Nineteenth-century pianist-composers like Franz Liszt and Clara Schumann were able to practice for improvisation (and for composition) by using exemplar-based practice methods, which are described in this dissertation. Pedagogues like Friedrich Wieck and Carl Czerny published short exemplars that represented not only harmonic patterns but also common accompanimental strategies and technical flourishes. These exemplars were meant to be varied and practiced in all keys. Practice methods like these contributed to fluency in improvisation, but also in composition and sight reading. This dissertation uses tools from linguistic anthropology, literary theory, and the cognitive study of skill to describe exemplar-based practice methods of the mid-n...