ghungroo
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Hindi घुँघरू (ghuṅghrū).
Noun
[edit]ghungroo (plural ghungroos)
- (music) A small metallic bell, usually part of a set strung together and worn on an anklet, especially by classical Indian dancers.
- 2021, “On the Ghungroos: Ankle-bells of Servitude, and Mastery”, in Donovan Roebert, editor, Essays on Classical Indian Dance[1], CRC Press, →ISBN:
- Every dancer cherishes her ghungroos, and no wonder. From the time she first learnt to use her feet in step, they have been with her in ever-increasing numbers, and now, at the height of her artistic maturity, two-hundred or more adorn her ankles where once there had been only ten or twenty.
- 2023, Radhika Iyengar, Fire on the Ganges, Fourth Estate, page 158:
- His other meagre finds include a lone ghungroo—a tiny silver orb that once belonged on an anklet—and what might have once been a copper nose pin.