banlieue
English

A French banlieue
Noun
banlieue (plural banlieues)
- The outskirts of a city, especially in France, inhabited chiefly by poor people living in tenement-style housing
- 2007 November 4, Elisabeth Vincentelli, “You Are What Your Name Says You Are”, in New York Times:
- But Guy Desplanques, a demographer, pointed out in 2002 that names like Ahmed and Jamila actually were on the wane, and that second-generation French men and women work toward integration by coming up with variations like Yanis or Rayan; the latter has become popular in some banlieues, evoking both the Maghreb and the relatively widespread Ryan.
French
Etymology
From Old French banlieue, from Medieval Latin banleuca, bannileuga, from ban + lieue (“league, mile”). Compare Middle High German banmile, modern German Bannmeile.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bɑ̃.ljø/
Audio (file)
Further reading
banlieue on Wikipedia.Wikipedia- “banlieue” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
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