salle

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See also: sallé and šalle

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French salle. Doublet of sala.

Pronunciation

  • Audio (UK):(file)

Noun

salle (plural salles)

  1. A fencing school.
    • 2001, Nick Evangelista, Anita Evangelista, The Woman Fencer
      Your local fencing salle is a good place to relax and unwind and let the cares of the day take a backseat for a while. Meeting someone on the fencing strip, blade in hand, can become your only concern for two or three hours a couple of times a week.

Synonyms

Anagrams


Estonian

Noun

salle

  1. partitive plural of sall

French

Etymology

From Middle French salle, from Old French sale (a large room, large reception hall), from Frankish *sal (dwelling, house, entrance hall), from Proto-Germanic *salą (dwelling, house, hall), from Proto-Indo-European *sel- (human settlement, village, dwelling). More at salon.

Pronunciation

Noun

salle f (plural salles)

  1. hall
  2. room (in a house)

Derived terms

See also

Descendants

  • Haitian Creole: sal, lasal
  • Italian: sala

Further reading

Anagrams


Middle French

Etymology

From Old French sale (a large room, large reception hall), from Frankish *sal (dwelling, house, entrance hall), from Proto-Germanic *salą (dwelling, house, hall), from Proto-Indo-European *sel- (human settlement, village, dwelling).

Noun

salle f (plural salles)

  1. room

Norman

Etymology

From Old French sale (a large room, large reception hall), from Frankish *sal (dwelling, house, entrance hall), from Proto-Germanic *salą (dwelling, house, hall), from Proto-Indo-European *sel- (human settlement, village, dwelling).

Noun

salle f (plural salles)

  1. (Jersey) living room

Pali

Alternative forms

Noun

salle

  1. inflection of salla (dart; porcupine):
    1. locative singular
    2. accusative plural

Spanish

Verb

salle

  1. inflection of sallar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative