No, the word is a noun. Therefore, it does not have a past form.
It means:
1. A person who is an expert
2. Having or revealing supreme mastery or skill.
3. Genius
4. Ace
1. Hindi –Kalaapraveen vyakti
2. Spanish – Virtuoso
3. French – Virtuose
4. Mandarin – Yǎnzòu jiā
1. It was music pure, almost classical—the work not of a virtuoso, but of a composer.
2. He was a virtuoso violinist greater than anyone before him.
3. He was distinctly a virtuoso, loving his instrument and its tonal powers.
4. I prefer that no one handle it, said the virtuoso commandingly.
5. It takes on the colour of any composer’s ideas and submits like a slave to the whims of any virtuoso.Some synonyms of the word are:
magician, musician, prodigy, ace, adept, artist, artiste, authority, brain, celebrity, champ, champion, crackerjack, egghead, genius, hotshot, natural, performer, pro, professional, pundit, sharp, star, superstar, whiz, wizard, intelligent etc.
What are some antonyms of the word of the day?
Some antonyms of the word are:
amateur, ignoramus, imbecile, rookie, greenhorn, inept, inexperienced, inexpert, incapable, unskillful
Quotation:
When a pianist sits down and does a virtuoso performance he is in a technical sense transmitting more information to a machine than any other human activity involving machinery allows.
Robert Moog
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