BARDIC - definition. What is BARDIC
Diclib.com
قاموس ChatGPT
أدخل كلمة أو عبارة بأي لغة 👆
اللغة:

ترجمة وتحليل الكلمات عن طريق الذكاء الاصطناعي ChatGPT

في هذه الصفحة يمكنك الحصول على تحليل مفصل لكلمة أو عبارة باستخدام أفضل تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي المتوفرة اليوم:

  • كيف يتم استخدام الكلمة في اللغة
  • تردد الكلمة
  • ما إذا كانت الكلمة تستخدم في كثير من الأحيان في اللغة المنطوقة أو المكتوبة
  • خيارات الترجمة إلى الروسية أو الإسبانية، على التوالي
  • أمثلة على استخدام الكلمة (عدة عبارات مع الترجمة)
  • أصل الكلمة

%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

PROFESSIONAL POET IN MEDIEVAL GAELIC AND BRITISH CULTURE
Bards; Bardic; Bardic school; Bardd; Village bard
  • 'Beardna,' a loanword of Celtic origin
  • William Blake's hand painted engraving of his poem "[[The Voice of the Ancient Bard]]" in the ''[[Songs of Innocence and of Experience]]''
  • John Martin]]

Bardic         
·adj Of or pertaining to bards, or their poetry.
Bard         
·noun Specifically, Peruvian bark.
II. Bard ·noun Hence: A poet; as, the bard of Avon.
III. Bard ·noun ·Alt. of Barde.
IV. Bard ·vt To cover (meat or game) with a thin slice of fat bacon.
V. Bard ·noun The exterior covering of the trunk and branches of a tree; the rind.
VI. Bard ·noun A professional poet and singer, as among the ancient Celts, whose occupation was to compose and sing verses in honor of the heroic achievements of princes and brave men.
bard         
bard1
¦ noun
1. archaic or literary a poet, traditionally one reciting epics.
(the Bard) Shakespeare.
2. (Bard) the winner of a prize for Welsh verse at an Eisteddfod.
Derivatives
bardic adjective
Origin
ME: from Sc. Gaelic bard, Ir. bard, Welsh bardd, of Celtic origin.
--------
bard2
¦ noun a rasher of fat bacon placed on meat or game before roasting.
¦ verb cover with bards.
Origin
C18: from Fr. barde, a transferred sense of barde 'armour for the breast of a warhorse'.

ويكيبيديا

Bard

In Celtic cultures, a bard is a professional story teller, verse-maker, music composer, oral historian and genealogist, employed by a patron (such as a monarch or chieftain) to commemorate one or more of the patron's ancestors and to praise the patron's own activities.

With the decline of a living bardic tradition in the modern period, the term has loosened to mean a generic minstrel or author (especially a famous one). For example, William Shakespeare and Rabindranath Tagore are respectively known as "the Bard of Avon" (often simply "the Bard") and "the Bard of Bengal". In 16th-century Scotland, it turned into a derogatory term for an itinerant musician; nonetheless it was later romanticised by Sir Walter Scott (1771–1832).

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. Powys‘s last two great novels are deeply Welsh, reflecting his increasing sense of what he thought of as his bardic heritage.
2. The women, minstrel singers from a remote region of Uzbekistan who are featured on the Smithsonian Folkways CD "Bardic Divas," were to be part of a U.S. tour called "Spiritual Sounds of Central Asia." But for reasons that are unclear, they were denied visas on the spot during a brief questioning at the U.S. consulate in Tashkent.