serenade

listen to the pronunciation of serenade
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
a love song, especially one performed below the window of a loved one in the evening
an instrumental composition in several movements
to sing or play a serenade (for someone)
{n} music by lovers in the night
A love song, or piece traditionally performed below a loved one's window in the evening
A lover's song or poem of the evening (Compare Aubade)
A piece of music suitable to be performed at such times
A type of instrumental composition originally performed in the 18th century as background music for public occasions
sing and play for somebody; "She was serenaded by her admirers"
a song characteristically played outside the house of a woman sing and play for somebody; "She was serenaded by her admirers
(fr ) - An evening music A compostion for use in the open air at night [back]
To entertain with a serenade
(3 syl ) Music performed in the serene- i e in the open air at eventide (Latin, serenum whence the French sérénade and Italian serenata) “Or serenate which the starved lover sings To his proud fair ” Milton: Paradise Lost, iii 769 Serene (2 syl ) A title given to certain German princes Those princes who used to hold under the empire were entitled Serene or Most Serene Highnesses It's all serene All right (Spanish, sereno, “all right”- the sentinel's countersign) Sereno, the night-watch “ `Let us clearly understand each other ' `All serene,' responded Foster ”- Watson; The Web of the Spider chap viii Serif and Sanserif The former is a letter in typography with the “wings” or finishing-strokes (as T); the latter is without the finishing-strokes (as T)
a musical composition in several movements; has no fixed form
{i} instrumental or vocal love song performed at night in the open air (esp. by a man under the window of the woman he desires); piece of music suitable for this type of performance
a song characteristically played outside the house of a woman
A love song or piece, usually performed below someone's window in the evening
In classical music, a serenade is a piece in several parts written for a small orchestra. Vaughan Williams's Serenade to Music. if you serenade someone, you sing or play music to them, especially to show them that you love them
If one person serenades another, they sing or play a piece of music for them. Traditionally men did this outside the window of the woman they loved. In the interval a blond boy dressed in white serenaded the company on the flute Serenade is also a noun. Placido Domingo sang his serenade of love
it could mean a love song, or, in the 18th century, an evening entertainment for orchestra
To perform a serenade
Originally, this was a musical greeting to a beloved or a person of rank Now, it is a musical form closely related to the divertimento
{f} sing a love song at night in the open air (especially under the window of a woman)
(3 syl ) Music performed in the serene- i e in the open air at eventide (Latin, serenum whence the French sérénade and Italian serenata) “Or serenate which the starved lover sings To his proud fair ” Milton: Paradise Lost, iii 769 Serene (2 syl ) A title given to certain German princes Those princes who used to hold under the empire were entitled Serene or Most Serene Highnesses It's all serene All right (Spanish,sereno, “all right”- the sentinel's countersign) Sereno, the night-watch “ `Let us clearly understand each other ' `All serene,' responded Foster ”- Watson; The Web of the Spider chap viii Serif and Sanserif The former is a letter in typography with the “wings” or finishing-strokes (as T); the latter is without the finishing-strokes (as T)
Music sung or performed in the open air at nights; usually applied to musical entertainments given in the open air at night, especially by gentlemen, in a spirit of gallantry, under the windows of ladies
(Italian): a suite usually written as background music for a social function
serenader
{i} one who sings love songs at night in the open air (especially a man singing under the window of the woman he desires)
serenader
One who serenades
serenades
plural of serenade
serenade

    الواصلة

    ser·e·nade

    التركية النطق

    serıneyd

    النطق

    /ˌserəˈnād/ /ˌsɛrəˈneɪd/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ "ser-&-'nAd ] (noun.) 1649. French sérénade, from Italian serenata, from sereno (“clear, calm”), from Latin serenus (“calm”).

    الازمنة

    serenades, serenading, serenaded
المفضلات