troubadour Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈtruː.bə.dɔːr]
  • Us [ ˈtruː.bə.dɔːr]

Meaning of troubadour In English

More Definitions of troubadour

Examples of troubadour

  • For example, a sizable body of musical settings in the so-called genre troubadour survives from the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries.

  • First, regularity of strophic constructions and tight rhyme schemes are especially cultivated by the troubadours to impose structure on an unruly vernacular language.

  • Instead, he interprets and uncovers it in a creative tradition of eight centuries, historicizing troubadours and trouveres continuously.

  • Finally, with the troubadours, the musical aspect of the refrain is much less in evidence.

  • The latter claim a special distinction as living descendants of the original troubadours; the former views himself as more remotely related to medieval music.

  • This brief etymological sketch makes clear that ' troubadour' is more than a generic signifier.

  • Indeed, musicians have always been travellers: from troubadours to today's rock stars, musicians travel the world.

  • The troubadours, who have a prominent place both in traditional medieval music study and in popular culture, illustrate this well.

More Examples of troubadour

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