goliard — ● goliard nom masculin (ancien français goliart, débauché, peut être de gole, gueule) Au Moyen Âge, clerc indiscipliné qui vivait en marge des lois de l Église. ⇒GOLIARD, subst. masc. HIST. (XIVe XVe s.). Clerc étudiant pauvre, en marge de l… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Goliard — Gol iard (g[=o]l y[ e]rd), n. [From OF. goliart glutton, buffoon, riotous student, Goliard, LL. goliardus, prob. fr. L. gula throat. Cf. {Gules}.] A buffoon in the Middle Ages, who attended rich men s tables to make sport for the guests by ribald … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
goliard — [gōl′yərd] n. [contr. < ME goliardeis (< OFr goliardois) & OFr goliart, glutton < gole (< L gula: see GULLET) + art, ARD] any of a class of wandering students of the late Middle Ages who wrote satirical Latin verse and often served as … English World dictionary
goliard — goliardery /gohl yahr deuh ree/, n. goliardic, adj. /gohl yeuhrd/, n. (sometimes cap.) one of a class of wandering scholar poets in Germany, France, and England, chiefly in the 12th and 13th centuries, noted as the authors of satirical Latin… … Universalium
Goliard — The Goliards were a group of clergy who wrote bibulous, satirical Latin poetry in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. They were mainly clerical students at the universities of France, Germany, Italy, and England who protested the growing… … Wikipedia
Goliard — Le Carmina Burana est une chanson écrite par les Goliards et découverte dans le Monastère de Benediktbeuern. Les Goliards étaient des clercs itinérants (clerici vagi) qui écrivaient des chansons à boire et des poèmes satiriques en latin aux… … Wikipédia en Français
Goliard — Go|li|ard, Go|li|ar|de, der; ...den, ...den [frz. goliard < afrz. goliart, zu: gole = Schnauze < lat. gula = Kehle, Gurgel]: umherziehender, kirchenfeindlicher französischer Kleriker u. Scholar bes. des 13. Jahrhunderts … Universal-Lexikon
Goliard — Go|li|ard, Go|li|’ar|de der; ...den, ...den <über gleichbed. fr. goliard aus altfr. goliart, wohl zu gole »Schnauze«, dies aus lat. gula »Kehle, Gurgel«> umherziehender franz. Kleriker u. Scholar, bes. des 13. Jh.s; vgl. ↑Vagant … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
goliard — noun Etymology: Middle French Date: 15th century a wandering student of the 12th or 13th century given to the writing of satiric Latin verse and to convivial living and minstrelsy • goliardic adjective … New Collegiate Dictionary
goliard — noun A 12th/13th century wandering student, whose convivial lifestyle included minstrelsy and a typical satyric Latin poetry … Wiktionary