conventionnel
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French conventionnel.
Noun
conventionnel (plural conventionnels)
- (history) A member of the French National Convention.
- 1979, David P Jordan, The King's Trial, University of California, published 1979, page 178:
- To calm their nerves and dispel the phantoms of their imaginations, the conventionnels proposed a series of fantastic draconian measures designed to insure tranquillity during the voting.
- 2004, David Andress, The French Revolution and the People, London, page 236:
- When the crowds burst again into the assembly hall, they bore with them on a pike the head of a conventionnel, Féraud, who had tried to bar their path.
- 2006, Howard G Brown, Ending the French Revolution, University of Virginia, published 2008, page 27:
- The Conventionnels who had voted for the measure included many who had worked closely with deputies now under arrest for their part in the Terror.
French
Etymology
From convention + -el.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɔ̃.vɑ̃.sjɔ.nɛl/
Audio (file)
Adjective
conventionnel (feminine conventionnelle, masculine plural conventionnels, feminine plural conventionnelles)
Derived terms
Descendants
- → Danish: konventionel
- → Dutch: conventioneel
- Afrikaans: konvensioneel
- → Indonesian: konvensionil
- → German: konventionell
- → Norwegian Bokmål: konvensjonell
- → Norwegian Nynorsk: konvensjonell
- → Romanian: convențional
- → Swedish: konventionell
- → Turkish: konvansiyonel
- → Yiddish: קאָנווענציאָנעל (konventsyonel)
Noun
conventionnel m (plural conventionnels, feminine conventionnelle)
- (historical) conventionalist, conventionnel
Further reading
- “conventionnel”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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