cohue
French
Etymology
1235; from Middle Breton cochuy (“covered market; bustle, tumult”) (modern Breton koc'hu, koc'hui), similar to Welsh cy- (“together”) + chwyf (“movement, commotion”), from Proto-Brythonic *hwɨβid (“to move”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɔ.y/
Noun
cohue f (plural cohues)
- crowd, rabble
- 1924, Emmanuel Bove, Mes Amis:
- Malgré la cohue, le chemin était toujours libre devant nous. Quand il fallait traverser une rue, un agent, comme par hasard, interrompait la circulation.
- Despite the crowd, the road was always open before us. Whenever we had to cross a street, some force, as if by chance, stopped traffic.
Further reading
- “cohue”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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