different between serenade vs sonnet
serenade
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French sérénade, from Italian serenata, from the past participle of serenare, from Latin serenare, from serenus (“calm”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?s????ne?d/
- Rhymes: -e?d
Noun
serenade (plural serenades)
- A love song that is sung directly to one's love interest, especially one performed below the window of a loved one in the evening.
- (music) An instrumental composition in several movements.
Translations
Verb
serenade (third-person singular simple present serenades, present participle serenading, simple past and past participle serenaded)
- (transitive) To sing or play a serenade for (someone).
- 2013, Daniel Taylor, Rickie Lambert's debut goal gives England victory over Scotland (in The Guardian, 14 August 2013)[1]
- The Southampton striker, who also struck a post late on, was being serenaded by the Wembley crowd before the end and should probably brace himself for some Lambert-mania over the coming days but, amid the eulogies, it should not overlook the deficiencies that were evident in another stodgy England performance.
- 2013, Daniel Taylor, Rickie Lambert's debut goal gives England victory over Scotland (in The Guardian, 14 August 2013)[1]
Translations
Further reading
- serenade on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- enseared
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
serenade f (plural serenades)
- serenade
Romanian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [sere?nade]
Noun
serenade f pl
- plural of serenad?
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sonnet
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French sonnet, from Italian sonetto, from Old Occitan sonet (“a song”), diminutive of son (“song, sound”), from Latin sonus (“sound”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?s?n?t/
- Rhymes: -?n?t
Noun
sonnet (plural sonnets)
- A fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of fourteen lines that are typically five-foot iambics and rhyme according to one of a few prescribed schemes.
Translations
See also
- poem
- English sonnet
- Italian sonnet
- quatorzain
Verb
sonnet (third-person singular simple present sonnets, present participle sonneting, simple past and past participle sonneted)
- (intransitive) To compose sonnets.
- (transitive) To celebrate in sonnets; to write a sonnet about.
Anagrams
- Neston, non est, nonets, senton, stonen, tennos, tenons, tenson, tonnes
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French sonnet, from Italian sonetto, from Old Occitan sonet (“a song”), diminutive of son (“song, sound”), from Latin sonus (“sound”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /s??n?t/
- Hyphenation: son?net
- Rhymes: -?t
Noun
sonnet n (plural sonnetten, diminutive sonnetje n)
- sonnet
- Synonym: klinkdicht
Derived terms
- meestersonnet
- Shakespearesonnet
- sonnettenbakker
- sonnettencyclus
- sonnettenkrans
Anagrams
- snoten
References
- “sonnet” in Woordenlijst Nederlandse Taal – Officiële Spelling, Nederlandse Taalunie. [the official spelling word list for the Dutch language]
French
Etymology
From Middle French sonnet, borrowed from Italian sonetto, from Old Occitan sonet (“a song”), diminutive of son (“song, sound”), from Latin sonus (“sound”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /s?.n?/
Noun
sonnet m (plural sonnets)
- sonnet
Further reading
- “sonnet” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
- entons, tenons, tonnes, tonnés
German
Pronunciation
Verb
sonnet
- second-person plural subjunctive I of sonnen
sonnet From the web:
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- what sonnet means
- what sonnet 116 is about
- what sonnet 130 is about
- what sonnet is in romeo and juliet
- what sonnet 18 is about
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- what sonnet poem
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