hommage

See also: Hommage

English

Etymology

From French hommage.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɒˈmɑːʒ/, /oʊˈmɑːʒ/

Noun

hommage (plural hommages)

  1. A homage, especially something in an artwork which has been done in respectful imitation of another artist.
    • 1991 November 29, Jonathan Rosenbaum, “His Master's Vice”, in Chicago Reader:
      There's a clip from his Pickup on South Street in Scorsese's The King of Comedy, and extended hommages to other Fuller films in Godard's Breathless and Spielberg's Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.)
    • 2002, Maria Luisa Ardizzone, Guido Cavalcanti, page 150:
      It is certainly true that Pound wanted to pay hommage to Guido.
    • 2007 April 30, Anthony Tommasini, “Doing Everything but Playing the Music”, in New York Times:
      The piece is like an hommage to Ives: atmospheric and thickly textured music with multiple elements happening at once.

See also

Anagrams


French

Etymology

From Old French homage, hommage, from Medieval Latin hominaticum (homage, the service of a vassal or 'man'), from Latin homo (a man, in Medieval Latin a vassal).

Pronunciation

  • (mute h) IPA(key): /ɔ.maʒ/
  • (file)

Noun

hommage m (plural hommages)

  1. homage
    rendre hommage à
    pay homage to

Further reading


Middle English

Noun

hommage

  1. Alternative form of homage
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