cité

See also: cite, citë, and cítě

French

Etymology

From Middle French cité, from Old French cité, citet, from Latin cīvitātem, accusative of civītās (a union of citizens, a citizenry).

Pronunciation

Noun

cité f (plural cités)

  1. city
    Synonym: ville
  2. a fortified city, city-state, or historic city centre specifically
    la Cité des Papesthe city of popes (Avignon)
  3. (historical, Canada) a municipality with city rather than town status
  4. housing estate
  5. complex of buildings or district set aside for a specific purpose; campus

Usage notes

Cité is usually used in historical, technical, or metaphorical senses, with the usual term for a town or city of any size being ville.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Dutch: cité
  • Turkish: site

Participle

cité (feminine citée, masculine plural cités, feminine plural citées)

  1. past participle of citer

Derived terms

Further reading

Middle French

Etymology

From Old French cité.

Noun

cité f (plural citez)

  1. city

Descendants

Old French

Noun

cité f (oblique plural citez, nominative singular cité, nominative plural citez)

  1. Alternative form of citet

Spanish

Verb

cité

  1. first-person singular preterite indicative of citar
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