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View synonyms for

ھԳé

or ھ··

[ fee-ahn-sey, fee-ahn-sey ]

noun

  1. a woman engaged to be married.


ھԳé

/ ɪˈɒԲɪ /

noun

  1. a woman who is engaged to be married
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Gender Note

When French words describe or name people, they are inflected to match the gender of the person. To mark a noun or adjective as feminine, French adds an unaccented letter e at the end of a word. If the person engaged to be married is a man, he’s a ھԳé . The bride-to-be is a ھԳé . This distinction is usually preserved in English language use of these words: ھԳé for a man, ھԳé for a woman. However, it is also common for borrowed words to lose some foreign characteristics. This is why, for example, words like é , ھԳé , or éܳé may be written in English without accent marks. Such an omission in French would be an error, resulting in the wrong pronunciation of these words, but in English, it is acceptable to lose this foreign feature. Similarly, some English speakers will completely drop the gender agreement in the ھԳé ھԳé distinction, using ھԳé for both men and women. The prescriptive rules of English grammar do not encourage the reduction to a single form, though it is a natural phenomenon for words borrowed into English to neutralize gender markings. The adjective é presents a slightly different case. The feminine inflection of this French word is the commonly borrowed form, since women are usually the ones to distinguish their maiden names from their married ones. However, the masculine form é would be the appropriate one for a man in reference to his original last name, in the increasingly common event of the groom’s name changing with his marriage. The spelling with the extra e is the marked feminine form and should be used to name or describe a woman: é , 徱ǰé , ھԳé . If you choose to spell these French words with their accents, be sure to place them correctly. For words ending in é, the accented é is the first of the two.
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Word History and Origins

Origin of ھԳé1

First recorded in 1850–55; from French; feminine of ھԳé
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Mr Wood, who normally lives on the boat with his ھԳé and two young children, encountered his first hiccup right at the beginning of his voyage.

From

But the physiotherapist went silent on Instagram in 2023 when a popular gossip podcast shared a story about a man who had allegedly cheated on his well-known ھԳé - with enough clues to suggest the man in question was her then partner.

From

Jeeves extricates Bertie from every one of these entanglements, and thankfully so, because every ھԳé begins their relationship with the determination to toss Jeeves out on his ear.

From

For reasons too eye-rolling to explain, Min and Angela must marry and commit to the ruse when Ja-Young arrives to investigate whether her grandson’s ھԳé is a gold-digger.

From

King, pop star Katy Perry, documentarian Kerianne Flynn, Nobel Peace Prize nominee Amanda Nguyễn, aerospace engineer Aisha Bowe and Bezos’ ھԳé Lauren Sánchez comprised the largest all-woman space mission crew since Russian cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova’s 1963 solo flight.

From

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Fiancée Vs. Fiancé

’s the difference between ھԳé and ھԳé?

The word ھԳé is traditionally used to refer to the woman that a person is engaged to be married to (the bride-to-be). The word ھԳé is traditionally used to refer to the man that a person is engaged to be married to (the groom-to-be).

However, the spelling ھԳé—with just one e—is sometimes used without reference to gender.

The two words are pronounced exactly the same. Their different endings are due to the fact that they derive from French, which has grammatical gender, meaning that some words end differently depending on whether they are applied to men or women (with e being the feminine ending). This happens in a few other pairs of words in English, like blond and blonde, though in many cases the term without the e has become largely gender-neutral. This is the case with both blond and ھԳé.

Similar to some other words derived from French (like éܳé), they are sometimes written without accents, as fiance and fiancee.

Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between ھԳé and ھԳé.

Quiz yourself on ھԳé vs. ​!

True or False?

The spelling ھԳé can be used for any gender.

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ھԳéfianchetto