This is the definition of a secondary dominant.
What is a dominant chord that tonicizes a chord other than the tonic?
Fully diminished chords are built from this interval stacking.
What is minor thirds?
The Neapolitan chord is built on this scale degree.
What is lowered 2 (♭2)?
These chords resolve outward to this scale degree.
What is the dominant (V)?
This type of modulation uses a shared chord between keys.
What is pivot chord modulation?
In C major, V/V is this chord.
What is D major?
This chord type often replaces V in tonicization.
What is vii°?
This inversion is most common for Neapolitan chords.
What is first inversion (N6)?
The defining interval in these chords is this.
What is an augmented sixth?
This cadence confirms a new key.
What is a perfect authentic cadence (PAC)?
This accidental is commonly raised to create secondary dominants.
What is the leading tone of the tonicized chord
In C major, vii°/V is this chord.
What is F# diminished?
In C minor, the Neapolitan chord is this.
What is D♭ major?
This type uses only ♭6, 1, and ♯4.
What is Italian Augmented Sixth?
This phrase structure is antecedent + consequent.
What is a period?
V/ii in G major resolves to this chord.
What is A minor?
These chords are built on this scale degree of the tonicized chord.
What is the leading tone?
This is the typical harmonic function of the Neapolitan chord.
What is predominant?
This type includes a ♭3.
What is French Augmented Sixth?
This modulation occurs suddenly without preparation.
What is direct (phrase) modulation?
This is the correct resolution tendency of the 7th in a secondary dominant.
What is downward by step?
These pitches spell vii half diminshed 4/3 of vi in Db major
What are Eb, Gb, Bbb, Db?
The Neapolitan typically resolves to this chord.
What is V (or V7)?
This type resembles a dominant seventh chord.
What is German Augmented Sixth?
Binary form is typically structured as this.
What is A–B?