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pudeur. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From French pudeur, from Latin pudor. Doublet of pudor.
Pronunciation
Noun
pudeur (countable and uncountable, plural pudeurs)
- A sense of modesty or reserve, especially as relating to sexual matters.
1861, Caroline Clive, chapter VII, in Why Paul Ferroll Killed His Wife, pages 137–8:Leslie felt confident enough of that also, but the pudeur of composition (when the author has written what he felt) made him shrink from so much talk about it.
1868, Paschal Beverly Randolph, chapter X, in After Death: Or, Disembodied Man, page 132:In preceding pages I have mooted a long-contested point of great importance, promising to recur it at a subsequent stage of this essay. I do so now because the pudeur of others has hitherto prevented its just discussion.
1994, Janet Lungstrum, edited by Peter J. Burgard, Nietzsche Writing Woman/Woman Writing Nietzsche: The Sexual Dialectic of Palingenesis, quoted in Nietzche and the Feminine, →ISBN, page 152:Nietzsche, the conquering Dionysus-creator, thus confesses to having the pudeurs of a blushing bride, or of his faking Weib, when she “gives herself.”
Anagrams
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin pudor (“modesty, chastity”).
Pronunciation
Noun
pudeur f (plural pudeurs)
- sense of modesty or reserve; shame
- Antonym: impudeur
- sense of decency, chastity, propriety
- 30 janvier 1901, Jules Renard, (journal):
- La rose a la couleur de la pudeur mais elle a aussi celle du mensonge.
Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams