0 a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc -- mecenáš
He’s a patron of the arts.
1 a (regular) customer of a shop etc -- stálý zákazník
The manager said that he knew all his patrons.
Poems which show no trace of a late composition, however, are also deeply sceptical of wealthy patrons.
Still, in this poem she is examining a condition into which she would enter by seeking patrons for her verse.
From the 1880s he moved among the patrons of the arts as well as the practitioners.
Such events see the patron's own sensibilities meander through very different architectural cultures.
Here again the house was refined to express his patron's nobility.
Small wonder that even his usual patrons showed little interest in the conversations.
Of course, not everyone had access to such powerful patrons, so it is no surprise that only the most famous musicians could skip the broker.
Their ability to impose the constraints and obligations of reciprocity upon their patrons considerably weakened.
中文繁体
支持者, 贊助者,資助人, 客戶…
More中文简体
支持者, 赞助者,资助人, 客户…
MoreEspañol
patrocinador, -ora, cliente…
MorePortuguês
patrono, -a, cliente…
MoreTürk dili
patron, koruyucu, hamî…
MoreFrançais
client/-ente [masculine-feminine], protecteur/-trice [masculine-feminine], mécène…
MoreDansk
sponsor, mæcen, protektor…
MoreIndonesia
pelindung, pelanggan…
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