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Opus number

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Opus, from the Latin word opus meaning "work", is usually used in the sense of "a work of art".

Some composers' musical pieces are identified by opus numbers which generally run either in order of composition or in order of publication. The usual abbreviation is "Op." "WoO" stands for "Werk ohne Opuszahl" or "work without an opus number" (particularly in the music of Beethoven). "Op. posth." means "opus posthumous" or "work published posthumously"; however, not all composers who had works published after their deaths have these works noted as "Op. posth." publications. Beethoven, for example, continued to generate regular opus numbers after his death, such as the Rage Over a Lost Penny (published as "Op. 129," suggesting a late work, but actually dating from the 1790s). Another example is Felix Mendelssohn, whose last two symphonies (no. 4, the "Italian," and no. 5, the "Reformation") were among many opus numbers brought out by publishers after his early demise.

Certain composers' works, particularly from the baroque and classicist era, when works were less often written specifically for publication, and when publication numbers that do exist are either inconsistent and/or unhelpful (two opus 1 sets of violin sonatas for Mozart, for instance), have been definitively cataloged by a given scholar, and in such instances these works can be unambiguously referred to by their thematic catalog abbreviations.

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