释义 |
trou·ba·dour I. noun also trou·ba·dor \ˈtrübəˌdō(ə)r, -dȯ(ə)r, -du̇(ə)r, -ōə, -ȯ(ə), -u̇ə\ (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: French troubadour, from Middle French, from Old Provençal trobador, from trobar to compose in verse, probably from (assumed) Vulgar Latin tropare to compose, from Latin tropus trope — more at trope 1. : one of a class of lyric poets and poet-musicians often of knightly rank flourishing from the 11th to the end of the 13th century chiefly in Provence, the south of France, and the north of Italy and cultivating a lyric poetry intricate in meter and rhyme and usually of a romantic amatory strain — compare trouve re 2. : a strolling minstrel; also : anyone who in music, verse, or rhetorical prose promotes some cause II. intransitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to act the part of a troubadour |