longueur
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /lɒŋˈ(ɡ)əː/
Noun
longueur (plural longueurs)
- (authorship) A lengthy passage in a dramatic or literary work, especially a dull or tedious one; a period of boredom.
- 1998 August 17, Adam Gopnik, “Man Goes To See a Doctor”, in The New Yorker:
- Most of the reasons given for its disappearance make sense: people are happier, busier; the work done by the anti-Freudian skeptics has finally taken hold of the popular imagination, so that people have no time for analytic longueurs and no patience with its mystifications.
- 2002, Colin Jones, The Great Nation, Penguin, published 2003, page 30:
- He cultivated the aura, if not quite of the Anti-Christ, at least of an Anti-Sun King, discountenancing his uncle and shocking the dévots by preferring the intimacy and informality of a clique of drinking companions to the formal longueurs of the courtly round […] .
- 2024 April 22, Adrian Searle, “Venice Biennale 2024 review – everything everywhere all at once”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- Claire Fontaine (who are actually a duo) have queered the phrase, lending its pungency and ambiguity to a biennale that I wish were nearly so succinct. There are longueurs. There are detours and incomprehensible delays.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lɔ̃.ɡœʁ/
audio (file)
Related terms
Further reading
- “longueur”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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