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key
(redirected from Keyer)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.

key, in music

key.

1 In music, term used to indicate the scale scale, in music, any series of tones arranged in a step-by-step rising or falling order of pitch . A scale defines the interval relationship of each tone to the others upon which the composition depends.
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 from which the tonal material of a given composition is derived. To say, for example, that a composition is in the key of C major means that it uses as its basic tonal material the tones of that scale which is associated with C major, and that its harmony employs the chords built on the tones of that scale. C is then the keynote, and the C major triad, or the notes CEG, the tonic chord of the composition. In addition to the seven tones of the C major scale, however, the remaining five tones of the chromatic scale may appear as auxiliary tones, and chords may be borrowed from other keys. Modulation modulation, in music, shift in the key center of a composition. For its accomplishment use is made of the fact that each chord figures in the harmonic relationships of several keys.
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 to another key may take place, but if there is a return to the original key the whole composition is said to be in the key of C. At the beginning of a composition, its key is usually indicated by a key signature (see musical notation musical notation, symbols used to make a written record of musical sounds.

Two different systems of letters were used to write down the instrumental and the vocal music of ancient Greece. In his five textbooks on music theory Boethius (c.A.D. 470–A.D.
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). A term usually used synonymously with key is tonality tonality (tōnăl`ĭtē)
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. Absence of a feeling of key is called atonality atonality (ā'tōnăl`ĭtē), in music, systematic avoidance of harmonic or melodic reference to tonal centers (see key ).
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. The concept of keynotes was developed gradually during the 16th and 17th cent. and its partial or total abandonment was a feature of the modernism of the early and mid-20th cent. Polytonality, the employment of two or more keys simultaneously, has been used by some 20th-century composers.

2 Also in music, in reference to musical instruments the term key refers to a lever depressed by the player's finger or, in the case of the pedal keyboard of the organ, the foot. In woodwind instruments the keys control covers on the holes that shorten the vibrating column of air. In brass winds they control the valves that lower the pitch of the instrument by lengthening the tube.


key, in mechanics

key, in mechanics: see lock and key lock and key, fastening fitted to an entryway, such as a gate or door, or a container, such as a cabinet, drawer or safe, to keep it closed and/or prevent unauthorized access or use.
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.

key

In music, system of pitches and harmonies generated from a scale of seven tones, one of which is predominantly important. Keys are a basic element of tonality and represent an outgrowth of modal music (see church mode). When a given piece is said to be “in C,” C is its “tonic,” or central tone. Most Western music from about 1700 until about 1900 is characterized by use of the 12 major and 12 minor keys of the tonal system.


key

(1) A keyboard button. See qwerty keyboard.

(2) A numeric code that is used to encrypt text for security purposes. See key length, key space, cryptography and salt.

(3) A data field in a record. See key field and sort key.


key
1. a metal instrument, usually of a specifically contoured shape, that is made to fit a lock and, when rotated, operates the lock's mechanism
2. any instrument that is rotated to operate a valve, clock winding mechanism, etc.
3. a small metal peg or wedge inserted into keyways
4. any of a set of levers operating a typewriter, computer, etc.
5. any of the visible parts of the lever mechanism of a musical keyboard instrument that when depressed set in motion the action that causes the instrument to sound
6. 
a. any of the 24 major and minor diatonic scales considered as a corpus of notes upon which a piece of music draws for its tonal framework
b. the main tonal centre in an extended composition
c. the tonic of a major or minor scale
d. See tuning key
7. Biology a systematic list of taxonomic characteristics, used to identify animals or plants
8. Photog Painting the dominant tonal value and colour intensity of a picture
9. Electrical engineering
a. a hand-operated device for opening or closing a circuit or for switching circuits
b. a hand-operated switch that is pressed to transmit coded signals, esp Morse code
10. Railways a wooden wedge placed between a rail and a chair to keep the rail firmly in place
11. Botany any dry winged fruit, esp that of the ash
12. Photog determining the tonal value of a photograph

key
attribute of the personified Fidelity. [Art: Hall, 184]

1.(database)key - A value used to identify a record in a database, derived by applying some fixed function to the record. The key is often simply one of the fields (a column if the database is considered as a table with records being rows, see "key field"). Alternatively the key may be obtained by applying some function, e.g. a hash function, to one or more of the fields. The set of keys for all records forms an index. Multiple indexes may be built for one database depending on how it is to be searched.
2.(cryptography)key - A value which must be fed into the algorithm used to decode an encrypted message in order to reproduce the original plain text. Some encryption schemes use the same (secret) key to encrypt and decrypt a message, but public key encryption uses a "private" (secret) key and a "public" key which is known by all parties.
3.(hardware)key - An electromechanical keyboard button.


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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
KONA 3 also includes a variety of 10-bit broadcast-quality features, such as hardware-based up-, down-, and cross-conversion to and from HD, and adds a live hardware HD/SD keyer for compositing bugs, live clips, and other elements over video.
In fact, we found that the total number of data entry keyer jobs lost was larger than the total job losses recorded for all other IT job categories combined," summarized Puryear.
Discreet's Master Keyer is based on powerful new algorithms that enable artists to interact more directly with the image yet provide the intelligence to guide the keying process with greater sophistication and precision.
 
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