@unnumberedsubsubsec Spoken music
@cindex parlato
@cindex Sprechgesang
-Such effects as @q{parlato} or @q{Sprechgesang} require perfomers to speak
+Such effects as @q{parlato} or @q{Sprechgesang} require performers to speak
without pitch but still with rhythm; these are notated by cross
note heads, as demonstrated in @ref{Special note heads}.
Be careful when defining a variable with lyrics that creates a new
-context, for example, using the deprecated @code{\lyrics} command. See
+context, for example, using the deprecated @code{\lyrics} command. See
the next erroneous example:
@example
@c verbose! --FV
@c duplicated: TODO fix
-Additionaly, you can make an extender line to be typeset to indicate
+Additionally, you can make an extender line to be typeset to indicate
the melisma in the score, writing a double underscore next to the
-first syllable of the melisma. This example shows the three elements
+first syllable of the melisma. This example shows the three elements
that are used for this purpose (all of them surrounded by spaces):
double hyphens to separate syllables in a word, underscores to add
notes to a melisma, and a double underscore to put an extender line.
-@c wrong: extender line only on last syllable of a word. Change example
+@c wrong: extender line only on last syllable of a word. Change example
@lilypond[relative=1,verbatim,fragment,quote]
{ \set melismaBusyProperties = #'()
c d( e) f f( e) e e }
This method is recommended only if the music in the @code{Devnull}
context does not contain melismata. Melismata are defined by the
-@code{Voice} context. Connecting lyrics to a @code{Devnull} context
+@code{Voice} context. Connecting lyrics to a @code{Devnull} context
makes the voice/lyrics links to get lost, and so does the info on
melismata. Therefore, if you link lyrics to a @code{Devnull} context,
the implicit melismata get ignored.