crémer

See also: cremer

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kʁe.me/

Etymology 1

From crème + -er

Verb

crémer

  1. (transitive) to add cream
  2. (intransitive) to turn to cream
Conjugation

This verb is conjugated like céder. It is a regular -er verb, except that its last stem vowel alternates between /e/ (written ‘é’) and /ɛ/ (written ‘è’), with the latter being used before mute ‘e’. One special case is the future stem, used in the future and the conditional. Before 1990, the future stem of such verbs was written crémer-, reflecting the historic pronunciation /e/. In 1990, the French Academy recommended that it be written crèmer-, reflecting the now common pronunciation /ɛ/, thereby making this distinction consistent throughout the conjugation (and also matching in this regard the conjugations of verbs like lever and jeter). Both spellings are in use today, and both are therefore given here.

Antonyms
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Latin cremāre, present active infinitive of cremō. Doublet of cramer.

Verb

crémer

  1. (archaic, rare) (transitive) to cremate
    • 2006, Philippe Charlier, Médecin des morts, 2008 ed., Paris: Fayard, →ISBN, p. 272
      En 1867 a lieu la découverte du bocal d'apothicaire censé contenir quelques ossements crémés de Jeanne d'Arc recueillis sous le bûcher, conservé dans un droguier abandonné dans le grenier d'une pharmacie de la rue du Temple, à Paris.
Conjugation

This verb is conjugated like céder. It is a regular -er verb, except that its last stem vowel alternates between /e/ (written ‘é’) and /ɛ/ (written ‘è’), with the latter being used before mute ‘e’. One special case is the future stem, used in the future and the conditional. Before 1990, the future stem of such verbs was written crémer-, reflecting the historic pronunciation /e/. In 1990, the French Academy recommended that it be written crèmer-, reflecting the now common pronunciation /ɛ/, thereby making this distinction consistent throughout the conjugation (and also matching in this regard the conjugations of verbs like lever and jeter). Both spellings are in use today, and both are therefore given here.

Synonyms
Hypernyms

Further reading

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