Definitions Related words Mentions
We found 2 dictionaries that define the word The Four Musketeers:

General (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. The Four Musketeers (musical), The Four Musketeers (tennis), The Four Musketeers, The Four Musketeers: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia

Definitions from Wikipedia (The Four Musketeers)

noun:  The Four Musketeers, named after a 1921 film adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' novel,Chris Bowers, "The New Musketeers", Davis Cup News, February 27, 2009 were French tennis players who were top competitors of the game during the second half of the 1920s and early 1930s, winning 18 Grand Slam singles titles and 13 Grand Slam doubles.
noun:  (also known as The Four Musketeers (The Revenge of Milady)) a 1974 British swashbuckler film that serves as a sequel to the 1973 film The Three Musketeers, and covers the second half of Dumas' 1844 novel The Three Musketeers.
noun:  The Four Musketeers! is a musical with a score by Laurie Johnson and lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer.
noun:  a 1934 German drama film directed by Heinz Paul and starring Fritz Kampers, Paul Westermeier and Erhard Siedel.
noun:  (Italian: I quattro moschettieri) a 1936 Italian adventure film directed by Carlo Campogalliani.
noun:  a 1963 Italian-French adventure-comedy film co-written and directed by Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia and starring Aldo Fabrizi, Erminio Macario and Nino Taranto.


Words similar to The Four Musketeers

Usage examples for The Four Musketeers

Idioms related to The Four Musketeers

Wikipedia articles (New!)

Words that often appear near The Four Musketeers

Rhymes of The Four Musketeers

Invented words related to The Four Musketeers




Home   Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Word games   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Random word   Help


Color thesaurus

Use OneLook to find colors for words and words for colors

See an example

Literary notes

Use OneLook to learn how words are used by great writers

See an example

Word games

Try our innovative vocabulary games

Play Now

Read the latest OneLook newsletter issue: Compound Your Joy