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-euse
a suffix occurring in loanwords from French, forming feminine nouns corresponding to nouns ending in -eur: chanteuse.
51Թ History and Origins
Example Sentences
John XX, James d’Euse, born at Cahors, cardinal, bishop of Porto, elected pope at Lyons the 7th of Aug. 1316, died 4th Dec. 1334 Excommunication of the emperor Louis of Bavaria.
Having chosen Tom as their captain, the gang started for Euse bridge, at the foot of Bassenthwaite lake, which place they reached a couple of hours after nightfall.
Euse�bius, of C�sarea, the father of ecclesiastical history, a Greek writer, born in Palestine about A.D.
Frieda came to the end of the "Valse Brillante" and took up the "Ber�euse."
This is the Latin -osus; French -eux, -euse.
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When To Use
The form -euse is a suffix that marks an agent noun or, occasionally, an adjective in loanwords from French. Agent nouns are nouns that indicate a person who does an action. Broadly speaking then, -euse means "doer." The suffix -euse is relatively common in both everyday and technical terms.The suffix -euse comes from the Latin -ō, which was used to indicate agent nouns whose grammatical gender was female.The suffix -euse is the feminine-gendered variant of -eur. Although -eur is a masculine-gendered ending for agent nouns, it is often (though not always) preferred over -euse as the default in English, regardless of the subject’s gender. Some words that end with -euse, such as danseuse, are still reserved (though not without due criticism) for women.Want to know more? Read our 51Թs That Use -eur article.
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