different between marionettist vs marionette

marionettist

English

Etymology

marionette +? -ist

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?mæ????n?t?st/

Noun

marionettist (plural marionettists)

  1. A puppeteer who controls a marionette.

Translations

marionettist From the web:



marionette

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French marionnette. One of the first figures to be made into a marionette was the Virgin Mary, hence the name.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?t

Noun

marionette (plural marionettes)

  1. A puppet, usually made of wood, which is animated by the pulling of strings.
    • 1885 — Gilbert and Sullivan, The Mikado
      If you think we are worked by strings,
      Like a Japanese marionette,
      You don't understand these things:
      It is simply Court etiquette.
  2. (obsolete) The buffel duck.

Derived terms

  • marionettist

Translations

Verb

marionette (third-person singular simple present marionettes, present participle marionetting, simple past and past participle marionetted)

  1. (transitive) To control (somebody) as if they were a puppet; to manipulate.

See also

  • marionette on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Marionettes in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)
  • manipulator

Anagrams

  • metanorite, ortetamine, temeration

Interlingua

Noun

marionette (plural marionettes)

  1. marionette

Italian

Noun

marionette f

  1. plural of marionetta

Anagrams

  • intemerato, riemettano

Portuguese

Noun

marionette f (plural marionettes)

  1. Superseded spelling of marionete.

marionette From the web:

  • what's marionette lines
  • what's marionette in english
  • marionette what language
  • marionettes what does it mean
  • what causes marionette lines
  • what are marionette lines on face
  • what causes marionette lines on the face
  • what does marionette do in fnaf
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like