different between roundelay vs rondelet

roundelay

English

Alternative forms

  • rondelay

Etymology

From Middle French rondelet, diminutive of Old French rondel (French: rondeau). Ending -lay either from lay (ballad or sung poem), or from virelay.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /??a?nd??le?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /??a?nd??le?/

Noun

roundelay (plural roundelays)

  1. (music) A poem or song having a line or phrase repeated at regular intervals.
    • 1579, Edmund Spenser, Perigot and Willie's Roundelay published in The Shepheardes Calender, republished in 1907, William Stanley Braithwaite, ed., The Book of Elizabethan Verse.
      It fell upon a holly eve,
      Hey ho, hollidaye!
      When holly fathers wont to shrieve,
      Now gynneth this roundelay.
    • 1830, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Song - The Owl published in Poems, Chiefly Lyrical
      When merry milkmaids click the latch
      And rarely smells the new-mown hay,
      And the cock hath sung beneath the thatch
      Twice or thrice his roundelay,
      Twice or thrice his roundelay;
      Alone and warming his five wits,
      The white owl in the belfry sits.
    • 1871, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Idylls of the King: The Last Tournament published in Contemporary Review
      "Ay, fool," said Tristram, "but 'tis eating dry
      To dance without a catch, a roundelay
      To dance to." Then he twangled on his harp,
      And while he twangled little Dagonet stood
      Quiet as any water-sodden log
      Stay'd in the wandering warble of a brook;...
    • 1903, Howard Pyle, The Story of King Arthur and His Knights, Part II, Chapter First, page 61.
      For then the little birds do sing their sweetest song, all joining in one joyous medley, whereof one may scarce tell one note from another, so multitudinous is that pretty roundelay;...
  2. A dance in a circle.
  3. Anything having a round form; a roundel.

See also

  • rondeau
  • roundel

roundelay From the web:

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rondelet

English

Etymology

Middle French rondelet

Noun

rondelet (plural rondelets)

  1. A metric verse (form), modeled after the rondeau, in two rhymes over seven lines, the first (in four syllables) being repeated as third and refrain (final one), each other line having eight syllables

Related terms

  • rondel, rondelle
  • roundel
  • roundelay

Anagrams

  • Del Norte, redolent

French

Etymology

From rondel +? -et. Rondel has become rondeau in Modern French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???.dl?/

Adjective

rondelet (feminine singular rondelette, masculine plural rondelets, feminine plural rondelettes)

  1. quite round; roundish
  2. (by extension) large, hefty, significant

Further reading

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

Middle French

Etymology

rondel +? -et

Noun

rondelet m (plural rondelez)

  1. A roundelay, certain metric verse from

rondelet From the web:

  • what does rondelet means
  • what does rondelet
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