English edit

Verb edit

vouvoie (third-person singular simple present vouvoies, present participle vouvoying, simple past and past participle vouvoied)

  1. Alternative form of vouvoy
    • 1997 March 1, Éamonn McManus, “NO CARRIER”, in soc.motss (Usenet):
      My hairdresser does not like this, for instance, and will often vouvoie even clients younger than him if he doesn't know them. [] In the local gyms I've been to there has been a very "copain copain" ambience and tutoiement has been the rule, in the changing rooms as elsewhere. I noticed for instance that at my free trial session the personnel vouvoied me but once I had signed up I was tu. [] Alex immediately eliminated one of the suspects because the murdered woman would have vouvoied her.
    • 2007, Penelope Gardner-Chloros, “Tu/vous Choices: An ‘Act of Identity’?”, in Wendy Ayres-Bennett, Mari C. Jones, editors, The French Language and Questions of Identity (Studies in Linguistics 4), Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing, →ISBN, page 109:
      At this, Marianne makes a sudden ‘confession’ that she and her husband have continued to vouvoie Linda and Jean-Pierre, although they have known them for years and, by implication, fulfil the criterion of getting on well.
    • 2014, Kelly Rogers, Extraordinary, Ordinary Women: Questions of Expatriate Identity in Contemporary American Paris, University Press of America, →ISBN, page 56:
      Tutoiement of a person who would generally be “vouvoie-d” is a deliberate sign of disrespect, a provocation. [] Charlotte is expected to vouvoie her French in-laws despite having been shown an extensive collection of nude photographs of her husband’s mother.

French edit

Verb edit

vouvoie

  1. inflection of vouvoyer:
    1. first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person singular imperative