This voice leading error occurs between the soprano and bass when a 5th is approached by similar motion with a leap in the soprano.
What are hidden (direct) 5ths?
This quality of triad contains a raised 5th?
What is an augmented chord?
V to I with the tonic in soprano
What is a perfect authentic cadence?
A non-chord tone that is approaced and left by step in same direction.
What is a passing tone?
These two numbers indicate a 7th chord in 1st inversion?
What are 6/5?
This is the only chord progression in which the chordal 7th can resolve up.
I - V43 - I6
This quality of 7th chord contains a major triad and a minor 7th?
What is a dominant 7th chord?
What is an imperfect authentic cadence?
These non-chord tones, also known as "incomplete neighbor tones," are approached by step and left by leap, and occur only in weak metric positions.
What are escape tones?
What is a 3rd?
You should never double this note.
What is a leading tone?
A raised scale degree 4 usually indicates this harmony.
What is V/V?
A phrase that ends on V is using this type of cadence.
What is a half cadence?
Appoggiaturas and suspensions can only be used in this metric position.
What is a strong beat?
Under scale degree 5, the figures
8 - 7
6 - 5
4 - 3
indicate what harmonic progression?
What is I64 - V7 (cadential 6/4)?
What are pedal, passing, cadential, and arpeggiated?
The ii7 chord in a minor key creates this quality of 7th chord.
What is a half-diminished 7th?
This is the formula for flawlessly voice leading a deceptive cadence.
What is "move all voices opposite the bass, except for the leading tone, which resolves up, resulting in a doubled 3rd in the vi chord which is fine"?
This non chord tone is approached by a common tone and resolved by step up.
What is a retardation?
A bass note with the figures
4---3
indicates this type of non-chord tone?
What is a suspension?
When writing sequential root position triads, move the upper 3 voices this way
Opposite the bass
What is V/ii ?
IV6 to V (in minor)
What is a Phrygian Half Cadence?
A suspension in which the common tone is not tied, but rather is played again.
What is a re-articulated suspension?
In C major, a bass note D with the figures
4+
2
implies this harmonic analysis.
What is V42/vi ?