chanter

Etymology
From, from , from ; equivalent to. Compare 🇨🇬. .

Noun

 * 1) One who chants or sings.
 * 2) A priest who sings in a chantry.
 * 3) The pipe of a bagpipe on which the melody is played.
 * 4) * 1860s, anon, Lanigan's Ball (song)
 * the piper was near being strangled / They squeezed up his pipes, bellows, chanters and all.
 * 1) The hedge sparrow.
 * 2)  One who sells horses fraudulently, exaggerating their merits.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: псалт
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Irish: cantaire
 * Middle English: chauntour
 * Ottoman Turkish: شرقیجی
 * Portuguese:


 * Portuguese:


 * Bulgarian:
 * Finnish: melodiapilli
 * French:
 * German: Melodiepfeife
 * Hungarian: szólamsíp
 * Italian: canna della melodia
 * Portuguese:
 * Scottish Gaelic: feadan
 * Spanish:


 * French: (1),  (1)

Etymology
, from, from.

Verb

 * 1)  to sing
 * 2) to crow
 * 1) to crow
 * 1) to crow
 * 1) to crow

Etymology
From.

Verb

 * 1) to sing

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , from.

Verb

 * 1)  to sing

Etymology
From. First known attestation ca. 980 as.

Verb

 * 1) to pray (to God)
 * 2) to sing
 * 3) to retell, to recount