rebetiko

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Greek ρεμπέτικο (rempétiko, rebetiko).

Noun

rebetiko (countable and uncountable, plural rebetika)

  1. (music) A Greek urban folk song, characterised by lyrics about underworld activity, and played generally on stringed instruments including the bouzouki. [from 20th c.]
    • 1994, Louis de Bernières, Captain Corelli's Mandolin:
      I need another player to put a Greek melody over the top, perhaps a rebetiko of some sort.
  2. (music, in the plural) This style of music; such music as a genre. [from 20th c.]
    • 2019, Roderick Beaton, Greece: Biography of a Modern Nation, Penguin, published 2020, page 172:
      At the time, these earliest songs of the rebetika tradition were a symptom and a particular manifestation of a wider climate of violence, criminality and despair, whether real or imagined, that permeated the Greek capital around the turn of the century.

Translations

Further reading

Turkish

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɾɛbɛtikɔ]
  • Hyphenation: re‧be‧ti‧ko

Noun

rebetiko

  1. rebetiko

Declension

Inflection
Nominative rebetiko
Definite accusative rebetikoyu
Singular Plural
Nominative rebetiko rebetikolar
Definite accusative rebetikoyu rebetikoları
Dative rebetikoya rebetikolara
Locative rebetikoda rebetikolarda
Ablative rebetikodan rebetikolardan
Genitive rebetikonun rebetikoların
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