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pasticcio
[ pa-stee-choh; Italian pahs-teet-chaw ]
noun
- a pastiche.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of pasticcio1
Example Sentences
Baroque opera lends itself to the genre better than most styles, from the “pasticcio†of yore, which recycled pre-existing works, to “The Enchanted Island†in 2011, a Metropolitan Opera commission in which the librettist Jeremy Sams inserted music by Handel, Vivaldi, Rameau and others into a plot borrowed from Shakespeare plays.
“A messâ€, “disorderâ€, “confusionâ€, “unclear†are some of the words that come up when you look to translate the word pasticcio.
He sat working out what it costs to make a pasticcio di pasta; peas and bechamel for four.
A player’s individual move is a numero, his error or lapse in judgment is a pasticcio, or “pasticheâ€, while his shot on goal is a conclusione, which, should he miss, is considered fallita, or “failedâ€, the same word Italians use to describe bankruptcy.
She showed her how to make pasticcio.
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