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Instructions for Side by Side Printing
  1. Print the notecards
  2. Fold each page in half along the solid vertical line
  3. Cut out the notecards by cutting along each horizontal dotted line
  4. Optional: Glue, tape or staple the ends of each notecard together
  1. Verify Front of pages is selected for Viewing and print the front of the notecards
  2. Select Back of pages for Viewing and print the back of the notecards
    NOTE: Since the back of the pages are printed in reverse order (last page is printed first), keep the pages in the same order as they were after Step 1. Also, be sure to feed the pages in the same direction as you did in Step 1.
  3. Cut out the notecards by cutting along each horizontal and vertical dotted line
To print: Ctrl+PPrint as a list

3 notecards = 1 page (4 cards per page)

Viewing:

Shakespeare Project

front 1

Music was very important in Shakespeare's time, it was used in civil life, as well as courtly life.1

back 1

Lute: English followed Arab instruments by having four strings, and was plucked and favored by the Elizabethan courtiers for making music in court.

front 2

Hurdy-Gurdy: Strings not played like a violin, but played by a rosined wooden wheel, multiple strings, some being drone notes, and others played by wooden pegs pushed up by the fingers, in order to shorten the vibration the wheel created.

back 2

Renecance Flute: used from 1500 until the baroque flute was invented in 1670. Information is sparse, but there are a few things to discover. It is a very simple instrument, with a celindrical bore, six finger holes and a mouth hole. the flute primeraly had two uses. One use being a military instrument, and the second as a chamber music instrument

front 3

Fife: Fifes have been around since the middle ages. In the Elizabetan era, fifes, when paired with a rope tension snare drum were used in the military, used to summon the soldiers, and tell them when to advance. The fifes bore is narrower than other wind instruments, and is traditionally tuned to the key of B-flat, a sixth above concert flutes, which are usualy tuned to the key of D. because of this, they are high pitched instruments, and have a range of an octave and a fifth

back 3

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