See Also: sarabande(encyclopedia)

ag- (iou) and sarabande (sh)


ag- (iou)



ag- prefix (not productive).
Assim. form of Latin AD- before g. In Old French, Latin agg- was reduced to ag-, which appears in Middle English adoptions, but in later French, and hence in English, agg- was restored by Latinization, as aggrandize, aggrieve, except in agree.

sarabande (sh)




Stately processional Dance in triple metre popular in the French court and throughout Europe in the 17th-18th century.

Of Spanish or Mexican origin, it began as a vigorous Dance, set to lively Music and castanets, for a double line of couples. At first considered improper, it was forbidden in Spain in 1583. In the early 17th century it was modified to its slow, dignified court version in France and Italy. The slow sarabande, usually with an accented dotted note on the second beat, became a standard movement of the baroque suite.