minstrel in Vietnamese

@minstrel /'minstrəl/
* danh từ
- (sử học) người hát vè rong (thời Trung cổ)
- nhà thơ; nhạc sĩ, ca sĩ
- (số nhiều) đoàn người hát rong
@Chuyên ngành kỹ thuật
@Lĩnh vực: xây dựng
-hát rong

Sentence patterns related to "minstrel"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "minstrel" from the English - Vietnamese Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "minstrel", or refer to the context using the word "minstrel" in the English - Vietnamese Dictionary.

1. This isn't a minstrel show.

Đây không phải gánh hát rong!

2. But now bring me a minstrel.

3. The end man in a minstrel show.

4. The Negro minstrel is touring the country.

5. Minstrel shows included music, dance and comedy.

6. I'm getting tired of this little minstrel act.

Chị khó chịu với cái thái độ dân chơi đó rồi.

7. The minstrel stopped singing abruptly, and went outside.

8. They hired a minstrel for her birthday party.

9. The young minstrel had a rare, rich voice. Sentencedict.com

10. I shall run off with the first strolling minstrel!

11. By the middle of the century, Blackface minstrel shows had

12. You recall what that minstrel told us some weeks back, Ralf?

13. There was a minstrel sitting on a stool by the yurt wall.

14. The origins of Blackface date back to the minstrel shows of mid-19th

15. Well, one time, he gave it to the next minstrel down the street.

Có lần ngài ấy đưa số tiền cho một tay hát rong khác.

16. The minstrel travelled about the country singing songs and poems written by him.

17. The cast's sole survivor from the great Minstrel days says that's a shame.

18. Blackface minstrelsy, indigenous American theatrical form that constituted a subgenre of the minstrel show

19. She was lead singer in the Black and White Minstrel Show during the 70s.

20. Synonyms for Balladeer include troubadour, singer, musician, jongleur, songster, vocalist, bard, minstrel, joculator and trouveur

21. The first of all the negro minstrel shows came to town, and made a sensation.

22. Alfred the Great acted as his own spy, visiting Danish camps disgused as a minstrel.

23. Minstrel shows drew a good audience and visiting theater companies played at the Brooks Opera House.

24. Beloved traditional jazz Banjoist and “Manhattan Minstrel” Eddy Davis died of Covid-19 on April 7th

25. Till the gentle breath o 'spring Blaws the icy fields awa', The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume V

26. Aprowl on the pitiless four, lad! 1920, Marian Storm, “A Woodland Valentine” in Minstrel Weather, New York: Harper, p

27. As the book opens, his latest target is an Atlanta office building, whose security the Wind Minstrel easily defeats.

28. Based on the Busker's gear it can be assumed unlike the minstrel they lack formal education and are a vagrant.

29. The Bards regrouped around their original English poet and minstrel theme and decided they would literally put poetry to music

30. Lou Holtz is an itinerant minstrel, his hand out for a few more coins to sing his song at another stop.

31. For ten minutes he becomes a wandering minstrel, illuminated by the bass-player following him with a torch from the stage.

32. Http://flixdump.com/movie-67481-Download-Bamboozled.htmA frustrated African American TV writer proposes a blackface minstrel show in protest, but to his chag

33. The history of Blackface is long and complex, and deeply ingrained in our culture – in vaudeville and minstrel shows and in movies

34. ↑ The "Advowry," as it was called, over the Cheshire minstrels lasted until 1756, when the latest minstrel court was held at Chester

35. Blackface as entertainment emerged from 19th-century minstrel shows that featured white actors in dark makeup, playing characters who embodied stereotypical depictions of African Americans

36. ‘Bamboozled’ is the Forgotten Gem in Spike Lee’s Career A new Criterion Collection edition of the 2000 film—about a primetime TV minstrel show that becomes a …

37. Merriam Webster defines Blackface as, “dark makeup worn (as by a performer in a minstrel show) in a caricature of the appearance of a black person,” or “a

38. “Aunt Jemima” was a minstrel show character developed during the mid-1850s by a white male in blackface dressed as a black woman, designed to entertain white audiences.

39. Minstrel shows with white performers in Blackface became widespread in popular culture, a form of entertainment that also functioned to dehumanize African Americans and sought to legitimize slavery and oppression.

40. The rugged Blackface character “Jim Crow” was inspired by a black stablehand's eccentric song and dance, Rice's “Jump Jim Crow” was a national sensation, and launched the minstrel craze in the 1830s

41. Similarly, a steward creating a reception for a visiting liege lord would need at least a month to properly prepare ... but, a minstrel might come up with a bawdy song in an afternoon.

42. Minstrel shows helped shape American entertainment, historians acknowledge, but also Belittled and dehumanized blacks as “other.” Washington Post Nov 11, 2015 Her late husband, Walter, Belittled her and preyed on his young female assistants

43. The phrase "Jim Crow" was drawn from a stock character in "minstrel" (vaudeville) shows of the time, in which a white singer and actor would put on black makeup to look like a black man.

44. 1885, Gilbert and Sullivan, “Act 1”, in The Mikado: A wandering minstrel I — / A thing of shreds and patches, / Of Ballads, songs and snatches, / And dreamy lullaby! The poet composed a Ballad praising the heroic exploits of

45. “The wretch, Concentred all in self, Living, shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust, from whence he sprung, Unwept, unhonored, and unsung.” ― Walter Scott, The Lay of the Last Minstrel 1805

46. Coon, a racial slur, used pejoratively to refer to a dark-skinned person of African, Australian Aboriginal, or Pacific island heritage, in usage mainly from the late 19th century until the 1970s Coon Carnival, the original name for the Kaapse Klopse, a yearly minstrel festival in Cape Town, South Africa