zingaro
English
Etymology
From Italian. Doublet of tzigane.
Noun
zingaro (plural zingaros or zingari)
- (archaic) A Gypsy.
- 1969, Georges Perec, translated by Gilbert Adair, A Void:
- Sporting a woolly cardigan with four buttons on top of an Oxford smock without a collar, our man has a faintly folksy look about him, calling to mind a zingaro or a gypsy, a carny or a Mongol, but also (switching to a wholly distinct mythology and iconography) a hippy strumming his guitar in a barroom in Haight-Ashbury or at Big Sur or in Katmandu.
Related terms
Anagrams
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /zɛ̃.ɡa.ʁo/
Audio: (file)
Adjective
zingaro (plural zingaros)
Further reading
- “zingaro”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Italian
Alternative forms
Etymology
Dissimilated form of earlier zingano, most likely from a Greek term meaning "untouchable". Compare the modern Greek designations Τσιγγάνοι (Tsingánoi), Αθίγγανοι (Athínganoi), τσιγγάνος (tsingános).[1][2][3] Cognate to German Zigeuner.
The word is considered to be offensive by some in educated speech, the most common preferred euphemisms being nomade (“nomadic”), Rom (“Romani”), Sinto (“Sindhi”) and rarely also gitano (“traveller”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): */ˈd͡zin.ɡa.ro/, (traditional) */ˈt͡sin.ɡa.ro/[4]
- Rhymes: -inɡaro
- Hyphenation: zìn‧ga‧ro
Noun
zingaro m (plural zingari, feminine zingara)
- Gypsy, Roma
- 1975, “Rimmel”, in Rimmel, performed by Francesco De Gregori:
- Chi mi ha fatto le carte / mi ha chiamato vincente / ma uno zingaro, è un trucco.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- (offensive) a scruffy or slovenly person
- tinker
- (figuratively) a person who likes to travel, who cannot stay a long time in one place
- 1971, “Il cuore è uno zingaro”, performed by Nicola Di Bari:
- Catene non ha, / il cuore è uno zingaro e va.
- It has no chains, / the heart is a Gypsy and goes away.
Adjective
zingaro (feminine zingara, masculine plural zingari, feminine plural zingare)
References
- ^ 2004, Viorel Achim, The Roma in Romanian History (Bucharest), page 9
- ^ 2007, Jean-Pierre Liégeois, Roma In Europe, page 17
- ^ 1993, Struggling for Ethnic Identity: The Gypsies of Hungary (published by Human Rights Watch), page 1
- ^ zingaro in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)