释义 |
Definition of chanteuse in English: chanteusenoun ʃɑ̃tøzʃɑːnˈtəːzˌSHänˈto͞oz A female singer of popular songs. 流行歌曲女歌手 Example sentencesExamples - Listen to her voice and there's a depth and maturity that many of the current batch of young teenage chanteuses, who look as if the worst thing in life they've experienced is runny mascara, conspicuously lack.
- He married the prettiest girl in the country's top-selling group of chanteuses.
- ‘Our stories are very different,’ acknowledges the Montreal-born chanteuse.
- Wise young chanteuses seem to be very much in vogue right now.
- She is the type of singer that gets called a chanteuse a lot.
- The song is addressed to the chanteuse's competitors who are female, so the correct interpretation would be that she is offering to share her secret.
- A chanteuse embarks on a decades-long search for fame.
- For a half-dozen albums, the sentimental chanteuse has avoided mimicking other people's songs, opting instead to bend and deconstruct the material to fit her mood.
- Her doe-eyed features and silken voice conjures comparisons to other mystic chanteuses with names like Sarah, Chantal, Diana and Tori.
- She grew up in an age when the chanteuse didn't need an orchestra or a symphony hall to get their message across.
- This female chanteuse has soothing vocals that'll take you to sonic heights that you've never been to.
- Chase's sophomore release will no doubt further her career as a country chanteuse.
- ‘People hearing me as a singer-songwriter is a lot more terrifying than people hearing me as a jazz singer,’ once said the soft-spoken chanteuse.
- The evergreen chanteuse romps like a woman a quarter her age through an exuberant programme of pop and musical hits.
- But what really draws the 26-year-old Ryan these days is performing live in that domain of glamorous but faded chanteuses - cabaret.
- But the down-to-earth chanteuse can't go too long without visiting family and regularly returns to her home town.
- The French chanteuse, actress and street entertainer has delivered delights to her adoring masses of European fans for many years.
- They were bashing out 1963 Beatles tunes for a while, before a blonde with a lived-in air took the microphone and transformed herself into a tragic chanteuse, singing through her nose like the best of them.
- Influences range from film soundtracks to French chanteuses and jangly pop, but everything is tightly arranged by the classically-trained Campbell.
- The mood is intimate and late night; a chanteuse in a little club somewhere with a piano trio augmented by sax, vibes and guitar.
Synonyms singer, vocalist, soloist, songstress, crooner, warbler, melodist, artiste
OriginFrench, from chanter 'sing'. Rhymesagents provocateurs, berceuse, charmeuse, chartreuse, chauffeuse, coiffeurs, danseuse, diseuse, furze, hers, messieurs, Meuse, secateurs, vendeuse Definition of chanteuse in US English: chanteusenounˌSHänˈto͞oz A female singer of popular songs, especially in a nightclub. 流行歌曲女歌手 Example sentencesExamples - ‘People hearing me as a singer-songwriter is a lot more terrifying than people hearing me as a jazz singer,’ once said the soft-spoken chanteuse.
- Her doe-eyed features and silken voice conjures comparisons to other mystic chanteuses with names like Sarah, Chantal, Diana and Tori.
- She grew up in an age when the chanteuse didn't need an orchestra or a symphony hall to get their message across.
- This female chanteuse has soothing vocals that'll take you to sonic heights that you've never been to.
- The evergreen chanteuse romps like a woman a quarter her age through an exuberant programme of pop and musical hits.
- The French chanteuse, actress and street entertainer has delivered delights to her adoring masses of European fans for many years.
- The song is addressed to the chanteuse's competitors who are female, so the correct interpretation would be that she is offering to share her secret.
- He married the prettiest girl in the country's top-selling group of chanteuses.
- But the down-to-earth chanteuse can't go too long without visiting family and regularly returns to her home town.
- She is the type of singer that gets called a chanteuse a lot.
- Chase's sophomore release will no doubt further her career as a country chanteuse.
- A chanteuse embarks on a decades-long search for fame.
- Listen to her voice and there's a depth and maturity that many of the current batch of young teenage chanteuses, who look as if the worst thing in life they've experienced is runny mascara, conspicuously lack.
- For a half-dozen albums, the sentimental chanteuse has avoided mimicking other people's songs, opting instead to bend and deconstruct the material to fit her mood.
- They were bashing out 1963 Beatles tunes for a while, before a blonde with a lived-in air took the microphone and transformed herself into a tragic chanteuse, singing through her nose like the best of them.
- Influences range from film soundtracks to French chanteuses and jangly pop, but everything is tightly arranged by the classically-trained Campbell.
- The mood is intimate and late night; a chanteuse in a little club somewhere with a piano trio augmented by sax, vibes and guitar.
- But what really draws the 26-year-old Ryan these days is performing live in that domain of glamorous but faded chanteuses - cabaret.
- ‘Our stories are very different,’ acknowledges the Montreal-born chanteuse.
- Wise young chanteuses seem to be very much in vogue right now.
Synonyms singer, vocalist, soloist, songstress, crooner, warbler, melodist, artiste
OriginFrench, from chanter ‘sing’. |