Home

Directrice

Directrice is the feminine form of directeur and is used in French to refer to a woman who heads or administers an organization, institution, company, or project. The term designates a position of leadership rather than a specific person, and it can apply to schools, government agencies, cultural institutions, nonprofits, and other bodies. Examples include la directrice d'une école (the head of a school) or la directrice générale d'une entreprise (the chief executive officer).

Grammatical notes: The masculine form is directeur; the feminine form is directrice. The plural form is directrices.

Etymology and related terms: Directrice comes from the masculine directeur, both deriving from Latin directus meaning

Usage in different fields: In business and administration, directrice is standard for a female head of a

See also: directeur, dirigeante, administratrice, réalisatrice.

As
a
title,
directrice
is
typically
capitalized
in
formal
usage
when
preceding
a
name
(Directrice
Dupont)
in
certain
institutional
styles,
but
common
practice
is
to
use
the
lowercase
form
in
running
text.
guided
or
directed.
In
contemporary
French,
the
term
is
widely
used
across
sectors
to
designate
a
female
leader.
In
some
contexts,
gender-inclusive
language
may
also
employ
alternatives
such
as
dirigeante
or
administratrice,
depending
on
style
or
preference.
company
or
department.
In
education,
it
refers
to
the
principal
or
head
of
a
school.
In
the
arts
and
film,
however,
the
term
most
often
used
for
a
female
director
of
a
film
is
réalisatrice
rather
than
directrice,
though
directrice
may
appear
when
referring
to
leadership
roles
within
an
artistic
organization.