Interlude Definition
ĭntər-lo͝od
interludes
noun
interludes
A short, humorous play presented between the parts of a miracle play or morality play.
Webster's New World
A short play of a sort popular in the Tudor period, either farcical or moralistic in tone and with a plot typically derived from French farce or the morality play.
Webster's New World
A 16th-century genre of comedy derived from this.
American Heritage
Intervening time or, rarely, space.
Webster's New World
Any performance between the acts of a play.
Webster's New World
Synonyms:
Antonyms:
verb
To provide with an interlude.
Wiktionary
Other Word Forms of Interlude
Noun
Singular:
interlude
Plural:
interludesOrigin of Interlude
-
Middle English enterlude a dramatic entertainment from Old French entrelude from Medieval Latin interlūdium Latin inter- inter- Latin lūdus play leid- in Indo-European roots
From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition
-
Latin inter- (“between”) + ludo (“to play”)
From Wiktionary
Interlude Is Also Mentioned In
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