See also: Connaisseur

English edit

Etymology edit

Either a borrowing of the French connaisseur (literally knower, one who knows) or an updating of the earlier borrowing, connoisseur, to bring it into line with modern French orthography.

Noun edit

connaisseur (plural connaisseurs)

  1. A specialist of a given field, especially in one of the fine arts or in a matter of taste: a connoisseur.
    • 1847, L. Piale (publisher), Guide to Naples and Sicily, Part I: Naples, page 42
      The gallery of Prince Valsavoja contains about 100 pictures several of which deserve the attention of the artist and connaisseur.
    • 1890, James Knowles, ed, The Nineteenth Century: a monthly review (July–December 1890), page 579
      They pass their Sundays agreeably, in complete repose: seated outside their doors, dressed in the best clothes, and displaying, with serene satisfaction, the many rings, pendants, and huge earrings of rare beauty, inherited for many past generations, and wich possess an individual character that the connaisseur at once recognises.
    • 1994, Yirmiyahu Yovel, Gideon Segal, ed, Spinoza on Knowledge and the Human Mind: Papers Presented at the Second Jerusalem Conference, page xii:
      The support of Mr. Albert Igoin, a Spinoza reader and connaisseur of long date, is particularly appreciated.
    • 2004, Arthur Hartkamp, Carla Joustra, Towards a European Civil Code: Third Fully Revised and Expanded Edition, Kluwer Law International, a footnote on page 159:
      But it needed a connaisseur of Roman law, namely Wolfgang Ernst, Bonn/Cambridge, to remind me that justum facere is the common root of Recht-Fertigung and justification.

Synonyms edit

Coordinate terms edit

Anagrams edit

French edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From connaître +‎ -eur.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /kɔ.nɛ.sœʁ/, /kɔ.ne.sœʁ/
  • (file)

Noun edit

connaisseur m (plural connaisseurs, feminine connaisseuse)

  1. connoisseur

Descendants edit

  • German: Connaisseur

Further reading edit