cantar, discantar (verb infinitives)
canto llano/salmo (nouns)
chant-de-noël
un chant d'oiseau, le chant des oiseaux
Yes, the word 'chant' is both a noun (chant, chants) and a verb (chant, chants, chanting, chanted). Examples:Noun: He recited a chant his mother would say to put him to sleep as a child.Verb: The crowd began to chant, 'Go, Jimmy, go!".
Chant is defined as to sing or to say something over and over again. An example of chant is to continuously shout the same cheer at a sporting event.
It is called the IPL tune. It is a spanish chant used at bull fights and is follow by a shout of "Ole" or "Hey."
Chant des anges
Chant
Yes, the word "chant" is considered an onomatopoeia because when you say it, it mimics the sound of chanting or singing in a rhythmic and repetitive manner.
REPEATING
carmen, carminis, n. - song, chant, incantation, charm
That is called a "chant" or a "repetitive phrase."
"rhyme" and 'canto', part of a poem "chant" also 'I sing' from verb (infinitive) 'cantar'