senestre
See also: sénestre
French
Alternative forms
- sénestre, senêtre
Etymology
From Middle French senestre, from Old French senestre, from Late Latin sinextrum, from Latin sinistrum. Doublet of sinistre, a borrowing from Latin.
The expected result of the Middle French senestre, pronounced approximately as /səˈnɛːtrə/, should have been senêtre in modern French (which does exist in heraldic jargon). A spelling-pronunciation, with etymologically restored /s/, came to predominate as the word became increasingly archaic, having been driven out of common usage as the word for "left" by gauche in the sixteenth century.
Pronunciation
Adjective
senestre (plural senestres)
See also
References
- “senestre”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French senestre.
Noun
senestre m (uncountable)
- left (left-hand side)
Descendants
Old French
Etymology
Inherited from Late Latin sinextrum, from Latin sinistrum.
Pronunciation
Adjective
senestre m (oblique and nominative feminine singular senestre)
- left (on the left-hand side)
Declension
| Case | masculine | feminine | neuter | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| singular | subject | senestres | senestre | senestre |
| oblique | senestre | |||
| plural | subject | senestre | senestres | |
| oblique | senestres |