bigophone
English
Etymology
From Bigot + -phone (after its French inventor Romain Bigot).
Noun
bigophone (plural bigophones)
- (music) Any of a series of cheap musical instruments, made to resemble orchestral instruments, that were blown in the manner of a kazoo
- 1978, Jan Romein, The Watershed of Two Eras: Europe in 1900, page 303:
- Elsewhere, professionals could enthuse over new precision instruments capable, for instance, of measuring weights down to a tenth of a milligram, or over a host of self-registering thermometers and barometers, microscopes, typewriters, calculators and all sorts of technical and musical devices, including automatic concertinas, edeophones, auto-harps, bigophones and other long-forgotten objects.
Translations
Translations
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French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bi.ɡɔ.fɔn/
Audio (file)
Noun
bigophone m (plural bigophones)
- (music) bigophone
- (France, slang) telephone
- 1959, Frédéric Dard (San-Antonio), Tout le plaisir est pour moi, Fleuve Noir, page 13:
- À l’instant où je me lève pour mettre ces modestes projets à exécution, le bigophone joue le refrain de Dring-dring et je décroche.
- The moment I get up to put these modest plans into action, the telephone plays the chorus of Ring-ring and I pick up.
- 1959, Frédéric Dard (San-Antonio), Tout le plaisir est pour moi, Fleuve Noir, page 13:
Derived terms
Further reading
- “bigophone”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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