plaisir

See also: Plaisir

French

Etymology

Inherited from Middle French plaisir, from Old French plaisir, from Latin placēre. Compare Occitan plaser, Catalan plaer.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /plɛ.ziʁ/, /ple.ziʁ/
  • (file)

Noun

plaisir m (plural plaisirs)

  1. pleasure
    avec bien de plaisirwith much pleasure
    avec grand plaisirwith great pleasure
    priver quelqu’un du plaisir de faire quelque choseto deprive someone of the pleasure of doing something
    avoir eu le plaisir de faire quelque choseto have had the pleasure of doing something

Derived terms

Further reading

Middle French

Etymology

From Old French plaisir.

Noun

plaisir m (plural plaisirs)

  1. pleasure

Descendants

  • French: plaisir
  • Dutch: plezier
    • Afrikaans: plesier
    • Berbice Creole Dutch: plesiri
    • Negerhollands: plesir, plaisi, plesi, plesier
    • Aukan: piisii
    • Indonesian: pelesir
    • Papiamentu: pleizí, plezier, pleizier
    • Saramaccan: piizíi
    • Sranan Tongo: prisiri
      • Caribbean Javanese: persiri, plesiri, presiri

Old French

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin placēre.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /plai̯ˈziɾ/

Noun

plaisir oblique singular, m (oblique plural plaisirs, nominative singular plaisirs, nominative plural plaisir)

  1. pleasure

Verb

plaisir

  1. to please

Conjugation

This verb conjugates as a third-group verb. This verb ends in a palatal stem, so there is an extra i before the e of some endings. This verb has irregularities in its conjugation. Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.

Synonyms

Descendants

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