vaurien
See also: Vaurien
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French vaurien; used by Isaac D'Israeli for the name of the eponymous character of his 1797 novel Vaurien: or Sketches of the Times.[1]
Noun
vaurien (plural vauriens)
- (archaic) A good-for-nothing; a scoundrel.
- 1841, William Jesse, Notes of a Half-pay in Search of Health, Volume 1, James Madden & Co., page 62:
- Quarantine, a disagreeable thing at all times, was rendered perfectly disgusting by the manner in which the spoglia was conducted, the vermin, and the disobliging conduct of the director, who was a regular “vaurien.”
References
- 2004, M. O. Grenby, The Anti-Jacobin Novel: British Conservatism and the French Revolution, page 104.
French
Etymology
From vaut (“is worth”), third person singular of valoir + rien (“nothing”). Compare German Taugenichts or Dutch deugniet.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /vo.ʁjɛ̃/
Audio (file)
Noun
vaurien m (plural vauriens, feminine vaurienne)
- good-for-nothing, a person regarded as useless or worthless
- Cet esclave est un vaurien: même le fouet ne le rend pas productif.
- That slave is a good-for-nothing, even the whip doesn't make him productive.
Further reading
- “vaurien”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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