different between trumpet vs chanterelle

trumpet

English

Etymology

From Middle English trumpet, trumpette, trompette (trumpet), from Old French trompette (trumpet), diminutive of trompe (horn, trump, trumpet), from Frankish *trumpa, *trumba (trumpet), ultimately imitative.

Akin to Old High German trumpa, trumba (horn, trumpet), Middle Dutch tromme (drum), Middle Low German trumme (drum), Old Norse trumba (pipe; trumpet). More at drum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t??mp?t/
  • Rhymes: -?mp?t

Noun

trumpet (plural trumpets)

  1. (music) A musical instrument of the brass family, generally tuned to the key of B-flat; by extension, any type of lip-vibrated aerophone, most often valveless and not chromatic.
  2. Someone who plays the trumpet; a trumpeter.
    • 1751, Tobias Smollett, The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, vol. III, ch. 88:
      Next day, he sent a trumpet to the general, with a detail of my misfortune, in hopes of retrieving what I had lost [] .
  3. The cry of an elephant, or any similar loud cry.
  4. (figuratively) One who praises, or propagates praise, or is the instrument of propagating it.
    • That great politician was pleased to have the greatest wit of those times [] to be the trumpet of his praises.
  5. A funnel, or short flaring pipe, used as a guide or conductor, as for yarn in a knitting machine.
  6. A kind of traffic interchange involving at least one loop ramp connecting traffic either entering or leaving the terminating expressway with the far lanes of the continuous highway.
    • 1974, O.T.A., Proceedings (page 4)
      The result of adopting the latter principle would be that even unimportant T-junctions would be in the form of trumpets or half-cloverleaf junctions.
  7. A powerful reed stop in organs, having a trumpet-like sound.

Synonyms

  • (musical instrument): cornet

Hyponyms

  • (musical instrument): natural trumpet, straight trumpet

Meronyms

  • (musical instrument, opening): bell, codon, mouth

Derived terms

  • natural trumpet
  • straight trumpet
  • trumpeter, trumpetist

Translations

References

  • 2009. Tipbook Trumpet and Trombone, Flugelhorn and Cornet: The Complete Guide. Hugo Pinksterboer. Pg. 141.

Verb

trumpet (third-person singular simple present trumpets, present participle trumpeting, simple past and past participle trumpeted)

  1. (intransitive) To sound loudly, be amplified
  2. (intransitive) To play the trumpet.
  3. (transitive, intransitive) Of an elephant, to make its cry.
  4. (transitive, intransitive) To give a loud cry like that of an elephant.
  5. (transitive) To proclaim loudly; to promote enthusiastically
    • 1623, Francis Bacon, A Discourse of a War with Spain
      They did nothing but publish and trumpet all the reproaches they could devise against the Irish.

Translations

Related terms

  • trumpet player
  • trumpeter
  • trumpetress

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • trompette, trumpette, trompet, troumpette

Etymology

From Old French trompette; equivalent to trumpe +? -et.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?trump?t/, /?trumpit/

Noun

trumpet (plural trumpetes)

  1. A trumpet; a small brass instrument.
  2. One who uses or plays such an instrument.

Descendants

  • English: trumpet
  • Scots: trumpet

References

  • “trompet, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2019-03-16.

Swedish

Etymology 1

From Old French trompette (trumpet), diminutive of trompe (horn, trump, trumpet), from Frankish *trumpa, *trumba (trumpet), ultimately imitative.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tr?m?pe?t/

Noun

trumpet c

  1. trumpet

Declension

See also

  • trumpeta (verb)
  • trumpetare c (trumpeter)
  • trumpetblåsare c (trumpeter)

Hyponyms

  • piccolotrumpet c
  • signaltrumpet c
  • fanfartrumpet c
  • bastrumpet c
  • aidatrumpet c

References

  • trumpet in Svenska Akademiens ordlista (SAOL)
  • trumpet in Svenska Akademiens ordbok (SAOB)

Etymology 2

Adjective

trumpet

  1. absolute indefinite neuter form of trumpen.

trumpet From the web:

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chanterelle

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French chanterelle, from New Latin cantharellus, diminutive of Latin cantharus (drinking vessel).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?t?ænt???l/, /??nt????l/

Noun

chanterelle (plural chanterelles)

  1. (mycology) A widely distributed edible mushroom, Cantharellus cibarius, being yellow and trumpet-shaped; or any similar mushroom of the genera Cantharellus, Polyozellus or Gomphus, not all of which are edible.
    • 1979, Angela Carter, ‘The Erl-King’, The Bloody Chamber, Vintage 2006, p. 98:
      Even the homely wood blewits, that you cook like tripe, with milk and onions, and the egg-yolk yellow chanterelle with its fan-vaulting and faint smell of apricots, all spring up overnight like bubbles of earth, unsustained by nature, existing in a void.
  2. (music) The highest string of the violin or similar instrument.

Synonyms

  • (mushroom): girolle

Derived terms

  • black chanterelle
  • funnel chanterelle

Translations

Further reading

  • chanterelle on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???.t??l/

Etymology 1

From the genus name, New Latin Cantharellus, from Latin cantharus (drinking vessel).

Noun

chanterelle f (plural chanterelles)

  1. (mycology) chanterelle
    Synonym: girolle
Descendants
  • ? English: chanterelle

Etymology 2

chanter +? -elle

Noun

chanterelle f (plural chanterelles)

  1. (music) chanterelle (highest string of the violin or similar instrument)

Further reading

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

chanterelle From the web:

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