释义 |
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024vir•e•lay (vir′ə lā′),USA pronunciation n. [Pros.]- Poetryan old French form of short poem, composed of short lines running on two rhymes and having two opening lines recurring at intervals.
- Poetryany of various similar or other forms of poem, as one consisting of stanzas made up of longer and shorter lines, the lines of each kind rhyming together in each stanza, and having the rhyme of the shorter lines of one stanza forming the rhyme of the longer lines of the next stanza.
- Music and Dance, Poetrya medieval song form providing a musical setting for a virelay but having a formal structure different from that of the poem.
Also, vir′e•lai′. - Old French virelai, alteration (see lay4) of vireli, virli jingle used as the refrain of a song
- Middle English 1350–1400
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: virelay /ˈvɪrɪˌleɪ/ n - an old French verse form, rarely used in English, consisting of short lines arranged in stanzas having only two rhymes, and two opening lines recurring at intervals
Etymology: 14th Century: from Old French virelai, probably from vireli (associated with lai lay4), meaningless word used as a refrain |