gaillarde
English
Noun
gaillarde (plural gaillardes)
- Alternative form of galliard (dance)
- 2005, Kate van Orden, Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France:
- At its most elemental, the gaillarde consisted of four steps or hops (pieds en l'air or grèves), a jump (saut), and a pose (posture), for which the combination was known as the cinq pas or "five steps."
- 2005, Rebecca Harris-Warrick, editor, The Grotesque Dancer on the Eighteenth-century Stage:
- The connection of these three examples of the gaillarde step is unmistakeable. Magri says that it is one of the steps — along with jeté, chassé, and glissade — used "by all three kinds of Ballerini: Seri, mezzo Carattere and Grottesco" when two dancers dance in a Carè or square formation.
- 2006, Louis Andriessen, Elmer Schönberger, The Apollonian Clockwork: On Stravinsky:
- Arbeau gives a lengthy description of the gaillarde, the second dance of the First Pas-de-Trois from Agon.
-
French
Noun
gaillarde f (uncountable)
- (printing, dated) Galliard: the size of type between petit-texte and petit-romain, standardized as 9 Fournier points (3.06 mm) then as 8 Didot points (3.00 or 3.01 mm).
- The galliard, a 16th-century European dance.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.