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rondes

Rondes is the plural form of ronde, a term used in French and in related languages with several related but distinct meanings. The basic sense is a circular or repeating circuit, derived from the Old French ronde and ultimately from Latin rota, meaning wheel or circle. The word appears in everyday, cultural, and technical contexts.

In policing and municipal administration, rondes refer to rounds or patrols conducted by guards, police, or

In music, ronde denotes a whole note. The plural, rondes, is used when describing multiple whole notes

In cultural and folkloric contexts, la ronde can describe a circle dance or a singing game in

Overall, ronde(s) function as a versatile term spanning security patrols, music theory, and cultural practices, with

security
staff.
Night
watch
teams,
for
example,
perform
“rondes”
to
monitor
streets
and
ensure
safety.
In
everyday
language,
to
“faire
une
ronde”
can
also
mean
moving
through
a
social
circuit,
visiting
people
or
keeping
company
in
a
sequence
of
stops.
in
a
passage
or
score.
This
musical
sense
is
common
in
French-language
notation
and
instruction.
which
participants
form
a
ring
and
perform
a
repeated
musical
or
choreographic
pattern.
The
term
appears
in
literature
and
in
regional
toponymy
as
a
place-name
or
as
part
of
a
proper
noun
in
some
French-speaking
areas.
the
core
idea
of
a
circulating
or
repeating
form.