different between bagpipe vs bourdon

bagpipe

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?bæ??pa?p/

Noun

bagpipe (plural bagpipes)

  1. singular of bagpipes (normally used in plural)
  2. attributive form of bagpipes

Translations

Verb

bagpipe (third-person singular simple present bagpipes, present participle bagpiping, simple past and past participle bagpiped)

  1. To play the bagpipes.
  2. (nautical) To lay (the mizzen) aback by bringing the sheet to the mizzen rigging.
  3. (slang) To masturbate a person's penis in one's armpit.
    • 2006, George K. Ilsley, ManBug (page 91)
      Until he met Sebastian, Tom had never even heard of bagpiping, and is generally too ticklish to be really good at it.

Translations


Middle English

Alternative forms

  • bagpype, bagge pipe

Etymology

From bagge +? pipe.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ba?(?)pi?p(?)/

Noun

bagpipe

  1. bagpipes

Descendants

  • English: bagpipe, bagpipes

References

  • “bagge-p?pe, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-12-06.

bagpipe From the web:

  • what bagpipe song is played at funerals
  • what bagpipe song is played at police funerals
  • what bagpipe song is played at firefighter funerals
  • what bagpipe song is played at remembrance day
  • what bagpipes sound like
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  • what bagpipes to buy
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bourdon

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French bourdon.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?b??d?n/

Noun

bourdon (plural bourdons)

  1. (music, archaic) The burden or bass of a melody.
    • 1985, Anthony Burgess, Kingdom of the Wicked:
      The earth tremors resumed and made a bourdon to the loud psalms that they sang, interspersed with the odd ode of Horace recited by Silas.
  2. The drone pipe of a bagpipe.
  3. The lowest-pitched stop of an organ.
    • 1890, Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Vintage 2007, p. 5:
      The dim roar of London was like the bourdon note of a distant organ.
  4. The lowest-pitched bell of a carillon.
  5. A large, low-pitched bell not part of a diatonically tuned ring of bells.
  6. A bumblebee, genus Bombus.
  7. A pilgrim's staff.

Translations

Anagrams

  • obround

French

Etymology

From Middle French bourdon (honeybee, bumblebee), from Old French bordon (bumblebee, drone, beetle, insect), from Medieval Latin burdo (c. C.E. 1000), first recorded in the Homilies of King Ælfric, glossed by Old English dora (bumblebee). Of uncertain origin. Possibly from Frankish *bordo, *burdo (beetle, insect), from Proto-Germanic *buzdô (beetle, grub", literally, "swelling), from *b?s- (to erupt, burst, flow rapidly), from Proto-Indo-European *b??s- (to move quickly), related to Old English budda (beetle), Middle Low German buddech (thick, swollen), Low German budde (louse, grub). See bug.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bu?.d??/
  • Rhymes: -??

Noun

bourdon m (plural bourdons)

  1. bumblebee (species of bee)
  2. (music) drone
  3. (figuratively, colloquial) blues (feeling of sadness)
    Synonym: cafard

Derived terms

  • faux-bourdon
  • bourdonner
  • bourdonnement

Further reading

  • “bourdon” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Louisiana Creole French

Etymology

From French bourdon (bee).

Noun

bourdon

  1. bee, wasp

References

  • Alcée Fortier, Louisiana Folktales

Norman

Etymology

From Old French bordon (bumblebee, drone, beetle, insect), from Medieval Latin burdo.

Noun

bourdon m (plural bourdons)

  1. (Jersey) bumblebee

Synonyms

  • bourde

Derived terms

bourdon From the web:

  • bourdon meaning
  • what is bourdon tube
  • what is bourdon tube pressure gauge
  • what is bourdon gauge
  • what does bourbon mean
  • what is bourdon gauge used for
  • what is bourdon effect
  • what is bourdon tube gauge
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