fugue

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , from , from ; compare 🇨🇬. Apparently from the metaphor that the first part starts alone on its course, and is pursued by later parts.

Noun

 * 1)  A contrapuntal piece of music wherein a particular melody is played in a number of voices, each voice introduced in turn by playing the melody.
 * 2) Anything in literature, poetry, film, painting, etc., that resembles a fugue in structure or in its elaborate complexity and formality.
 * 3)  A fugue state.
 * 1)  A fugue state.

Translations

 * Arabic: فُوغَا, فُوغَا
 * Armenian:
 * Azerbaijani: fuqa
 * Belarusian: фуга
 * Bulgarian:
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech:
 * Danish: fuga
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: fugo
 * Estonian: fuuga
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Friulian: fughe
 * Georgian: ფუგა
 * German:
 * Greek: ,
 * Hebrew:
 * Hungarian:
 * Icelandic: fúga
 * Ido:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: 遁走曲, フーガ
 * Korean: 푸가
 * Latin: contrāpunctus
 * Latvian:
 * Lithuanian: fuga
 * Occitan: fuga
 * Persian: فوگ
 * Piedmontese:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:
 * Slovak: fúga
 * Slovene: fuga
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Thai:
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian:
 * Vietnamese: tẩu pháp
 * Walloon:


 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Russian:
 * Slovene: fuga

Verb

 * 1) To improvise, in singing, by introducing vocal ornamentation to fill gaps etc.
 * 2)  To spend time in a dissociative fugue state.

Noun

 * 1)  a fugue state

Etymology 1
Inflected forms of fuguer.

Etymology 2
..

Noun

 * 1)  running away (from a place where one was staying)

Synonyms

 * : flight, fleeing