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serenade

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serenade

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Music
ser·e·nade1 /ˌserəˈneɪd/ noun [countable]  1. APMa song sung to someone, especially one that a man performs for the woman he loves while standing below her window at night 〔尤指男子晚上站在其意中人窗外唱或奏的〕小夜曲2. APMa piece of gentle music 柔和的乐曲
Examples from the Corpus
serenadeI knew it would be an elaborate fantasy, a courtship, a serenade.Swan vision in ebony rising before us, each movement a serenade.Fling myself at her black-stockinged feet while the Ally Pally sparrows sang a serenade.There seems to be no exact definition, but serenade or divertimento would be equally appropriate.From the minaret, the muezzin's call to prayer mingled with the gentle serenade of mariachis.Alice suggested he try the Don's serenade from Don Giovanni.Here the composers introduce their serenades and discuss the thoughts behind their composition.
Related topics: Music
serenade2 verb [transitive]  APMif you serenade someone, you sing or play music to them, especially to show them that you love them 〔尤为表爱慕之情而〕对[]小夜曲
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Examples from the Corpus
serenadeHe opened the Rabelais to a page and began reading, walking to the kitchen doorway to serenade Alice with the flow.Costa del Sol is a comment on the package holiday, a couple being serenaded by Antonio.I was down there serenading my heart out and they all started to pop their heads out of the window.At Macy's Plaza, a pianist gracefully serenades shoppers and a fountain offers a soothing respite from the pounding sidewalks outside.From three strategically located stages, well-known musical groups provide a dancing beat while roving bands serenade the crowd.There are the quiet, maudlin times: injured parties, slighted lovers, Chet Baker playing to serenade them.Daryl Johnston, the most celebrated blocking back on the planet, is serenaded with moose calls anytime he touches the football.
Origin serenade1 (1600-1700) French sérénade, from Italian serenata, from sereno clear, calm, from Latin serenus; → SERENE
sung especially Corpus to song one someone, a


serenade
I
serenade1 /ˌserəˈneɪd, ˌserɪˈneɪd/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1600-1700
 Language: French
 Origin: sérénade, from Italian serenata, from sereno 'clear, calm', from Latin serenus; serene
1. a song sung to someone, especially one that a man performs for the woman he loves while standing below her window at night
2. a piece of gentle music

II
serenade2 verb [transitive]
if you serenade someone, you sing or play music to them, especially to show them that you love them


ser·en·adeBrE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊 noun(in the past) a song or tune played or sung at night by a lover outside the window of the woman he loves (旧时男子在所爱慕的女子窗下演奏或歌唱的)小夜曲a gentle piece of music in several parts, usually for a small group of instruments (尤指供小型乐队演奏的)小夜曲
ser·en·adeBrE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they serenade BrE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪd/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it serenades BrE /ˌserəˈneɪdz/ 🔊 NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪdz/ 🔊past simple serenaded BrE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪd/ 🔊past participle serenaded BrE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪd/ 🔊 -ing form serenading BrE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˌserəˈneɪdɪŋ/ 🔊~ sb to sing or play music to sb (as done in the past by a man singing under her window to the woman he loved) (对所爱慕的女子)唱小夜曲,奏小夜曲