Fanfare

来自Big Physics

google

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mid 18th century: from French, ultimately of imitative origin.


Ety img fanfare.png

wiktionary

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Borrowed from French fanfare.


etymonline

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fanfare (n.)

c. 1600, "a flourish sounded on a trumpet or bugle," from French fanfare "a sounding of trumpets" (16c.), from fanfarer "blow a fanfare" (16c.), perhaps echoic, or perhaps borrowed (with Spanish fanfarron "braggart," and Italian fanfano "babbler") from Arabic farfar "chatterer," of imitative origin. French fanfaron also came into English 1670s with a sense "boastful."