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hideux

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

French

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Etymology

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From Middle French hideux, from Old French hideus, hydus, hisdos (that which inspires terror), from hide, hede, hisda (horror, fear), from Proto-West Germanic *agisiþu (horror, terror), from Proto-West Germanic *agisōn (to frighten, terrorise), from Proto-Germanic *agaz (terror, fear).

Alternative etymology cites possible derivation from Latin hispidosus (rugged), from hispidus (rough, bristly), yet the semantic evolution is more difficult to trace.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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hideux (feminine hideuse, masculine plural hideux, feminine plural hideuses)

  1. grotesque; vile; hideous

See also

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Further reading

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Middle French

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Alternative forms

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Adjective

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hideux m (feminine singular hideuse, masculine plural hideux, feminine plural hideuses)

  1. hideous

Descendants

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  • French: hideux