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Lhomme

L'homme is a masculine singular noun in French meaning “man” or “the man.” It refers to an adult male person and can also be used generically to denote humanity in philosophical or literary contexts. The plural form is les hommes, and the feminine counterpart is la femme (plural: les femmes). The definite article l’ is used with homme because the initial h is mute (h muet), which allows elision: l’homme.

Etymology and form: homme comes from Latin homo, hominis, meaning man or human being. It entered Old

Usage and nuance: In everyday language, l’homme appears when referring to an individual man or to men

See also: French grammar on gender and articles; etymology of homme; Homo (Latin root for man).

French
as
ome
and
evolved
into
the
modern
form
homme
in
Middle
French.
The
word
shares
the
same
Indo-European
root
as
related
terms
in
several
Romance
languages.
in
general.
It
also
occurs
in
philosophical
or
literary
discourse
to
discuss
human
nature
or
the
human
condition,
sometimes
in
contrast
with
feminine
terms
or
with
l’humanité
for
humanity
as
a
whole.
French
distinguishes
explicitly
between
the
singular
masculine
homme,
the
plural
hommes,
and
the
feminine
femme,
with
corresponding
adjective
and
verb
agreement.