troubadour• To the Cathar troubadour as to the psalmist it seemed as though there was little justice.• The catalyst for her new ensemble was undoubtedly her 1987 marriage to her fellowtroubadour Mr David Stewart.• BarefootGaelictroubadour joiedevivre captured, well, somewhere else, frankly.• With her short swinging hair, she looked like a medievaltroubadour.• To make matters worse it is clear that much troubadourpoetry was concerned with adultery.• Nor was he just a patron of troubadours.• James McMurtry is an unusualsinger-songwriter, a gentle, thoughtfultroubadour who writes songs that unfold like short stories.• We rode along like three troubadours from some romantictale.
Origintroubadour
(1700-1800)FrenchOld Provençaltrobador, from trobar“to make music”, probably from Latintropus; → TROPE