melomane
Appearance
See also: mélomane
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From French mélomane, from mélo- + -mane;[1] equivalent to melo- + -mane.
Noun
[edit]melomane (plural melomanes)
- Synonym of melomaniac
- 1868, [Henrietta Camilla] Jenkin, Two French Marriages, volume I, Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, page 12:
- Monsieur de Rochetaillée was a melomane. He thought of nothing, cared for nothing but music. It was the passion of his life; he could not live without music and musicians.
- 2000, Kermit Swiler Champa, “Painted Responses to Music: The Landscapes of Corot and Monet”, in Marsha L. Morton, Peter L. Schmunk, editors, The Arts Entwined: Music and Painting in the Nineteenth Century, Garland Publishing, Inc., Taylor & Francis Group, →ISBN, page 114:
- But what was even more important to Monet’s eventual success in devising landscape images that attracted music-modeled appreciation like Silvestre’s is the fact that the melomanes among the younger painters of the 1860s had not produced anything like a consistent painting practice modeled on music.
- 2012, Lisa Coulthard, “The Attraction of Repetition: Tarantino’s Sonic Style”, in James Eugene Wierzbicki, editor, Music, Sound and Filmmakers: Sonic Style in Cinema (Routledge Music and Screen Media Series), Routledge, →ISBN, page 166:
- But music in Tarantino is also part of a larger sonic obsession that stresses the acoustic impact of dialogue, noise, atmosphere, and effects—Tarantino is an audio[-]mane as much as a melomane.
References
[edit]- ^ “melomane”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
Italian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]melomane m or f by sense (plural melomani)
Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- melomane in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
Anagrams
[edit]Categories:
- English terms borrowed from French
- English terms derived from French
- English terms prefixed with melo-
- English terms suffixed with -mane
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- Italian terms prefixed with melo- (music)
- Italian terms suffixed with -mane
- Italian 4-syllable words
- Italian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Italian/ɔmane
- Rhymes:Italian/ɔmane/4 syllables
- Italian lemmas
- Italian nouns
- Italian countable nouns
- Italian masculine nouns
- Italian feminine nouns
- Italian nouns with multiple genders
- Italian masculine and feminine nouns by sense