rondel

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English, from Old French, a diminutive of ronde, the feminine of ront (circular), probably originally *redond, from Latin rotundus (like a wheel, circular, round)., related to rota (wheel).

Noun

rondel (plural rondels)

  1. A metric form of verse using two rhymes, usually fourteen 8- to 10-syllable lines in three stanzas, with the first lines of the first stanza returning as refrain of the next two.
  2. The verse form rondeau.
  3. A rondelle, (small) circular object.
  4. A long thin medieval dagger with a circular guard and a circular pommel (hence the name).
  5. A small round tower erected at the foot of a bastion.

Synonyms

Translations

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Old French

Noun

rondel m (oblique plural rondeaus or rondeax or rondiaus or rondiax or rondels, nominative singular rondeaus or rondeax or rondiaus or rondiax or rondels, nominative plural rondel)

  1. circular or round object
  2. rondel; type of poem

Descendants

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