1.15

21:53 Jun 30, 2017
This question was closed without grading. Reason: No acceptable answer

English language (monolingual) [PRO]
General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters / 1.15
English term or phrase: 1.15
Can we do like 1.15? Is 1:18 where it was like the first time? Let's do like 1:15


Musicians talking to each other in recording studio.

I want to know the meaning of these digits, please.

Thanks in advance.
S.J
Canada
Local time: 05:01


SUMMARY OF ALL EXPLANATIONS PROVIDED
1 +11.15 (Tempo?)
JohnMcDove
Summary of reference entries provided
Refs.
Taña Dalglish

  

Answers


26 mins   confidence: Answerer confidence 1/5Answerer confidence 1/5 peer agreement (net): +1
1.15 (Tempo?)


Explanation:
Without further context and just guessing, it could refer to a minute change of "tempo".

https://musescore.org/en/handbook/tempo

If you could provide a little bit more context, there will be some "proZ.comleague" who will be able to help you.



JohnMcDove
United States
Local time: 02:01
Specializes in field
Native speaker of: Native in SpanishSpanish
PRO pts in category: 8

Peer comments on this answer (and responses from the answerer)
agree  pablorecabal: Thats typical musician jargon, and the values seem quite normal
1 hr
  -> Thank you very much, Pablo. :-) I guess that this is controlled digitally, like Taña notes.
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Reference comments


1 hr peer agreement (net): +2
Reference: Refs.

Reference information:
Without further context, it sounds like digital time (and date) stamping of videos, recordings, etc.

http://techguylabs.com/episodes/983/how-can-i-get-time-and-d...
http://www.macworld.com/article/1166605/software/how-to-time...
https://www.lifewire.com/link-to-specific-part-of-youtube-vi...

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 hr (2017-06-30 23:04:01 GMT)
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http://transcriptionforeveryone.com/time-stamped-and-time-co...

Taña Dalglish
Jamaica
Native speaker of: English
PRO pts in category: 16

Peer comments on this reference comment (and responses from the reference poster)
agree  JohnMcDove: Yes, that's how I see it too. I guess that "digital time" or "digital tempo" may fit the bill. :-)
1 hr
  -> Thanks John.
agree  Alok Tiwari
1 day 2 hrs
  -> Thank you Alok.
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