par excellence
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French par excellence (“excellently, in an especially representative way; above all”), on the model of Latin per excellentiam.
Pronunciation
Adverb
par excellence (not comparable)
- Because or on account of one's excellence.
- Most excellently, variously intending
- Most especially, in particular, most notably (out of a thing or person's other attributes, roles, etc.).
- 2009, John Calvin, The Institutes of the Christian Religion:
- He was par excellence a theologian.
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- In a superior way, in the most representative or fully-developed manner.
- 1877, William Worthington Fowler, Woman on the American Frontier, p. 99:
- She was par excellence the vigilant member of the house-hold.
- Most especially, in particular, most notably (out of a thing or person's other attributes, roles, etc.).
Usage notes
Now frequently italicized as a self-consciously foreign expression. As an adverb, usually placed before the descriptive noun or noun phrase.
Synonyms
- (most excellently): pre-eminently, supremely, above all
Adjective
par excellence (not comparable)
- Most excellently, variously intending
- Being the proper or truest example of a general name.
- 1695 (published 1845), Earl of Perth, Letters, p. 61:
- The Santo (which is St. Antonio's church, called il Santo par excellence) […]
- 1883, "Meteora" in the Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th ed., Vol. XVI, p. 114:
- At one time they were twenty-four in number; but Holland (1812) and Hughes (1814) found them reduced to ten; at Curzon's visit (1834) there were only seven; and in 1853 not more than four of these were inhabited by more than two or three monks. Meteora par excellence is the largest and perhaps the most ancient.
- 1695 (published 1845), Earl of Perth, Letters, p. 61:
- Being a quintessential example of a general type.
- 1839 August, Edgar Allen Poe, Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, p. 68:
- This is the age of invention, most certainly—the age, one may say—the age par excellence.
- 1845, Edgar Allen Poe, "The Purloined Letter" in Tales, p. 212:
- The mathematical reason has long been regarded as the reason par excellence.
- 1839 August, Edgar Allen Poe, Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, p. 68:
- Being the proper or truest example of a general name.
Usage notes
Now frequently italicized as a self-consciously foreign usage. As an adjective, usually used as a post-modifier after the descriptive noun or noun phrase.
Synonyms
- (truest example of a general name): See proper
Translations
being a quintessential example of a general type
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References
- "par excellence, adv. and adj.", in the Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pa.ʁ‿ɛk.sɛ.lɑ̃s/
See also
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