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单词 ballad
释义

balladn.

Brit. /ˈbaləd/, U.S. /ˈbæləd/
Forms:

α. late Middle English–1500s balett, 1500s balat, 1500s balate, 1500s balette, 1500s ballatt, 1500s ballete, 1500s ballette, 1500s ballytte, 1500s–1600s ballat, 1500s–1600s ballet; English regional 1700s– ballet, 1800s ballat (Cumberland), 1800s– ballant (northern), 1800s– ballit (Lancashire); U.S. regional 1900s– ballet (eastern and southern), 1900s– ballit (southern), 1900s– ballot (Midland); Scottish pre-1700 balat, pre-1700 ballatt, pre-1700 balleit, pre-1700 ballett, pre-1700 1700s 1900s– ballat, pre-1700 1800s ballet, 1800s ballan', 1800s– ballant.

β. late Middle English–1500s balade, 1500s balled, 1500s–1600s ballade, 1500s– ballad.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French balade, ballade.
Etymology: < Middle French balade song for dancing (late 13th cent. in Old French; mid 13th cent. in Old French as barade ), lyric poem consisting of three strophes, each ending with the same refrain (c1341: see ballade n.), Middle French, French ballade (16th cent.; 1836 in sense ‘piece of instrumental music’ in the title of a composition for piano by Chopin: see ballade n.) < Old Occitan balada dance, song for dancing, sung poem (early 13th cent.; late 12th cent. as ballada ; 1288 as balade ; Occitan balada ) < balar to dance (see bale v.1) + -ada -ade suffix. Attested earlier in the specialized senses which are now distinguished in form as ballade n. Compare Old French balete , balaide , ballaite song for dancing (c1320), Catalan ballada dance, dancing (c1400), Portuguese bailada dancing, dance, lyric poetry or song of the troubadours (13th cent.), cognate with Old Occitan balada . Compare also post-classical Latin ballada form of dance music (1326 in a British source), Catalan balada (medieval) lyric poem or song (13th cent.), popular narrative poem or song on a historical or legendary subject (1857), Spanish balada Provençal poetic composition (c1430, now obsolete in this sense), popular narrative poem or song on a historical or legendary subject (1834), Portuguese balada epic musical composition, poem on a historical or legendary subject, lyric poem consisting of three strophes, each ending with the same refrain, etc. (1890), Italian ballata popular lyric poem or song (of a particular metre) for dancing (1294; 1309 as balata ), all < Old Occitan. Compare earlier ballade n. and discussion at that entry.Forms with final -at , -ate , and -et are common until the 18th cent., and apparently show remodelling of the unfamiliar ending -ad , -ade , perhaps partly after words in -ate suffix1 and -et suffix1 (as e.g. sonnet n.) respectively, although compare also the Middle French variants in -ete , -aite noted above. Compare, with similar remodelling of the same ending, forms at salad n. Spellings in -ant show further remodelling of these forms, perhaps after words in -ant suffix1. The prevalence of the headword spelling from the 18th cent. was perhaps motivated in part by the need to distinguish this word < ballet n.1 (compare 17th-cent. forms at that entry). Compare also ballett n., which is difficult to distinguish from this word in the early modern period.
1.
a. A light, simple song of any kind; (now) spec. a sentimental or romantic composition, typically consisting of two or more verses sung to the same melody with only light musical accompaniment.Earliest in ballad book n. at Compounds 1.In early use difficult to distinguish from ballade n. 1a and perhaps in some cases comprehending this within a wider class.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > types of song > [noun] > ballad
ballad1458
sing-song1609
street ballad1694
balladling1798
song ballad1832
border balladc1863
come-all-ye1892
slowie1939
slow dance1989
1458 in J. Raine Testamenta Eboracensia (1855) II. 213 (MED) j librum vocatum unum Balettboke.
1492 in Michelet Scot. Lang. 218 For the singyn of a ballat to the King.
c1500 Mayd Emlyn in Anc. Poet. Tracts (1842) 16 We do nought togyder, But prycked balades synge.
1521 in State Papers Henry VIII (1830) I. 10 Mr. Almoner, in hys sermone, broght in the balates off ‘Passe tyme with goodde cumpanye,’ and ‘I love unlovydde.’
1568 Bible (Bishops') (heading) The ballet of ballets of Solomon.
1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie i. xx. 35 Ballades of praise called Encomia.
1665 S. Pepys Diary 2 Jan. (1972) VI. 2 I occasioned much mirth with a ballet I brought with me, made from the seamen at sea to their ladies in town [i.e. Ld. Dorset's ‘To all you Ladies’].
1770 O. Goldsmith Deserted Village 244 No more the woodman's ballad shall prevail.
1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering II. xvi. 207 But they [sc. the smugglers] stick to it, that they'll..hae an auld wife when they're dying to rhyme ower prayers, and ballants, and charms,..rather than they'll hae a minister to come and pray wi' them.
1855 Ld. Tennyson Maud v. i, in Maud & Other Poems 22 She is singing an air that is known to me, A passionate ballad gallant and gay.
1898 A. Bennett Man From North xxi. 191 The song was a mediocre drawing-room ballad.
1906 A. Bennett Whom God hath Joined x. 367 The power of the drawing-room ballad rendered by a few fiddlers in the warm obscurity of an August evening.
1927 Melody Maker Aug. 768 (advt.) ‘Morning’, Fox-trot Ballad by Pat Thayer.
1979 D. Campbell in J. Hendry Chapman (1985) 67 Fient a bard'll scrieve a ballant for a strumpet when she's deid.
2002 Irish Times (Nexis) 9 Feb. (Weekend section) 50 In the now empty tango halls, 100-year-old ballads are lamentations of better times, lost loves and unimaginable sorrows.
b. A popular, usually narrative, song, spec. one celebrating or scurrilously attacking persons or institutions.In the 17th and 18th centuries such songs were often printed as broadsheets, without accompanying music, hence giving rise to sense 1c.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > types of song > [noun] > jocular or mocking
ballad1554
jig1570
1554 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1871) II. 199 Ballattis of defamatioun.
1556 in J. G. Nichols Chron. Grey Friars (1852) 57 Many ballyttes made of dyvers partys agayne the blyssyd sacrament.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. ii. 47 I wil haue it in a particular ballad else, with mine owne picture on the top on't. View more context for this quotation
1602 Returne fr. Parnassus (Arb.) i. ii. 10 Who makes a ballet for an ale-house doore.
1704 A. Fletcher Acct. Conversat. 9 Tempted to all manner of Lewdness by infamous Ballads sung in every corner of the Streets..I know a very wise man that believed that if a man were permitted to make all the Ballads, he need not care who should make the Laws of a Nation.
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 70. ¶3 The old Song of Chevy Chase is the favourite Ballad of the common People of England.
1716 A. Pope Further Acct. E. Curll 18 Resolv'd, That a Ballad be made against Mr. Pope.
1782 C. Burney Gen. Hist. Music II. 343 (note) The English Ballad, has long been..confined to a low species of song.
1789 D. Sillar Poems 236 An' tell them too, I'll never grudge them, A rantin' ballat tae oblige them.
1825 J. Wilson Noctes Ambrosianae xix, in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Mar. 366 A beuk o' auld ballants, as yellow as the cowslips.
1877 ‘Mrs. Forrester’ Mignon I. 10 A slight dark girl is singing an old English Ballad.
1941 L. MacNeice Poetry of Yeats viii. 167 Irish folk songs and street ballads.
1991 N.Y. Mag. 16 Dec. 98/1 William Berney's play, based on the ballad of Barbara Allen.
c. A narrative poem in short stanzas, esp. one that tells a popular story.Originally a ‘ballad’ in sense 1b considered as poetry, esp. as printed lyrics; later applied to any long narrative poem in this style.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > ballad
ballad1751
1670 J. Milton Hist. Brit. v. 229 The Song..(for..he refus'd not the autority of Ballats for want of better).]
1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 177. ⁋9 Cantilenus turned all his thoughts upon old ballads..He offered to shew me a copy of the Children in the Wood.
1783 W. Cowper Let. 4 Aug. (1981) II. 155 The Ballad is a species of poetry, I believe, peculiar to this country... Simplicity and Ease are its proper characteristics.
1817 S. T. Coleridge Sibylline Leaves The Bard..who made The grand old ballad of Sir Patrick Spence.
1858 H. W. Longfellow Children in Courtship Miles Standish 210 Ye are better than all the ballads That ever were sung or said; For ye are living poems, And all the rest are dead.
a1862 H. T. Buckle Misc. Wks. (1872) I. 161 All history is at first poetry, i.e. ballads.
1870 A. C. Swinburne in Fortn. Rev. May 565 The highest form of ballad requires from a poet at once narrative power, lyrical, and dramatic.
1898 O. Wilde (title) The Ballad of Reading Gaol.
1933 Times 27 Jan. 8/5 Charles Mackay's fine ballad of ‘Tubal Cain’.
2002 Eng. Jrnl. 91 91 Students were asked to complete an anthology of ten poems that contained an elegy, a ballad, a sonnet, and a poem that described a place.
d. In jazz and popular music: a slow song or piece of music, esp. one of a sentimental or romantic nature. Cf. power ballad n. at power n.1 Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > type of piece > [noun] > other types of piece
tinternel1573
aubade1678
nome1705
accompaniment1728
potboiler1783
raga1789
elegy1808
improvisation1824
pièce d'occasion1830
morceau de salon1854
tum-tum1859
murky1876
test-piece1876
invention1880
monodia1880
serenata1883
monody1887
dumka1895
incidental number1904
a cappella1905
folk-tune1907
realization1911
nosebleeder1921
show tune1927
sicilienne1927
estampie1937
ballad1944
Siciliana1947
hard rocker1957
rabble-rouser1958
display1959
mobile1961
soundscape1968
grower1973
lounge1978
1944 B. Crosby in Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 21 May As to what makes a ballad or sentimental song good—it's a perfect wedding of words and music, as witness ‘White Christmas’.
1959 Sunday Gaz.-Mail (Charleston, W. Va.) 20 Dec. (Parade section) 8/1 Roger has been chosen to popularize the ballad, ‘slow, dreamy love songs’.
1973 S. Propes Those Oldies but Goodies 3 Rhythm and blues collectors tend to attach the greatest value to the slow, sweetly romantic ballad.
1985 I. Gitler Swing to Bop (1987) Introd. 5 When Bird or Lester Young..played a romantic ballad, you put your arms around your partner, moved to the music, and got groovy.
2005 Guardian (Nexis) 10 Sept. (Weekend Suppl.) 14 They toured the world with other boy bands, tried not to sing naff, soppy ballads, sang naff, upbeat numbers instead.
2. A song intended as the accompaniment to a dance; the tune to which the song is sung. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > types of song > [noun] > song for dancing
carol1303
ballad1508
ring-songa1522
ballet1608
corroboree1847
shout1862
1508 W. Dunbar Goldyn Targe (Chepman & Myllar) in Poems (1998) I. 188 And sang ballettis with michty notis clere. Ladyes to dance full sobirly assayit.
1545 R. Ascham Toxophilus i. f. 9v These balades & roundes, these galiardes, pauanes and daunces.
1549 J. Olde tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Eph. v. 19 That can stirre vs, not to wanton dauncynges or folyshe ballettes.
1616 B. Jonson Love Restored 14 in Wks. I Vnlesse wee should come in like a Morrice-dance, and whistle our ballat our selues.
1929 L. Spence in W. H. Hamilton Holyrood 174 Awa' wi' yer diddles on the pipes and the fiddles, Awa' wi' yer ballats and yer flings sae free!
3. A proverbial saying, usually in the form of a couplet; a posy. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > saying, maxim, adage > proverb > [noun] > in verse
posya1450
poesyc1450
ballad1529
1529 T. More Dyaloge Dyuers Maters i. xxxi. f. xlviiv Than haue we well walked after ye balade, The ferther I go ye more behynde.
1546 J. Heywood Dialogue Prouerbes Eng. Tongue ii. v. sig. H Spend, & god shall sende..saith thold balet.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) i. iii. 60 For I the Ballad will repeate, which men full true shall finde, your marriage comes by destinie, your Cuckow sings by kinde. View more context for this quotation

Compounds

C1.
ballad book n.
ΚΠ
1458Balettboke [see sense 1a].
?1499 J. Skelton Bowge of Courte (de Worde) sig. Bi A balade boke before me for to laye.
1800 M. Edgeworth Castle Rackrent 77 Snatching up my ballad book..which lay in the window.
1914 W. Owen Let. 8 Aug. (1967) 273 (note) I had begun to believe all romance contained between the two covers of a ballad-book.
1997 Asheville (N. Carolina) Citizen-Times (Nexis) 6 Apr. f2 This engaging biography, discography, and ballad book of the legendary..folk music wizard, Lunsford.
ballad form n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > ballad > ballad-form
ballad form1791
1791 J. Ritson Pieces Anc. Pop. Poetry vii. 116 The reader will find a different copy of the poem, more in the ballad form, in a Collection of ‘Ancient Songs’, published by J. Johnson.
1865 M. Arnold Ess. Crit. v. 174 A ballad-form which has more rapidity and grace.
1991 E. McDonald Gangan Fuit 43 We'll dae that than, screivit in strict ballant form.
ballad lore n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > ballad > lore contained in ballads
ballad lore1806
1806 R. Jamieson Pop. Ballads I. i. 6 The lovers of ballad lore are indebted.
1902 Q. Rev. Oct. 478 The wind-riding Erlking of German ballad-lore.
2005 Irish Times (Nexis) 2 July 12 His sleeve notes..constitute an outstanding contribution to Irish ballad lore.
ballad measure n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > [noun] > stanza > quatrain > ballad-stanza
ballad measure1765
ballad stanza1778
1765 J. Rice Introd. Art of Reading ii. 146 This is very common in Songs, and all Pieces written to Ballad Measures.
1776 Ann. Reg. 1775 40/2 He wrote it in ballad measure.
1881 Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 2 356 Matthew Arnold..has shown the unsuitability of the fourteen-syllable ballad measure for a translation of Homer.
1999 Rev. Eng. Stud. 50 191 The rollicking rhythm of the ballad measure.
ballad poetry n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > ballad > collectively
balladry1596
ballad poetry1781
1781 J. Pinkerton Sc. Tragic Ballads p. xxx The ballad poetry of the Spaniards is tinged with the romantic gallantry of that nation.
1863 J. H. Burton Book-hunter (ed. 2) 300 That delightful department of literature, our ballad poetry.
1997 Jrnl. Musicol. 15 111 Brahms's Blätter piano pieces..do have a literary association—only not to ballad poetry.
ballad rhyme n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > versification > rhyme > [noun] > ballad-rhyme
ballad rhyme1640
1640 T. Carew Poems 124 Swell the windie page Till verse resin'd by thee..Turne Ballad-rime.
1737 Mem. Soc. Grub-St. I. 251 Here in British climes, Where in lewd prose, or luscious ballad rimes, Our poets write the sentiments of brutes.
1840 R. Browning Sordello in Poet. Wks. (1888–94) I. 115 Every time He gained applause by any ballad-rhyme.
1948 T. Brooke in A. C. Baugh Lit. Hist. Eng. 383 The broadside ballad rime which aimed at a somewhat lower and larger class of society.
1999 Mississippi Q. (Nexis) 22 Sept. 535 Its ballad rhyme basis,..with stress on the use of the internal ‘repetend’.
ballad stanza n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > [noun] > stanza > quatrain > ballad-stanza
ballad measure1765
ballad stanza1778
1778 T. Warton Hist. Eng. Poetry II. vii. 247 The Mirrour is a translation from a Latin elegiac poem, written in the year 1516, by Dominic Mancini De quatuor Virtutibus. It is in the ballad-stanza.
1781 J. Pinkerton Sc. Tragic Ballads p. xxvi The common ballad stanza is so simple, that it has been used by most nations as the first mode of constructing rimes.
1855 P. G. Hamerton Isles Loch Awe 2 (note) The Lyrics—like the ballad stanza which heads each canto of the ‘Faërie Queene,’—are introduced as preludes.
1934 Ess. & Stud. 19 102 The stanza, not itself a ballad-stanza, of The Dark Ladie.
2002 Afr. Amer. Rev. 36 349 In a few poems, he combines Blues rhythm and ballad stanza.
ballad stuff n.
ΚΠ
1598 E. Guilpin Skialetheia sig. B8 Their whimpring Sonnets..marre Resolutions ruffe, And melt true valour with lewd ballad stuffe.
1598 J. Marston Scourge of Villanie ii. Ad Rithmum sig. Ev Then hence base ballad stuffe.
1907 F. B. Gummere Pop. Ballad 91 Incremental repetition soon came to be the close pattern of ballad stuff.
1939 New Eng. Q. 12 225 All this is ballad stuff, the combat of two champions.
ballad tune n.
ΚΠ
1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy iii. ii. 581 Ride and daunce, and sing old ballet tunes.
1672 O. Walker Of Educ. i. xiv. 196 To thrum a Guitarr to 2. or 3. Italian Ballad tunes, may be agreable for once, but often practised is ridiculous.
a1695 Earl of Lauderdale tr. Virgil Pastorals iii. in Wks. (1709) 8 Some Ballad Tunes perhaps thou might'st compose, Or else some dismal Verse far worse than Prose.
a1774 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued (1777) III. iv. 153 A ballad tune sung by the coarse-piped chamber maid.
1871 Amer. Naturalist 5 768 When a boy the writer was fond of whistling, usually selecting some ballad tune.
1989 P. van der Merwe Origins Pop. Style (1992) xi. 105 The Scottish ballad tune does have a tonic, though of a subtle kind, so that it too may sound unfinished to the classically trained ear.
C2. Objective with verbal or agent noun (see also ballad-monger n.).
a.
ballad composer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > poet by kind of poem > [noun] > ballad poet
ballad-maker1565
ballad-monger1598
ballad writer1611
balladeer1714
balladist1811
ballad composer1821
troubadour1826
ballader1878
1821 J. Watkins Universal Biogr. Dict. (new ed.) at Carey (Henry) As a ballad composer he had great merit.
1947 A. Einstein Music Romantic Era vi. 58 Carl Loewe, Schubert's rival as a ballad-composer.
2006 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 10 Feb. e4 He also set out to demonstrate that a songwriter commonly celebrated for his brassy show tunes was a consummate ballad composer.
ballad-making n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [noun] > ballad > composing of ballads
ballad-making?1507
ballading1593
ballad-mongering1614
balladeering1939
?1507 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 96 Fra balat making and trigide.
1703 Poems on Affairs of State II. 144 Baber has left the Panegyrick strain And now to Ballad-making turns his Brain.
1820 J. Clare Let. 16 July (1985) 87 I have consciet to think I [shall] find out the knack of ballad making.
1914 Eng. Jrnl. 3 382 I give a five- or ten-minute talk on the two theories of ballad-making.
2003 Milwaukee (Wisconsin) Jrnl. Sentinel (Nexis) 29 Oct. e1 There was a tradition of ballad-making among the lumberjacks and people like that.
ballad-maker n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > poet by kind of poem > [noun] > ballad poet
ballad-maker1565
ballad-monger1598
ballad writer1611
balladeer1714
balladist1811
ballad composer1821
troubadour1826
ballader1878
1565 W. Alley Πτωχομυσεῖον ii. f.63 Our vice ballet makers, and enditers of wanton songes.
1586 W. Webbe Disc. Eng. Poetrie sig. D. The vncountable rabble of ryming Ballet makers.
1668 J. Dryden Sr Martin Mar-all v. 55 You mistake me for Martin Parker, the Ballad-Maker.
1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering III. ii. 36 The devil take all ballads and ballad-makers, and ballad-singers!
1911 Trans. Royal Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 5 33 The ordinary ballad maker..preferred to narrate incidents in the history of the city.
2005 Irish Times (Nexis) 30 July (Weekend section) 12 He valued where they came from—the rich cultural heritage, the Irish language tradition, the ballad-makers and storytellers.
ballad reciter n.
ΚΠ
1866 E. A. Finn Home in Holy Land xxv. 270 There were the same strange groups smoking and listening..to a wandering ballad reciter.
1930 S. B. Hustvedt Ballad Bks. & Ballad Men i. 18 Within the last century or so pains have been taken, as they were not before, to record the name, the age, the residence, the external mode of life of ballad reciters.
1994 M. Murayama Five Years on Rock ix. 54 Do you have any experience as a barber or a ballad reciter?
ballad singer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musician > singer > singer of other types of music > [noun] > ballad-singer
ballad singer1592
baladine1604
balladier1638
balladeer1714
1592 R. Greene Thirde Pt. Conny-catching sig. C4 But one angry fellow..fals vpon the ballad singer, and beating him with his fists well fauouredly, sayes, if he had not listned his singing, he had not lost his purse.
1682 London Gaz. No. 1712 13–17 Apr. Mr. John Clarke..did rent of Charles Killigrew Esq; the Licencing of all Ballad-Singers.
1707 London Gaz. No. 4370/4 Israel Sewell..a professyd Ballad-singer.
1834 T. Carlyle Sartor Resartus ii. ii. 35/1 Ballad-singers brayed, Auctioneers grew hoarse.
1913 Mod. Lang. Notes 28 215 This man was a genuine ballad-singer on American soil.
2007 Times (Nexis) 27 Apr. (Times2 section) 22 You think you have him pegged as a lovelorn ballad singer, perhaps, or a blue-eyed soul star.
ballad singing n.
ΚΠ
?1593 H. Chettle Kind-harts Dreame sig. C3v The last refuge in their life (beggery excepted) the poore helpe of Ballad-singing.
1718 S. Keimer Search after Relig. 14 Allen sets up for Worship, Ballad-Singing, And with Confused Words, our Ears was dinging.
1827 Times 28 Dec. 2/5 Some ‘singing gentlemen’ on a begging and ballad-singing excursion.
1915 Musical Q. 1 434 Norwegian fiddling, pipe-playing, cattle-calls, peasant dances and ballad singing.
2007 Cornwall (Ont.) Standard Freeholder (Nexis) 23 May 17 She has studied Irish ballad singing..and is currently studying piano.
ballad writer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poet > poet by kind of poem > [noun] > ballad poet
ballad-maker1565
ballad-monger1598
ballad writer1611
balladeer1714
balladist1811
ballad composer1821
troubadour1826
ballader1878
1611 W. Vaughan Spirit of Detraction iii. ix. 105 The Authors censure of certaine English Pamphleters, and Ballad-writers, with an inuocation to my L. of Canterbury for a reformation.
1846 T. Wright Ess. Middle Ages II. xvii. 200 The ballad-writers of after-times.
2007 Guardian (Nexis) 10 Jan. 30 He belonged to the grand line of French ballad writers.
b.
ballad concert n. a concert consisting mainly of ballads (sense 1).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > performing music > a performance > [noun] > concert > types of
Philharmonic concert1740
benefit-concert1759
chamber concert1760
recital1762
Dutch concert1774
concert performance1777
philharmonica1796
musical soirée1821
sacred concert1832
soirée musicale1836
promenade concert1839
pianoforte recital1840
ballad concert1855
piano recital1855
Monday pop1862
Pop1862
promenade1864
popular1865
Schubertiad1869
recitative1873
organ recital1877
pop concert1880
smoker1887
smoke concert1888
café concert1891
prom1902
smoke-ho1918
smoking-concert1934
hootenanny1940
opry1940
Liederabend1958
1855 H. R. Helper Land of Gold iv. 50 Madame Anna Bishop's last oratorio or ballad concert.
1868 Times 23 Mar. 12/6 The admirable London Ballad Concerts of Mr. John Boosey are still drawing crowds.
1879 G. Grove Dict. Music I. 129/2Ballad concerts’..often contain songs of all kinds.
1903 Daily Chron. 21 Mar. 8/4 A Concert Diary. Mar. 21.—London Ballad Concert, Queen's Hall.
2001 Stage (Nexis) 31 May 10 It was in ballad concerts that she won and retained the affection of vast audiences.
ballad farce n. a dramatic farce containing popular songs.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > other types of play
king play1469
king game1504
historya1509
chronicle history1600
monology1608
horseplaya1627
piscatory1631
stock play1708
petite pièce1712
mimic1724
ballad opera1730
ballad farce1735
benefit-play1740
potboiler1783
monodrama1793
extravaganza1797
theo-drama1801
monodrame1803
proverb1803
stock piece1804
bespeak1807
ticket-night1812
dramaticle1813
monopolylogue1819
pièce d'occasion1830
interlude1831
mimea1834
costume piece1834
mummers' play1849
history play1850
gag-piece1860
music drama1874
well-made1881
playlet1884
two-decker1884
slum1885
kinderspiel1886
thrill1886
knockabout1887
two-hander1888
front-piece1889
thriller1889
shadow-play1890
mime play1894
problem play1894
one-acter1895
sex play1899
chronicle drama1902
thesis-play1902
star vehicle1904
folk-play1905
radio play1908
tab1915
spy play1919
one-act1920
pièce à thèse1923
dance-drama1924
a mess of plottage1926
turkey1927
weepie1928
musical1930
cliffhanger1931
mime drama1931
triangle drama1931
weeper1934
spine-chiller1940
starrer1941
scorcher1942
teleplay1947
straw-hatter1949
pièce noire1951
pièce rose1951
tab show1951
conversation piece1952
psychodrama1956
whydunit1968
mystery play1975
State of the Nation1980
1735 H. Carey (title) The honest Yorkshire-man, a ballad farce as it is perform'd at the theatres with universal applause.
1747 T. Whincop Scanderbeg 185/1 Betty, or The Country Bumpkins, a Ballad-Farce, acted..at the Theatre in Drury-lane, 1738.
1787 J. Hawkins Life Johnson 198 An impatience for pantomimes and ballad-farces.
1899 Sunday Herald (Syracuse, N.Y.) 26 Feb. 30/1 Comic opera,..or ballad farce, or whatever name you may choose to designate a comedy studded with lyrics.
1994 Atlanta Jrnl. & Constit. (Nexis) 13 Nov. m2 It is thought to have been ‘Flora, Or Hob in the Well,’ a ballad farce by Colley Cibber.
ballad opera n. a play containing popular songs.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > a play > [noun] > other types of play
king play1469
king game1504
historya1509
chronicle history1600
monology1608
horseplaya1627
piscatory1631
stock play1708
petite pièce1712
mimic1724
ballad opera1730
ballad farce1735
benefit-play1740
potboiler1783
monodrama1793
extravaganza1797
theo-drama1801
monodrame1803
proverb1803
stock piece1804
bespeak1807
ticket-night1812
dramaticle1813
monopolylogue1819
pièce d'occasion1830
interlude1831
mimea1834
costume piece1834
mummers' play1849
history play1850
gag-piece1860
music drama1874
well-made1881
playlet1884
two-decker1884
slum1885
kinderspiel1886
thrill1886
knockabout1887
two-hander1888
front-piece1889
thriller1889
shadow-play1890
mime play1894
problem play1894
one-acter1895
sex play1899
chronicle drama1902
thesis-play1902
star vehicle1904
folk-play1905
radio play1908
tab1915
spy play1919
one-act1920
pièce à thèse1923
dance-drama1924
a mess of plottage1926
turkey1927
weepie1928
musical1930
cliffhanger1931
mime drama1931
triangle drama1931
weeper1934
spine-chiller1940
starrer1941
scorcher1942
teleplay1947
straw-hatter1949
pièce noire1951
pièce rose1951
tab show1951
conversation piece1952
psychodrama1956
whydunit1968
mystery play1975
State of the Nation1980
1730 T. Cibber Patie & Peggy Pref. The Simplicity of Characters, Manners, Sentiments, and Passions, which has gain'd That Poem its Reputation..induced me to turn it into a Ballad Opera.
1781 S. Johnson Gay in Pref. Wks. Eng. Poets VIII. 25 We owe to Gay the Ballad Opera.
1885 Musical Times & Singing Class Circular 26 73/2 The flimsy ballad operas, which were formerly considered distinctively English, are not hopelessly out of date.
2007 Independent (Nexis) 17 Apr. Returning to Littlewood, Goorney went into MacColl's ballad opera Johnnie Noble (1947).

Derivatives

ˈballad-wise adv. in the manner of a ballad, in song; (now also) regarding or in respect of ballads.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > [adverb] > in manner of ballad
ballad-wise1553
1553 T. Wilson Arte of Rhetorique iii. f. 108v They toke muche delite in rimed sentences, & in Orations made ballade wise.
1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie i. xxvi. 41 This was done in ballade wise..and was song very sweetely.
c1854 R. S. Mackenzie Bits of Blarney 261 He used to get them printed (ballad wise) on octavo slips of whity-brown paper.
1951 J. Lees-Milne Tudor Renaissance ii. 22 No longer do poems..grow up ballad-wise as the result of the unco-ordinated efforts of anonymous craftsmen.
2000 Evening Chron. (Newcastle) (Nexis) 25 Oct. (Entertainer section) 10 Ballad-wise, the stand-out track is the closing number.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

balladv.

Brit. /ˈbaləd/, U.S. /ˈbæləd/
Forms: late Middle English balade, 1500s–1600s ballat, 1600s balett, 1600s ballet, 1600s– ballad.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: French balader ; ballad n.
Etymology: Partly < Middle French balader to sing ballads (1422), to compose ballads (mid 15th cent. in the passage translated in quot. c1450 at sense 1; < balade ballad n.; compare ballade n.), and partly < ballad n. (compare also ballade n.).
1. intransitive. To write or compose ballads. Also transitive, with out. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > compose narrative poem [verb (intransitive)] > compose ballads
balladc1450
c1450 C. d'Orleans Poems (1941) 49 (MED) To balade [Fr. de balader] now y haue a fayre leysere.
1593 G. Harvey Pierces Supererogation 48 When Elderton began to ballat, Gascoine to sonnet, Turberuile to madrigal, Drant to versify [etc.].
1609 T. Dekker Lanthorne & Candle-light xii. sig. L What songs they balladed out in praise of Night!
a1631 J. Donne Iuuenilia (1633) i. sig. B Enuious Libellers ballad against them [sc. women].
2. transitive. To make the subject of a ballad, esp. a scurrilous one.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > narrative poem > write narrative poem about [verb (transitive)] > make subject of ballads
ballad1606
1606 G. Chapman Monsieur D'Oliue iii. i. sig. F I am afraid of nothing but I shall be Ballated.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) v. ii. 212 And scald Rimers [will] Ballads[read Ballad] vs out a Tune.
1636 T. Heywood Challenge for Beautie ii. sig. C4 I shall be Ballated, Sung up and downe by Minstrills?
1684 T. Southerne Disappointment iii. i. 22 Stag'd to the crowd..Nay, balleted about the streets in rhime.
1745 Remarks on Case Brigadier-General Ingoldsby 4 This unhappy Gentleman..was..trumpeted and balladed all over the Kingdom for having been wanting in his Duty.
?1750 Mod. Courtezan 25 When to the rising Sun in rustic Strain, The Love-sick Shepherd balladed his Pain.
1820 Ld. Byron Let. 9 Nov. (1977) VII. 222 You have balladed me fifty times—and are welcome to fifty more.
1877 Oakland (Calif.) Daily Evening Tribune 10 Feb. He was 'tolled in prose, and his liberation from prison balladed in rhyme.
1937 Times 12 June 15/5 The statue was hailed, balladed, and decorated as Queen Elizabeth by a Protestant mob in 1679.
1990 Yale Law Jrnl. 100 356 (note) Cooper had balladed the melancholy case of Jonathan Robbins, a native citizen of America, forcibly impressed by the British.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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