释义 |
min·strel I. \ˈmin(t)strəl\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English minstrale, menestrel, from Old French menestrel minstrel, official, servant, from Late Latin ministerialis imperial household officer — more at ministerial 1. : one of a class of medieval professional musical entertainers; especially : a singer of verses to the accompaniment of a harp or other instrument — compare gleeman, jongleur 2. : one (as a musician or poet) felt to resemble a medieval minstrel 3. a. : one of a troupe of musical performers and comedians of a kind originating early in the 19th century in the United States and typically giving a program of Negro melodies, jokes, and impersonations and usually blacked in imitation of Negroes < small troupes of blackface minstrels were among the earliest … traveling companies — American Guide Series: Washington > b. : minstrel show < the first full-scale minstrel staged by the church — Springfield (Massachusetts) Union > II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to celebrate in song especially in the style of a minstrel |