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cabaletta

American  
[kab-uh-let-uh, kah-buh-, kah-bah-let-tah] / ˌkæb əˈlɛt ə, ˌkɑ bə-, ˌkɑ bɑˈlɛt tɑ /

noun

plural

cabalettas, cabalette
  1. a short, operatic aria of simple form and style.


Etymology

Origin of cabaletta

1835–45; < Italian, alteration of coboletta stanza, diminutive of cob ( b ) ola, cobla stanza, couplet < Old Provençal cobla < Latin cōpula bond; see copula

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

As she scrabbled for a laser pointer in her large handbag, her coloratura was comically on point, though she was inaudible in her middle range during the cabaletta.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 1, 2025

An associate director an ocean away didn’t realize he also planned to perform the cabaletta, the faster-moving second part.

From Washington Times • Apr. 26, 2020

She made a tremendous impact in her multisectional final scene, in which Gemma sings of entering a convent, then reacts with horror to Tamas’s crime in a final cabaletta of despair.

From New York Times • Sep. 20, 2011

Every cabaletta or other quick number is abridged, usually drastically, which upsets the balance between fast and slow tempos.

From New York Times • Apr. 12, 2011

In this cabaletta we noticed a tendency to show off vocal gifts which may be just a little out of place.

From The Mapleson Memoirs, vol II 1848-1888 by Mapleson, James H.