Musard

Related to Musard: mustard

Mu´sard


n.1.A dreamer; an absent-minded person.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
Le Diable amoureux (Cazotte, a ballet in 1830), Robert le Diable (1831, with than 100 showings), Les trois baisers du Diable (Offenbach, Musard 1857) (Figure 3), and many operas inspired by Hoffmann's work (Figure 4) made the fantastic available to audiences who hadn't necessarily read Hoffmann's original or translated works.
Car ce soir apres la soupe Ils iront autour de Musard Et ne rentreront pas trop tard; Afin que demain l'on s'eveille Pour une existence pareille: Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si, do ...
Evesham Abbey held Weethley in the 14th century and in 1344 the Musard family raided the parish, killing three abbey servants and stealing several hundred sheep.
Ses oeuvres ressemblent a des symphonies de Berlioz exeeutees par Musard." Mesure.
It looks to me like a jab at popular orchestras such as Musard's, which were otherwise very highly regarded.
Picard, Louis-Benoit, Monsieur Musard ou Comme le temps passe (1808), comedie en un acte (14)
With: Kathleen Chalfant, Marty Pottenger, Alana Chezan, Yves Musard.
A bylined article by Francois Musard was headlined, "Ernest Hemingway who risked his life in all the great adventures of our time had arranged a rendezvous with death." L'Aurore also presented a biographical overview by Gilbert Gann.
PROSPECT (29) - Lewis 14, Tallman 4, Bennett 3, Govenor 1, Musard 1, Scriven 2, Eldrifge 2, Newcomb 2.
Of the works I saw, only Yves Musard's I Make a Motion was faintly optimistic; yet it was a benign, compositionally inchoate slide show with mime about a Lower East Side community garden.
The conspicuousness in his day of a figure such as the dance-music composer Philippe Musard is underlined by a plethora of quadrille adaptations he made of Auber melodies.