timbrel
English
Etymology
Diminutive of Old French timbre, from Latin tympanum.
Noun
timbrel (plural timbrels)
- An ancient percussion instrument rather like a simple tambourine.
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Hence the soft couch, and many-colour'd robe,
The timbrel and arch'd dome and costly feast,
With all th' inventive arts that nurse the soul
To forms of beauty […]
- Hence the soft couch, and many-colour'd robe,
- 1907, Robert William Chambers, chapter II, in The Younger Set, New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company, OCLC 24962326:
- "I ought to arise and go forth with timbrels and with dances; but, do you know, I am not inclined to revels? There has been a little—just a very little bit too much festivity so far …. Not that I don't adore dinners and gossip and dances; not that I do not love to pervade bright and glittering places. […]"
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Translations
Verb
timbrel (third-person singular simple present timbrels, present participle timbrelling, simple past and past participle timbrelled)
- (intransitive) To play the timbrel.
- (transitive) To accompany with the sound of the timbrel.
- Milton
- with timbrelled anthems
- William Lisle Bowles
- Yet there the timbrelled hymn / Rings to Osiris […]
- Milton
Anagrams
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