travàggio
Ligurian
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *tripālium (“toil” ← “suffering” ← “torture instrument”), derived from Latin tripālis (“having three stakes or poles”).
Cognates include French travail, Italian travaglio, Spanish trabajo.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /traˈvadd͡ʒu/
Noun
travàggio m (plural travàggi)
- work, toil
- 1984, Fabrizio De André (lyrics), Mauro Pagani (music), “Sinàn Capudàn Pascià”, in Crêuza de mä [Muletrack by the sea], performed by Fabrizio De André:
- E a-o pòsto di ànni, ch'êan dexenêuve, / se són pigiæ e gànbe e mæ bràsse nêuve / Da alôa a cansón l'à cantâ o tanbûo / e o lòu s'è gangiòu in travàggio dûo
- And instead of the years, which were nineteen, they took my new legs and arms. From then on, the drum sang the song, and work has changed into hard toil.
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Synonyms
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