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cantor
1[ kan-ter, -tawr ]
noun
- the religious official of a synagogue who conducts the liturgical portion of a service and sings or chants the prayers and parts of prayers designed to be performed as solos.
- an official whose duty is to lead the singing in a cathedral or in a collegiate or parish church; a precentor.
Cantor
2[ kan-ter; German kahn-tawr ]
noun
- Eddie Edward Israel Iskovitz, 1892–1964, U.S. singer and entertainer.
- Ge·org [gey-, awrk], 1845–1918, German mathematician, born in Russia.
cantor
/ ˈkæntɔː /
noun
- Also calledchazan Judaism a man employed to lead synagogue services, esp to traditional modes and melodies
- Christianity the leader of the singing in a church choir
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cantor1
Example Sentences
Seven candles were lighted in honor of those who died, as well as first responders and others who helped to save victims; rabbis and cantors sang in Hebrew as the crowd held up battery-powered candles.
The first talking picture, “The Jazz Singer,” starred Al Jolson as a cantor’s son who wanted to go pop.
In Grades IV and V, they perform tests at a walk, trot, cantor and do lateral work.
Have you heard the one about the cantor who can’t sing and the retired music teacher who walk into a bar?
Born Sidney Liebowitz in New York City’s borough of Brooklyn, Lawrence was the son of a Jewish cantor who worked as a house painter.
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