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confiner. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
confiner, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
confiner in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
confiner you have here. The definition of the word
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confiner, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology 1
From confine (verb) + -er.
Noun
confiner (plural confiners)
- One who, or that which, limits or restrains.
1794, Jonathan Scott, transl., Ferishta’s History of Dekkan from the First Mahummedan Conquests, volume I, Shrewsbury, page 311:[…] as he attended him through the streets, the common people, and even women, uttered loud exclamations of abuse against him, calling him the murderer of syeds, and confiner of Chaund Sultana.
1816, Barbara Hofland, chapter 2, in The Affectionate Brothers, volume 2, London: A.K. Newman, pages 40–41:[…] I hope to gain a friend in you, and that will surely repay, a thousand times, the exertions I have at length happily made to terminate your captivity, which has, I know, been continued, rather from the obstinacy and idleness of your confiners, than any remaining malice against your country, or suspicions of yourself.
1876, C. Henri Leonard, chapter 11, in A Manual of Bandaging Adapted for Self-Instruction, Detroit: Daily Post, page 122:The narrow adhesive strips […] are then applied spirally about the leg, as confiners.
- 2016, “Last Chance for Animals’ Investigation Leads to Animal Cruelty Charges for Marineland Canada,” Press Release dated 4 December, 2016,
- The undercover investigation exposed inadequate treatment, housing, and care of marine mammals at Marineland, the world’s largest confiner of beluga whales.
Etymology 2
From confine (noun) + -er.
Noun
confiner (plural confiners) (obsolete)
- A person who lives on the confines, boundary or edge; a neighbour.
- 1599, Samuel Daniel, The Civil Wars of England, Book 1, Stanza 18, in Poeticall Essayes, London: Simon Waterson, p. 4,
- So did the worldes proud Mistres Rome at first
- Striue with a hard beginning, warr’d with need;
- Forcing her strong Confiners to the worst,
- And in her bloud her greatnes first did breed:
1624, Henry Wotton, editor, The Elements of Architecture, collected by Henry Wotton Knight, from the Best Authors and Examples, London, Part 2, p. 88:[…] though Gladnesse, and Griefe, be opposites in Nature; yet they are such Neighbours and Confiners in Arte, that the least touch of a Pensill, will translate a Crying, into a Laughing Face […]
1629, Thomas Hobbes, transl., Eight Bookes of the Peloponnesian Warre written by Thucydides the Sonne of Olorus, London: Henry Seile, Book 3, p. 197:For being Confiners on the Aetolians, and vsing the same manner of arming, it was thought it would bee a matter of great vtility in the Warre, to haue them in their Armie; for that they knew their manner of fight, and were acquainted with the Country.
1683, Thomas Browne, Certain Miscellany Tracts, London: Charles Mearn, Tract 12, page 187:[…] he would soon endeavour to have Ports upon that Sea, as not wanting Materials for Shipping. And […] may be a terrour unto the confiners on that Sea, and to Nations which now conceive themselves safe from such an Enemy.
- 1697, Thomas d’Urfey, The Intrigues of Versailles, London: F. Saunders et al., Act IV, Scene 2, p. ,
- darkness is naturally a confiner of fancy; and my Muse has taught me just as people do Starlings: I sing always best when I’ve least light
- A person who lives within the confines; an inhabitant.
1611 April (first recorded performance), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Cymbeline”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (First Folio), London: Isaac Iaggard, and Ed Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, :The senate hath stirr’d up the confiners
And gentlemen of Italy, most willing spirits,
That promise noble service […]
- A prisoner incarcerated for a set term.
- 1819, Joseph John Gurney, Notes on a Visit Made to Some of the Prisons in Scotland and the North of England in Company with Elizabeth Fry, London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown, p. 64,
- Lancaster Castle contains two classes of prisoners; first, the untried, and those sentenced to death or transportation; and secondly, confiners,—persons sent hither for terms of imprisonment and labour.
French
Pronunciation
Verb
confiner
- to confine
- to border (on)
Conjugation
infinitive
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simple
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confiner
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compound
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avoir + past participle
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present participle or gerund1
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simple
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confinant /kɔ̃.fi.nɑ̃/
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compound
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ayant + past participle
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past participle
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confiné /kɔ̃.fi.ne/
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singular
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plural
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first
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second
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third
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first
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second
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third
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indicative
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je (j’)
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tu
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il, elle, on
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nous
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vous
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ils, elles
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(simple tenses)
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present
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confine /kɔ̃.fin/
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confines /kɔ̃.fin/
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confine /kɔ̃.fin/
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confinons /kɔ̃.fi.nɔ̃/
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confinez /kɔ̃.fi.ne/
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confinent /kɔ̃.fin/
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imperfect
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confinais /kɔ̃.fi.nɛ/
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confinais /kɔ̃.fi.nɛ/
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confinait /kɔ̃.fi.nɛ/
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confinions /kɔ̃.fi.njɔ̃/
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confiniez /kɔ̃.fi.nje/
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confinaient /kɔ̃.fi.nɛ/
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past historic2
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confinai /kɔ̃.fi.ne/
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confinas /kɔ̃.fi.na/
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confina /kɔ̃.fi.na/
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confinâmes /kɔ̃.fi.nam/
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confinâtes /kɔ̃.fi.nat/
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confinèrent /kɔ̃.fi.nɛʁ/
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future
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confinerai /kɔ̃.fin.ʁe/
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confineras /kɔ̃.fin.ʁa/
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confinera /kɔ̃.fin.ʁa/
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confinerons /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɔ̃/
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confinerez /kɔ̃.fin.ʁe/
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confineront /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɔ̃/
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conditional
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confinerais /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɛ/
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confinerais /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɛ/
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confinerait /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɛ/
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confinerions /kɔ̃.fi.nə.ʁjɔ̃/
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confineriez /kɔ̃.fi.nə.ʁje/
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confineraient /kɔ̃.fin.ʁɛ/
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(compound tenses)
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present perfect
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present indicative of avoir + past participle
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pluperfect
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imperfect indicative of avoir + past participle
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past anterior2
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past historic of avoir + past participle
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future perfect
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future of avoir + past participle
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conditional perfect
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conditional of avoir + past participle
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subjunctive
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que je (j’)
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que tu
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qu’il, qu’elle
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que nous
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que vous
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qu’ils, qu’elles
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(simple tenses)
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present
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confine /kɔ̃.fin/
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confines /kɔ̃.fin/
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confine /kɔ̃.fin/
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confinions /kɔ̃.fi.njɔ̃/
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confiniez /kɔ̃.fi.nje/
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confinent /kɔ̃.fin/
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imperfect2
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confinasse /kɔ̃.fi.nas/
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confinasses /kɔ̃.fi.nas/
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confinât /kɔ̃.fi.na/
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confinassions /kɔ̃.fi.na.sjɔ̃/
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confinassiez /kɔ̃.fi.na.sje/
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confinassent /kɔ̃.fi.nas/
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(compound tenses)
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past
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present subjunctive of avoir + past participle
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pluperfect2
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imperfect subjunctive of avoir + past participle
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imperative
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–
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tu
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–
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nous
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vous
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–
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simple
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—
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confine /kɔ̃.fin/
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—
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confinons /kɔ̃.fi.nɔ̃/
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confinez /kɔ̃.fi.ne/
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—
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compound
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—
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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—
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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simple imperative of avoir + past participle
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—
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1 The French gerund is usable only with the preposition en.
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2 In less formal writing or speech, these tenses may be found to have been replaced in the following way:
- past historic → present perfect
- past anterior → pluperfect
- imperfect subjunctive → present subjunctive
- pluperfect subjunctive → past subjunctive
(Christopher Kendris , Master the Basics: French, pp. 77, 78, 79, 81).
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Further reading