cantatrice

English

Etymology

From French or Italian cantatrice.

Pronunciation

French pronunciation
  • enPR: käɴtətʀēsʹ, IPA(key): /kɑ̃təˈtriːs/
Italian pronunciation
  • enPR: kăntətrēʹchā, IPA(key): /kantəˈtɹiːt͡ʃeɪ/
  • Rhymes: -iːtʃeɪ

Noun

cantatrice (plural cantatrices or cantatrici)

  1. A professional female singer.
    • 1899, Richard Savage, “Love's Legacy”, in Our Mysterious Passenger: And Other Stories, page 195:
      An hour later we left the Colosseum, but not till we had heard that soaring voice again, vibrating in our very hearts, and saw the young cantatrice appear with a knot of Russian violets pinned upon the bosom which rose and fell in an ecstasy of song.

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian cantatrice, from Latin cantātrīcem.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kɑ̃.ta.tʁis/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

cantatrice f (plural cantatrices)

  1. cantatrice

Further reading

Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kan.taˈtri.t͡ʃe/
  • Rhymes: -itʃe
  • Hyphenation: can‧ta‧trì‧ce

Adjective

cantatrice

  1. feminine singular of cantatore

Noun

cantatrice f (plural cantatrici)

  1. female equivalent of cantatore

Anagrams