In music notation, a mezzo stacatto is an articulation mark drawn as a dot and a short horizontal line just above the note-head, or just below it if the stem points upward, with the dot between the line and the note-head. It indicates that the note should be played more disconnected from the note following than a staccato, but less than a tenuto -- about three-fourths the duration of the beat. It means "half-detached" in Italian.

It looks something like this on the staff (complete with time signature and a quarter note scale):


    /\                                                     
---| /------------------------------|--------------------||
   |/                               |        |        _  ||
---/--------------------------------|---|----|--------.--||
  /|     4                       |  |   |    |   .    *  ||
-/-|/\----------------------|----|--|---|----|---*---|---||
|  |  |  4             |    |    |  |   |   *   |    |   ||
|--|--|----------|-----|----|----|--|--*----.---|----|---||
 \ |  |          |     |    |   *   |  .        |    |   ||
--\|_/-----------|-----|---*----.---|-----------|--------||
   |             |    *    .                               
  \|           -*--   .                 
                .

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