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troubadour
[ troo-buh-dawr, -dohr, -door ]
noun
- one of a class of medieval lyric poets who flourished principally in southern France from the 11th to 13th centuries, and wrote songs and poems of a complex metrical form in langue d'oc, chiefly on themes of courtly love. Compare 迟谤辞耻惫猫谤别.
- any wandering singer or minstrel.
troubadour
/ 藞迟谤耻藧产蓹藢诲蕣蓹 /
noun
- any of a class of lyric poets who flourished principally in Provence and N Italy from the 11th to the 13th centuries, writing chiefly on courtly love in complex metric form
- a singer
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of troubadour1
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of troubadour1
Example Sentences
Thirty years after his breakout as a Sundance darling with 鈥淭he Brothers McMullen,鈥 Edward Burns may have faded from view as an indie troubadour of middle-class mores, family fractures and romantic entanglements.
An elite balladeer with stylistic range, Boone made like a seasoned pop-soul troubadour at times, later delivering soaring folk-pop anthems with 鈥淢y Greatest Fear鈥 and the heart-pouring 鈥淧retty Slowly,鈥 a cathartic unreleased number.
Halfway through the film, a troubadour sings a ballad recounting the misadventures of the poor thieves we鈥檝e been watching, pointing out Arthur鈥檚 adrift state.
Is theirs music that ever said 鈥渆ngine for movie about young man who wants to skip college to join circus and falls for young troubadour who paints window frames?鈥
Residents have been left bewildered by the box's transformation that consists of a sign attached to the door and images of the tousle-haired troubadour.
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