sauvage
See also: Sauvage
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French sauvage, salvage, from Vulgar Latin salvāticus, from Latin silvāticus, from silva (“forest”).
Pronunciation
- (France) IPA(key): /so.vaʒ/
(file)
- (Canada) IPA(key): /sɔ.vaʒ/
(file)
Adjective
sauvage (plural sauvages)
- wild, untouched, unspoiled, pristine
- Antonym: anthropisé
- une région sauvage ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- wild, untamed, not domesticated (often used to qualify a wild alternative or pendant for a cultivated plant or domestic animal)
- Synonyms: des champs, des prés, des bois, (Antilles, Réunion) marron
- Antonyms: cultivé, domestique
- de l’ail sauvage ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- un chat sauvage ― a wildcat
- un animal sauvage ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- feral
- Synonyms: ensauvagé, féral, (Antilles, Réunion) marron
- un enfant sauvage ― a feral child
- primitive, uncivilized
- coarse, unrefined
- Synonym: rustique
- uncontained, anarchic; unregulated; unauthorized
- Synonym: anarchique
- la publicité sauvage ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- une grève sauvage ― a wildcat strike
- du camping sauvage ― (please add an English translation of this usage example)
- asocial, recluse (living in an eccentric, isolated way, not interested in social contact or appealing to others)
- Synonym: asocial
- (Canada, Missouri, New England, Louisiana, obsolete, offensive) Amerindian
Derived terms
Noun
sauvage m (plural sauvages, feminine sauvagesse)
- (derogatory) barbarian, savage
- (derogatory) hermit, recluse
- (Canada, Louisiana, obsolete, offensive) Amerindian
- (Louisiana) an Amerindian language
Further reading
- “sauvage”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Middle English
Norman
Etymology
From Old French sauvage, salvage, from Vulgar Latin salvāticus, from Latin silvāticus, from silva (“forest”).
Pronunciation
Audio (Jersey) (file)
Old French
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin salvāticus, from Latin silvāticus. Compare Old Occitan sauvatge, salvatge.
Declension
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