All warbler synonyms
war·bler
W w noun warbler
- artist — An artist is someone who draws or paints pictures or creates sculptures as a job or a hobby.
- crooner — A crooner is a male singer who sings sentimental songs, especially the love songs of the 1930s and 1940s.
- diva — a distinguished female singer; prima donna.
- musician — a person who makes music a profession, especially as a performer of music.
- soloist — a person who performs a solo.
- vocalist — a singer.
- voice — the sound or sounds uttered through the mouth of living creatures, especially of human beings in speaking, shouting, singing, etc.
- accompanist — An accompanist is a musician, especially a pianist, who plays one part of a piece of music while someone else sings or plays the main tune.
- artiste — An artiste is a professional entertainer, for example a singer or a dancer.
- chanter — a person who chants
- chorister — A chorister is a singer in a church choir.
- minstrel — a medieval poet and musician who sang or recited while accompanying himself on a stringed instrument, either as a member of a noble household or as an itinerant troubadour.
- nightingale — Florence ("the Lady with the Lamp") 1820–1910, English nurse: reformer of hospital conditions and procedures; reorganizer of nurse's training programs.
- songbird — a bird that sings.
- songster — a person who sings; a singer.
- troubadour — one of a class of medieval lyric poets who flourished principally in southern France from the 11th to 13th centuries, and wrote songs and poems of a complex metrical form in langue d'oc, chiefly on themes of courtly love. Compare trouvère.
- chanteuse — a female singer, esp in a nightclub or cabaret
- choralist — a person who sings in a chorus or ensemble
- intoner — to utter with a particular tone or voice modulation.
- melodist — a composer or a singer of melodies.
- serenader — a complimentary performance of vocal or instrumental music in the open air at night, as by a lover under the window of his lady.
- yodeler — a song, refrain, etc., so sung.