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1 корифей
2) Greek: coryphaeus, coryphaeus (в древнегреческой трагедии)3) Mass media: coryphee -
2 организатор празднества
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > организатор празднества
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3 предводитель хора
General subject: choragus (в древнегреческом театре), choregus (в древнегреческом театре) -
4 руководитель оркестра
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > руководитель оркестра
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5 руководитель хора
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6 хормейстер
1) General subject: chanter, chapel master, chapel-master, choirmaster, choragus, choregus2) Cinema: chorus master
См. также в других словарях:
choregus — variant of choragus * * * /keuh ree geuhs, kaw , koh /, n., pl. choregi / juy/, choreguses. choragus. * * * choregus var. choragus … Useful english dictionary
choregus — noun see choragus … New Collegiate Dictionary
choregus — /keuh ree geuhs, kaw , koh /, n., pl. choregi / juy/, choreguses. choragus. * * * … Universalium
choregus — noun /kəˈriːɡəs/ a) The leader of a chorus in Ancient Greece b) The leader of a group (especially of performers) … Wiktionary
choregus — cho•re•gus [[t]kəˈri gəs, kɔ , koʊ [/t]] n. pl. gi( jī), gus•es. anq sbz choragus … From formal English to slang
choregus — The financial backer in ancient Greece, usually of a play … Grandiloquent dictionary
103 Colmore Row — (Existing) General information Type Commercial Architectural style Brutalis … Wikipedia
choragus — choragic /keuh raj ik, ray jik/, adj. /keuh ray geuhs, koh , kaw /, n., pl. choragi / juy/, choraguses. 1. (in ancient Greece) a. the leader of a dramatic chorus. b. a person who undertook the expense of providing for such a chorus. 2. any… … Universalium
choragus — or choregus noun Etymology: Latin & Greek; Latin choragus, from Greek choragos, chorēgos, from choros chorus + agein to lead more at agent Date: 1625 1. the leader of a chorus or choir; broadly the leader of any group or movement 2. a leader of a … New Collegiate Dictionary
The Clouds — This article is about the play by Aristophanes. For other uses, see Cloud (disambiguation). The Clouds Strepsiades, his son and Socrates (from a 16th Century engraving). The Dramatis Personae in ancient comedy depends on interpretation of textual … Wikipedia
Sacrificial tripod — Priestess of Delphi (1891) by John Collier; the Pythia was inspired by pneuma rising from below as she sits on a tripod … Wikipedia