A medieval Italian lyric poem, with five or six stanzas and a shorter concluding stanza (or envoy) The poets Petrarch and Dante Alighieri were masters of the canzone
{i} (Music) type of song that was used in the period from the 16th to the early 18th-centuries which is similar to a madrigal (also canzona)
A medieval Italian or Provençal lyric poem of varying stanzaic form, usually with a concluding short stanza or envoi Sidelight: Milton's pastoral elegy, Lycidas, is an example in English poetry of a canzone-like structure (Compare Ghazal, Melic Verse, Ode, Romance, Society Verse)
hendecasyllabic lines in stanza form William Drummond of Hawthornden adapted the canzone to English
A song or air for one or more voices, of Provençal origin, resembling, though not strictly, the madrigal
italyan tarzı bestelenmiş bir çeşit lirik şiir
Hyphenation
i·tal·yan tar·zı bes·te·len·miş bir çe·şit li·rik şi·ir