The author of no less than fifteen operettas that are famed in England, America, and to a lesser degree in Continental Europe, he has clothed these works in charming orchestral garment.
As he spoke Raventik was seen sweeping into view from behind a point in the middle of the most rapid part of the river, and plying his long paddle with the intense energy of one whose life depends on his exertions.
The long point of the bigger island over there turns the currents off from this one, but perhaps you may find a little.
Just in these years Max Friedrich is busy with his tric-trac, his balls, his new operettasand comedies, and with his notion of making the theatre a school of morals.
Among her successfuloperettas are "La Pomme de Turquie" and "La Perruque du Bailli.
In England, owing to the example of Gilbert and Sullivan, light operas and operettashave flourished to a considerable degree.
To-morrow I will give you some scores of the operettas we play and you can learn the chorus parts.
On the days when no operettas were played and the choruses were free, she went to the Summer Theater and there, squeezed high up in the gallery, spent entire evenings dreaming.
The repertory of the company was composed largely of operettas at first, but gradually operas of large dimensions and serious import were added.
At other theaters, too, there were performances of operas and operettas by the Boston Ideal Opera Company and other troupes, but with them these annals have no concern.
You can walk about in the lobby and say proudly that you attended the first performance of the opera ever so long ago when operettas had tune and reason.
The prize was a pretty little old Dutch silver violin, and to the amusement of all it went to a girl who sang all the lyrics from all the operettas composed by Radcliffe girls during the past five years.
Three or four operettas have been composed and given by Radcliffe girls with great success.
The Italian operas alone were supported by the courts; the German operettasremained in the hands of private speculators; who did not possess the means of attracting vocalists of artistic cultivation.
But small operettas are not in her style at all; and then (as she acknowledges herself) she is more Italian than German, speaks on the stage with the same Viennese accent as in common life (just imagine!
Little by little the Gilbert and Sullivan operettas (of which the most famous, perhaps, were H.
Operettas Life at Eisenstadt moved on in "calm peace and quiet," but now and again it was stirred into special activity, when Haydn had to put forth his efforts in various new directions.
Felix was by this time composing a great deal, and, though little more than twelve years old, work of a more serious kind than the writing of operettas had been claiming his attention.
The performance of these operettas was not accompanied by action, the rule being for some one to read the dialogue at the piano, whilst the chorus were seated round the dining-table.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "operettas" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.