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canzone

 - 3 dictionary results

can⋅zo⋅ne

[kan-zoh-nee; It. kahn-tsaw-ne] .
–noun, plural -nes, -ni [-nee]
1. a variety of lyric poetry in the Italian style, of Provençal origin, that closely resembles the madrigal.
2. a poem in which each word that appears at the end of a line of the first stanza appears again at the end of one of the lines in each of the following stanzas.
Also, canzona.


Origin:
1580–90; < It < L cantiōnem, acc. sing. of cantiō song; see canto, -ion

can⋅zo⋅na

[kan-zoh-nuh; It. kahn-tsaw-nah]
–noun, plural -ne [-ney; It. -ne] .
canzone.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To canzone
can·zo·ne   (kān-zō'nē, känt-sō'ně)   
n.   pl. can·zo·nes (-nēz, -nāz) or can·zo·ni (-nē)
  1. A medieval Italian or Provençal lyric of varying stanzaic form, usually with a concluding envoy.

  2. A polyphonic song evolving from this form of poetry and resembling the madrigal in style.


[Italian, from Latin cantiō, cantiōn-, song, from cantus, past particple of canere, to sing; see kan- in Indo-European roots.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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