genteel
pronunciation
How to pronounce genteel in British English: UK [dʒenˈtiːl]
How to pronounce genteel in American English: US [dʒenˈtiːl]
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- Adjective:
- marked by refinement in taste and manners
Word Origin
- genteel (adj.)
- 1590s, "fashionably elegant; suitable to polite society, characteristic of a lady or gentleman; decorous in manners or behavior," from Middle French gentil "stylish, fashionable, elegant; nice, graceful, pleasing," from Old French gentil "high-born, noble" (11c.); a reborrowing (with evolved senses) of the French word that had early come into English as gentle (q.v.), with French pronunciation and stress preserved to emphasize the distinction. The Latin source of the French word is the ancestor of English gentile, but the main modern meaning of that word is from a later Scriptural sense in Latin. See also jaunty. OED 2nd ed. reports genteel "is now used, except by the ignorant, only in mockery" (a development it dates from the 1840s).
Example
- 1. He came from a genteel family .
- 2. This , rather genteel lady wrote to the schoolmaster inquiring about the wc .
- 3. I 'd stint myself to keep you both in a genteel and seemly style .
- 4. There are not as many genteel young men in devonshire as sussex .
- 5. Their list of important sights and experiences does not resemble the genteel image that europeans have of their own homeland-it includes more duty-free shopping , for a start .