Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "A male character in French pantomime ", 7 letters:
pierrot

Alternative clues for the word pierrot

Word definitions for pierrot in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of Pierrot English)

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
stock character in French pantomime, in English, "a buffoon," from French Pierrot , diminutive of Pierre ; considered a typical name of a French peasant.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Pierrot , born Tamás Zoltán Marosi (3 September 1969, in Budapest , Hungary ) is a Hungarian pop singer, game designer, musician and producer, best known internationally for his video game series AGON (Ancient Games Of Nations) and Yoomurjak's Ring . He ...

Usage examples of pierrot.

If chance had not made you take the convent gondola, if you had not had the strange idea of assuming the disguise of Pierrot, I should not have known who you were, for my friends in the convent would not have been interested in you.

All these arrangements being made, I determined to disguise myself as Pierrot.

That did not prevent my respectable protector from laughing at the sight of the costume of Pierrot lying on the sofa.

One of them has just told me that Pierrot, having spent the night at the Briati ball, did not find any gondola to return to Venice, and that our gondoliers took him for a sequin.

I decided upon the costume of a Pierrot, because it conceals the form and the gait better than any other.

I have said before that the dress of a Pierrot is the costume which disguises the figure and the gait most completely.

I had to take a decision, for I could not pass the whole night in my costume of Pierrot, and without speaking.

Elaine stood in the ball-room surrounded by a laughing jostling throng of pierrots, jockeys, Dresden-china shepherdesses, Roumanian peasant-girls and all the lively make-believe creatures that form the ingredients of a fancy-dress ball.

I entered the ball-room, and as there were a score of Pierrots nobody noticed me.

Groups of English and American students in their irreproachable evening attire, groups of French students in someone else's doubtful evening attire, crowds of rustling silken dominoes, herds of crackling muslin dominoes, countless sad-faced Pierrots, fewer sad-faced Capuchins, now and then a slim Mephistopheles, now and then a fat, stolid Turk, 'Arry, Tom, and Billy, redolent of plum pudding and Seven Dials, Gontran, Gaston and Achille, savoring of brasseries and the Sorbonne.

Out of breath, I threw myself on a sofa, pretending to go to sleep, and the moment I began to snore everybody respected the slumbers of Pierrot.

I made the tailor get me a new Pierrot costume, which I placed with the others, and with two new purses, in each of which I placed five hundred sequins, I repaired to the pastrycook's before seven o'clock.

I put away the cheque, and after shaking him by the hand, I got up and rolled away in true Pierrot fashion, and after making the tour of the ball-room I went to a box on the third tier of which I had given the key to the young officer, and there I found my beggars.

We amused ourselves in talking over past dangers, Pierrot's disguise, and the ball at Briati, where she had been told that another Pierrot had made his appearance.