Definition of "conversazione"
conversazione
noun
plural conversaziones or conversazioni
A formal gathering where something related to the arts or academia is discussed.
Quotations
Willie Redmond told of finding him [Oscar Wilde], to his astonishment, at the conversazione of some theatrical society, standing amid an infuriated crowd, mocking with more than all his old satirical wit the actors and their country.
1922, W[illiam] B[utler] Yeats, chapter II, in The Trembling of the Veil, London: Privately printed for subscribers only by T[homas] Werner Laurie, Ltd., book IV (The Tragic Generation), page 168
The one significant exception that was allowed was if an Indian habitually wore European clothes in public, then he would be allowed to wear shoes in the presence of his English masters on such occasions of western-style rituals such as the governor general's levee, a drawing room, conversazione or a ball.
1983, Bernard S. Cohn, “Representing Authority in Victorian India”, in Eric J. Hobsbawm, editor, The Invention of Tradition
He was a guest particularly sought after for conversation-assemblies, evening conversation parties, or conversaziones, which flourished in London from the 1750s into the 1780s, and which Johnson attended during the last fifteen years of his life.
1997, Catherine N. Parke, “Johnson and the arts of conversation”, in Greg Clingham, editor, The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, Cambridge University Press, page 26
(by extension) A community social gathering.
Quotations
Another form of young Victoria entertainment was the church conversazione. The Bishop opened, shut and blessed the affair but the congregation did the talking. Conversaziones were held in the church schoolroom which the ladies cut into little cubicles with benches—three sitting sides and one open. The benches were just close enough for one lady's lips to reach across confidentially to the opposite lady's ear. There was music for people who were not chatty and when everything had been done and encored tea was served.
1942, Emily Carr, “Visiting Matrons”, in The Book of Small