he let a beat pass." Folk etymology says it's related to the
- > musical beat (unit of time). The stage direction says to rest for one
- > musical beat.
-
- I'll buy that. And, for those still looking for quantitative information,
- folk musicology suggests that an otherwise unspecified beat is the length
- of the (human) heart beat. The actual line I have heard is that "fast" and
- "slow" in music can, in the absence of additional information, be
- interpreted, respectively, as faster than the heart beat, and slower than
- the heart beat.
- --
- Dan Prener (prener@watson.ibm.com)
-