buisine

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Old French buisine, busine (an earlier, Middle English-era borrowing bosyne did not survive into modern English), from Latin būcina. Doublet of buccina and posaune.

Noun

buisine (plural buisines)

  1. (music, historical) A medieval wind instrument with a very long, straight and slender body, usually made of metal.
    Synonym: herald's trumpet
    Coordinate term: buccina
    • 1823, Archaeologia; Or, Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, page 155:
      It was marvellously great, and shewed such joy and satisfaction that the sound and bruit of their instruments, horns, buisines, and trumpets, were heard even as far as the castle.
    • 1860, John Hewitt, The fourteenth century, page 310:
      The clarion named in the above passages appears to have been a smaller kind of trumpet. The buisine (from buccina) was also a sort of trumpet: it was of a bent form, and made of brass.

Alternative forms

Translations

Further reading

French

Alternative forms

Etymology

Inherited from Old French buisine, from Latin būcina.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bɥi.zin/

Noun

buisine f (plural buisines)

  1. (music instrument, historical) buisine

Further reading

Old French

Etymology

From Latin būcina, with a change to stress on the last syllable (influenced by the suffix -īnus).

Noun

buisine oblique singular, f (oblique plural buisines, nominative singular buisine, nominative plural buisines)

  1. A type of trumpet used in battle.

Descendants

See also

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