troubadour
English
Etymology
From Old Occitan trobar (“to find”) via Old French troubadour
Noun
troubadour (plural troubadours)
- An itinerant composer and performer of songs in medieval Europe; a jongleur or travelling minstrel.
- 2014 April 24, Alan Cowell, “At Pistorius trial, Twitterati have their day in court”, in The New York Times:
- Sitting in the courtroom ..., their laptops and tablets propped before them, power cables snaking through convoluted adapters, the Twitterati have sight of witnesses at all times – the troubadours, or perhaps the tricoteuses, of the digital revolution.
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Coordinate terms
- trobairitz
Translations
an itinerant performer of songs
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Danish
Noun
troubadour c (singular definite troubadouren, plural indefinite troubadourer)
- Alternative spelling of trubadur
Declension
Declension of troubadour
common gender |
Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | troubadour | troubadouren | troubadourer | troubadourerne |
genitive | troubadours | troubadourens | troubadourers | troubadourernes |
French
Etymology
From Old Occitan trobador (< trobar (“to find”)) via Old French troubadour. Corresponds to the native French trouveur.
Coordinate terms
- femme-troubadour
- trobairitz
- troubadouresse
Further reading
- “troubadour” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
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