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SINGING

Volume 17 · 213 words · 1810 Edition

the action of making divers inflections of the voice, agreeable to the ear, and correspondent to the notes of a song or piece of melody. See Melody.

The first thing to be done in learning to sing, is to raise a scale of notes by tones and semitones to an octave, and descend by the same notes; and then to rise and fall by greater intervals, as a third, fourth, fifth, &c., and to do all this by notes of different pitch. Then these notes are represented by lines and spaces, to which the syllables fa, sol, la, mi, are applied, and the pupil taught to name each line and space thereby; whence this practice is called sol-faing, the nature, reason, effects, &c. thereof, see under the article Solfeaging.

**Singing of Birds.** It is worthy of observation, that the female of no species of birds ever sings: with birds it is the reverse of what occurs in human kind. Among the feathered tribe, all the cares of life fall to the lot of the tender sex; theirs is the fatigue of incubation; and the principal share in nursing the helpless brood: to alleviate these fatigues, and to support her under them, nature hath given to the male the song, with all the little