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swan song. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
Calque of German Schwanenlied[1](from Schwan + Lied) or Schwanengesang;[2] from the belief that the mute swan sings before dying.
Pronunciation
Noun
swan song (plural swan songs)
- (idiomatic) A final performance or accomplishment, especially one before retirement.
1837, Thomas Carlyle, chapter VIII, in The French Revolution: A History , volume I (The Bastille), London: Chapman and Hall, →OCLC, book II (The Paper Age):Yet, on the whole, our good Saint-Pierre is musical, poetical though most morbid: we will call his Book the swan-song of old dying France.
1916, Albert Bigelow Paine, The Boys' Life of Mark Twain:"A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" […] —a pretentious volume which Mark Twain really considered his last. "It's my swan-song, my retirement from literature permanently," he wrote Howells, though certainly he was young, fifty-four, to have reached this conclusion.
2020 November 9, Gwen Ihnat, “With McCartney III, Paul McCartney offers lessons from a legendary life”, in The A.V. Club:[…] McCartney III could mark the end of his recording career. For a musician as continually prolific as McCartney (this is his 18th solo record), that seems unlikely. But if it is indeed a swan song, McCartney III will stand as a proper coda for the singer-songwriter we’ve been listening to for fifty-odd years: sentimental yet strong, a bit wistful, but as always, looking ahead.
2021 July 22, Philip Oltermann, “Merkel’s political and scientific sides slug it out in swan song presser”, in The Guardian:Merkel’s political and scientific sides slug it out in swan song presser [title]
2022 October 22, Wendy Ide, quoting Steven Spielberg, “‘It’s a way to bring my mum and dad back’: Steven Spielberg on the new wave of cine-memoirs”, in The Guardian:[S]pielberg was keen to stress that The Fabelmans is not a full stop: “It is not because I decided to retire, and this is my swan song, don’t believe that.”
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