Haydn

English

Etymology

Borrowed from German Haydn.

Proper noun

Haydn (plural Haydns)

  1. A surname from German; (music) used specifically of Franz Joseph Haydn (1732–1809), an Austrian composer of the Classical period.
    • 2014 April 18, Ruth Padel, “How to do justice to Christ's Last Words”, in The Guardian:
      Two years ago I rashly accepted a commission from Tring Chamber Music and Paul Barritt, leader of the Hallé orchestra, to write poems to read between movements of Haydn's quartet Opus 51, which meditates on Christ's "Seven Last Words". Haydn, commissioned in 1785 by Cádiz cathedral, wrote this music to go between words so it's hard to perform and listen to without some.

Derived terms

  • Haydnesque (adjective)
  • Haydnian (adjective)

Anagrams

French

Etymology

Borrowed from German Haydn.

Proper noun

Haydn ?

  1. a surname from German

German

Proper noun

Haydn m or f (proper noun, surname, masculine genitive Haydns or (with an article) Haydn, feminine genitive Haydn, plural Haydns)

  1. a surname, notably of Joseph Haydn, an 18th century Austrian composer

See also

Portuguese

Etymology

Borrowed from German Haydn.

Proper noun

Haydn m or f by sense

  1. a surname from German
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