| 释义 | 
		Definition of scherzo in English: scherzonounPlural scherzos, Plural scherzi ˈskɛːtsəʊˈskɛrtsoʊ Music A vigorous, light, or playful composition, typically comprising a movement in a symphony or sonata.  Example sentencesExamples -  On the other hand, I tend to judge on the basis of the opening movement and the slow one, rather than of the scherzo and the choral finale.
 -  Often, at pedagogy conferences, we witness prodigiously talented fourteen-year-olds taking a master lesson in huge pieces like Prokofiev sonatas or Chopin scherzos.
 -  The trio's third movement is a scherzo, full of fleeting and magical tunes very reminiscent of the Midsummer's Night Dream overture, a piece that Mendelssohn wrote when he was just 17.
 -  Allusion to the trio, as in some of Beethoven's symphonic scherzos, briefly turns up in the coda.
 -  The symphony takes the idea through a more classically-oriented structure: an opening allegro, a slow movement, a scherzo, and a dead-march finale.
 
 
 Origin   Italian, literally 'jest'.    Definition of scherzo in US English: scherzonounˈskertsōˈskɛrtsoʊ Music A vigorous, light, or playful composition, typically comprising a movement in a symphony or sonata.  Example sentencesExamples -  The trio's third movement is a scherzo, full of fleeting and magical tunes very reminiscent of the Midsummer's Night Dream overture, a piece that Mendelssohn wrote when he was just 17.
 -  The symphony takes the idea through a more classically-oriented structure: an opening allegro, a slow movement, a scherzo, and a dead-march finale.
 -  Often, at pedagogy conferences, we witness prodigiously talented fourteen-year-olds taking a master lesson in huge pieces like Prokofiev sonatas or Chopin scherzos.
 -  On the other hand, I tend to judge on the basis of the opening movement and the slow one, rather than of the scherzo and the choral finale.
 -  Allusion to the trio, as in some of Beethoven's symphonic scherzos, briefly turns up in the coda.
 
 
 Origin   Italian, literally ‘jest’.     |