English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From French connaisseuse.

Noun edit

connaisseuse (plural connaisseuses)

  1. female equivalent of connaisseur
    • 1857, “The Truffle-Hound”, in William Chambers, Robert Chambers, editors, Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science and Arts, volume VI, London: W. & R. Chambers [] and [] Edinburgh, page 245:
      ‘It is true, your eminence; for I not only saw it, but ate of it myself.’ ‘At whose table?’ ‘At the Comtesse de la Ferté’s. When cut into slices, it filled the air with a delicious fragrance, and was veined and clouded like the richest marble!’ ‘Madame de la Ferté is a connaisseuse,’ observed Mazarin.
    • a. 1862, Theodore Winthrop, Edwin Brothertoft, 3rd edition, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor and Fields, published 1862, page 260:
      “You do look just like an angel, Miss Lucy,” Abby Dewitt asseverated, with the air of a connaisseuse in the article .
    • 1878 June, the Author of “Skeleton Keys,” &c., “Hunstead Priors”, in The Kentish Magazine: A Literary Monthly Miscellany for the County, number II, Maidstone: Burgiss-Brown, []; London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co., [], chapter IV (Filaments), page 90:
      Save these and one fair-sized palm in the centre, all the other plants are ferns in infinite variety, Mrs. St. John being a connaisseuse in that branch of horticulture.
    • 1888, Julian Corbett, “Kophetua the Thirteenth. A Romance.”, in Time: A Monthly Magazine of Current Topics, Literature, & Art, volume VIII, London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., [], XX (Players), page 613:
      “You are right, Bocco,” answered Frampa, with the air of a connaisseuse who does not praise lightly.
    • 1896 October, Tighe Hopkins, “Bicêtre”, in The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, volume LXIV, New York, N.Y.: E. R. Pelton, [], page 457:
      It was a declaration of much in little, and Marion, a connaisseuse of such speeches, absolved and accepted him with a kiss.
    • 1900, Edwin Howland Blashfield, Evangeline Wilbour Blashfield, Italian Cities, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, part II, page 264:
      She had Leonardo for her visitor, and Titian for her portrait painter, and, to her honor as a connaisseuse, she recognized the talent of a Correggio when a Bembo, with all his assumption of art knowledge, passed him by unheeding.
    • 1902, Charles Theodore Murray, Mlle. Fouchette, 3rd edition, Philadelphia, Pa., London: J. B. Lippincott Company, page 295:
      “Poor me! I never tasted any better,” laughed the girl, sipping the wine with the air of a connaisseuse.
    • 1911, Edward Legge, The Comedy & Tragedy of the Second Empire: Paris Society in the Sixties; Including Letters of Napoleon III., M. Pietri, and Comte de la Chapelle, and Portraits of the Period, London, New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers, [], page 354:
      Her Imperial Majesty is a connaisseuse in precious stones of every description, especially diamonds and emeralds, of which, as well as pearls, she still possesses a large collection.
    • 1921, E. M. Delafield [pen name; Edmée Elizabeth Monica Dashwood], The Heel of Achilles, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, page 223:
      It was evidently essential that a counter-discovery should mitigate the publisher’s complacency, and sustain Lady Honoret’s reputation as a connaisseuse in the literary world.
    • 1938, H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells Wells, Apropos of Dolores, London: Jonathan Cape, [], page 189:
      A lover ceases to be a lover; he is a technician, he is a violinist under the scrutiny of a connaisseuse.
    • 1972, Vision: The European Business Magazine, page 109:
      As connaisseuses in their own right—and not just buying for their menfolk—they would talk about cigars with me. [] I feel that connaisseurs are rediscovering the large but darker, stronger maduro.
    • 1975, Catherine Aird, Slight Mourning, Bantam Books, published 1982, →ISBN, page 1:
      Miss Cynthia Paterson considered herself something of a connaisseuse of a good funeral.
    • 2002, Barbara Hambly, Wet Grave, Random House Large Print, →ISBN, page 354:
      Rose, who had undoubtedly spent many nights listening to the chatter and tales of the girls under her care at the school—to say nothing of Chighizola’s widely-varying tales about how the old pirate happened to lose his nose—nodded with the air of a connaisseuse and said, “That’s a good one.”

French edit

Pronunciation edit

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

Noun edit

connaisseuse f (plural connaisseuses)

  1. female equivalent of connaisseur

Further reading edit