Home

Homme

Homme is a French noun that primarily denotes an adult male human being. It is used to refer to men individually as well as to humanity in a collective or philosophical sense, especially when paired with definite or indefinite determiners as l’homme, un homme, or des hommes. The feminine form is femme.

Etymology and forms: The word derives from Latin homo, via Old French homme. In modern French, it

Usage and nuance: As a general term for a male person, homme is the default counterpart to

Phonology and orthography: The initial h in homme is typically treated as mute, allowing elision in l’homme

See also: cognates in other Romance languages include hombre (Spanish) and uomo (Italian), all tracing to the

is
masculine:
un
homme,
des
hommes,
le
héros
(note
the
h
may
be
mute
or
aspirated
depending
on
the
word;
in
homme
the
h
is
muet,
so
l’homme
is
used
with
elision:
l’homme).
The
standard
plural
is
hommes.
The
word
appears
in
numerous
compound
expressions
such
as
homme
d’affaires
(businessman),
homme
politique
(politician),
homme
de
lettres
(man
of
letters),
and
homme
au
foyer
(stay-at-home
man).
femme.
When
referring
to
humankind
or
the
human
species,
l’homme
is
often
used
in
a
broad,
sometimes
historical
or
philosophical
sense,
as
in
discussions
of
human
nature,
the
story
of
mankind,
or
the
development
of
civilizations.
In
everyday
language,
contexts
and
modifiers
clarify
whether
the
sense
is
individual,
social,
or
universal.
and
regular
liaison
in
des
hommes.
Spelling
is
stable,
with
no
gender-neutral
form
in
standard
usage,
though
phrases
and
neologisms
may
reframe
it
in
gender-inclusive
language.
same
Latin
root
Homo.