minstrel

suomi-englanti sanakirja

minstrel englannista suomeksi

  1. minstreli

  2. laulaa

  3. minstrel-esiintyjä

  1. Substantiivi

  2. minstreli, kiertelevä laulaja">kiertelevä laulaja

  3. Verbi

minstrel englanniksi

  1. Originally, an entertainer employed to juggle, play music, sing, tell stories, etc.; a buffoon, a fool, a jester; later, a medieval (especially travelling) entertainer who would recite and sing poetry, often to their own musical accompaniment.

  2. (synonyms)

  3. (RQ:Nashe Almond)|footer=Used as an insulting pun for (m).

  4. (quote-book)|edition=5th|location=London|publisher=(...) Ralph Smith,(nb...)|year=1669|page=77|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=VY1mAAAAcAAJ&pg=RA1-PA77|column=1|oclc=644255131|passage=Should a Minſtrel ſing to a ſweet tune with her voice, and play to another with her hand that is harſh and diſpleaſing; ſuch muſick would more grate the judicious ear, than if ſhe had ſung to what ſhe plaid? Thus to ſing to truth with our judgement, and play wickedneſs with our heart and hand in our life, is more abhorring to God and all good men, than where the judgement is erroneous, as well as the life ungodly.

  5. (RQ:Percy Reliques) &91;page xvi&93; The Minſtrels continued a diſtinct order of men, and got their livelihood by ſinging verſes to the harp, at the houſes of the great.

  6. (RQ:Scott Lay of the Last Minstrel)

  7. (quote-book) (lyricist); John Stevenson (composer)|chapter=Minstrel Boy|The Minstrel-Boy|title=A Selection of Irish Melodies.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=J. Power,(nb...)|year=1813|issue=5|section=verse I|page=30|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/MooreIrishMelodies17/page/n379/mode/1up|oclc=81801075|passage=The Minstrel-Boy to the war is gone, / In the ranks of death you'll find him; / His father's sword he has girded on, / And his wild harp slung behind him.

  8. (RQ:Gilbert and Sullivan Mikado)

  9. (RQ:Ford Vagabond Songs)

  10. Any lyric poet, musician, or singer.

  11. (RQ:Rossetti Ballads)

  12. One of a troupe of entertainers, often a white person who wore black makeup (blackface), to present a so-called show, being a show of banjo music, dance, and song (now sometimes regarded as racist).

  13. (RQ:Nesbit New Treasure Seekers)

  14. An amphetamine tablet, typically black, or black and white, in colour.(R:GDoS)

  15. (quote-book)

  16. To play (a tune on a instrument); to sing (a song).

  17. (quote-book); Boston, Mass.: Brothers|Roberts Bros.|year=1896|page=276|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/shapesinfirebein00shie/page/276/mode/1up|oclc=7345221|passage=And instantly from the depts of the black recesses behind the reredos of the altar there slid like slanting light-rays through the air a little creature, a tenuous grey bird, an embodied breeze, a flash of life. It settled, still minstreling its luted sibboleth, to a fluttering rest in the panting bosom of Areta.

  18. (quote-book)|month=spring–summer|year=1997|volume=31|issue=1|page=5|issn=0043-311X|oclc=173769296|newversion=quoted in|2ndauthor=George Elliott Clarke|chapter2=Embarkation: Discovering Africa-Canadian Literature|title2=Odysseys Home: Mapping African-Canadian Literature|location2=Toronto, Ont.; Buffalo, N.Y.|publisher2=University of Toronto Press|year2=2002|section2=note 5|page2=19|pageurl2=https://archive.org/details/odysseyshomemapp00clar/page/19/mode/1up|isbn2=978-0-8020-4376-4|passage=sense that African Canadians began to appear about the time that Pierre Trudeau|Pierre Elliott Trudeau became prime minister of Canada in 1968 has lead ''sic'' to the perception that black Canadian writing, minstreling the pioneer mythologies of survival, simply records the struggle of (West Indian) immigrants against a cold, white, bitterly racist Canada.

  19. To act as a minstrel; to entertain by playing a musical instrument, singing, etc.

  20. (quote-book) = The Odes of Anacreon the Teian Bard, Literally Translated into English Prose;(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) M‘Gowan and Son for W. Simpkin and R. Marshall,(nb...)|year=1830|page=22|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=WVtiAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA22|oclc=1196090059|passage=Crown me, therefore,—and minstrelling near to thy 2|fanes, Bacchus, thickly-adorned with rosy chaplets will I dance with a full-bosomed maid.

  21. (quote-journal); and J. D. Potter,(nb...)|date=26 March 1872|year_published=June 1872|volume=XLI (New Series)|page=492|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=mBUAAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA492|oclc=845531299|passage=There are hotels in Kertch, the keepers of which bring over a band of musicians, singing men and singing women, especially the latter, every year for the amusement of ship masters, who, (..) lavishly distribute bottles of champagne, and other delicacies, to these minstreling angels—women, and pay away their roubles as if they were coppers.

  22. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=The H. K. Fly Company|year=1921|page=185|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/throughshadowswi01jenn/page/185/mode/1up|oclc=1251871669|passage=The three of us will set forth from this fortress of mighty stone and like troubadours of old we will go a-minstreling from village to village!

  23. (quote-book)|year=2012|section=part 5|page=138|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/midnightmanphysi0000dohe/page/138/mode/1up|isbn=978-1-78029-026-3|passage=Cutwolf was not just acting the troubadour, the jongleur, the travelling minstrel, he was also Beauchamp's spy. (..) Once he'd finished minstrelling, he would invite others to make their contribution about life along the alleyways of Dowgate and the surrounding wards. Everyone was eager to participate and, in anticipation during the day, garner as much tittle-tattle and gossip as possible.

  24. (quote-book): A Life in Freedom and Music|location=Oxford, Oxfordshire; New York, N.Y.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2015|isbn=978-0-19-939989-5|passage=But to come to a sick world like Burma, as a meteoric ''Kulturträger'' carrier, minstrelling about the advantages of freedom over slavery, is an imposture, a ''Schweinerei'', disgrace with Germanic overtones.

  25. (l)

  26. (syn)

    (uxi)

  27. (l) (gl)