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rondeau
ron·deau R0296700 (rŏn′dō, rŏn-dō′)n. pl. ron·deaux (-dōz, -dōz′) 1. A lyrical poem of French origin having 13 or sometimes 10 lines with two rhymes throughout and with the opening phrase repeated twice as a refrain.2. A medieval French song, either monophonic, as in the songs of the trouvères, or polyphonic in construction. [French, alteration of Old French rondel; see rondel.]rondeau (ˈrɒndəʊ) n, pl -deaux (-dəʊ; -dəʊz) (Poetry) a poem consisting of 13 or 10 lines with two rhymes and having the opening words of the first line used as an unrhymed refrain. See also roundel[C16: from Old French, from rondel a little round, from rond round]ron•deau (ˈrɒn doʊ, rɒnˈdoʊ) n., pl. -deaux (-doʊz, -ˈdoʊz) 1. a short poem of 13 or 10 lines on two rhymes with the opening words or phrase used in two places as an unrhymed refrain. 2. a monophonic song of the trouvères. [1515–25; < Middle French: little circle; see rondel] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | rondeau - a musical form that is often the last movement of a sonatarondoclassical, classical music, serious music - traditional genre of music conforming to an established form and appealing to critical interest and developed musical taste | | 2. | rondeau - a French verse form of 10 or 13 lines running on two rhymes; the opening phrase is repeated as the refrain of the second and third stanzasrondelpoem, verse form - a composition written in metrical feet forming rhythmical linesroundel - English form of rondeau having three triplets with a refrain after the first and thirdrondelet - a shorter form of rondeau | Translations
rondeau
rondeau a poem consisting of 13 or 10 lines with two rhymes and having the opening words of the first line used as an unrhymed refrain Rondeau a fixed verse form consisting of 15 lines in three stanzas, with a rhyme scheme of aabba, abbR, and aabbaR, in which R is a refrain (often nonrhyming) that repeats the first words of the first line. In content, most rondeaux were love lyrics. The form originated in French poetry in the late 14th century and flourished from the 16th century through the first half of the 17th. Rondeaux were written by Russian poets during the 18th and early 20th centuries. In the 20th century the rondeau is used as a consciously stylized form (for example, M. Kuzmin’s “Manon Lescaut”). V. P. BOBROVSKII and M. L. GASPAROV rondeau
Synonyms for rondeaunoun a musical form that is often the last movement of a sonataSynonymsRelated Words- classical
- classical music
- serious music
noun a French verse form of 10 or 13 lines running on two rhymesSynonymsRelated Words- poem
- verse form
- roundel
- rondelet
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