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commandée

Commandée is the feminine singular past participle of the French verb commander. It functions as an adjective meaning “ordered” or as part of a compound tense. The masculine singular is commandé, and the forms commandés (masc. plur.) and commandées (fem. plur.) exist to agree with the noun they describe.

Grammatical use and agreement

As adjective or in passive constructions, commandée agrees in gender and number with the noun it modifies

Common contexts

The word is frequent in commerce, logistics, and procurement to describe items that were requested or placed

Etymology and related terms

Commandée derives from the verb commander, which traces back to Latin roots related to entrusting or ordering.

See also

commande, commander, commandement, commandes, commandant.

or
with
the
subject
in
a
passive
clause.
With
the
auxiliary
avoir
in
passé
composé,
the
past
participle
generally
does
not
agree
with
the
subject,
unless
a
preceding
direct
object
requires
agreement.
For
example:
“La
marchandise
commandée
est
arrivée”
(the
ordered
goods
have
arrived)
shows
agreement
with
the
feminine
noun
marchandise.
In
a
relative
clause,
“les
fleurs
que
j’ai
commandées”
also
shows
agreement
with
fleurs.
in
an
order.
It
also
appears
in
everyday
phrases
like
“la
commande
commandée”
to
refer
to
an
order
that
has
been
placed
and
is
to
be
fulfilled,
or
“des
articles
commandés”
for
“ordered
items.”
Related
words
include
commande
(order),
commandeur
(commander),
commandement
(command),
and
les
commandes
(orders).