Definition of Serenades

1. Noun. (plural of serenade) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Serenades

1. serenade [v] - See also: serenade

Lexicographical Neighbors of Serenades

seraskierate
seraskierates
seraskiers
serated
serdab
serdabs
serdar
sere
sered
serein
sereins
serenade
serenaded
serenader
serenaders
serenades (current term)
serenading
serenata
serenatas
serenate
serenates
serendibite
serendipities
serendipitous
serendipitously
serendipity
serene
serened
serenely
sereneness

Literary usage of Serenades

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Life of Charles Dickens by John Forster (1872)
"serenades ' passage outside our chamber door; singing, in low voices haven. . . and Ncw- ' to guitars, about home and absent friends and other ..."

2. Catalogue of the Allen A. Brown Collection of Music in the Public Library of by Allen Augustus Brown (1915)
"serenades. For violin and pianoforte. (Continued.) Sérénade, 33e, sur l'opéra: ... 15 in N.357.12 serenades. For wind instruments. JADASSOHN. Serenade. ..."

3. Can Grande's Castle by Amy Lowell (1918)
"To the serenades they have heard so often? Cavatine, canzonette, dance songs, hymns, for six hundred years the songs of Venice have drifted past them, ..."

4. Mendelssohn by Stephen Samuel Stratton (1910)
"... a teacher in the Conserva- torium—Festivals at Aix-la-Chapelle, Liege, and Cologne —Festivities and serenades—Spohr and Wagner at ..."

5. A Jar of Honey from Mount Hybla by Leigh Hunt (1848)
"serenades IN SICILY AND NAPLES. " WE reached Alcamo in the evening ; a well-built town, that contains above 8000 inhabitants. It was built in the year 828, ..."

6. A Jar of Honey from Mount Hybla by Leigh Hunt (1870)
"serenades IN SICILY AND NAPLES. " WE reached Alcamo in the evening; a well-built town, that contains above 8000 inhabitants. It was built in the year 828, ..."

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