Home

Conseillé

Conseillé is the past participle of the French verb conseiller, meaning to advise or to recommend. As an adjective, it translates as “advised” or “recommended” and is used to indicate that something has been suggested by someone or by guidelines. In everyday language, the impersonal construction il est conseillé de is common and means “it is advisable to” or “it is recommended to.” This phrase appears widely in instructions, medical guidance, and official documents.

Grammatical notes: The form agrees with the noun it modifies. Masculine singular is conseillé, feminine singular

Differences and usage: conseiller and recommander both convey advising or endorsing, but conseiller often implies guidance

Etymology and usage notes: The word comes from the verb conseiller, itself from Old French conseillier, from

conseillée;
masculine
plural
conseillés,
feminine
plural
conseillées.
The
participle
can
appear
after
the
noun
as
a
predicate,
for
example:
ces
mesures
sont
conseillées
par
les
autorités,
or
attributively:
des
mesures
conseillées
par
le
médecin.
within
a
context
or
guideline,
while
recommander
can
carry
a
stronger
or
more
personal
endorsement.
In
formal
or
legal
language,
il
est
conseillé
de
and
il
est
recommandé
de
are
both
standard.
conseil
(council,
advice),
ultimately
rooted
in
Latin
consilium.
Conseillé
is
rarely
used
as
a
noun;
for
a
person
who
provides
advice,
one
uses
conseiller
(m)
or
conseillère
(f).
Its
feminine
form
is
conseillée
and
is
used
when
describing
a
female
instance.