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gouvernée

Gouvernée is the feminine form of the past participle of the French verb gouverner, meaning to govern or rule. In contemporary French it is used as an adjective or in the passive voice to describe a feminine noun that is under governance. For example, La province est gouvernée par le roi illustrates a passive construction, while une région gouvernée par des lois fortes shows adjectival use. The term signals that the subject is governed rather than acting as the governing authority.

Grammatically, gouvernée agrees with the noun it modifies in gender and number. As a past participle used

Etymology traces gouvernée to the Latin gubernare, meaning to steer or to govern, which itself derives from

See also

- gouverner

- gouvernement

- gouverneur

- gouvernance

Note: gouvernée functions primarily as an adjectival or passive participle form in standard French and is not

with
the
auxiliary
être
in
passive
constructions,
it
typically
forms
a
compound
tense
(La
ville
a
été
gouvernée),
and
it
also
functions
as
an
ordinary
adjective
(une
entité
gouvernée).
In
modern
French
it
generally
follows
the
noun
when
used
attributively,
though
it
may
appear
in
various
positions
in
stylistic
or
historical
contexts.
Greek
origins
related
to
steering
or
directing.
The
verb
gouverner
and
its
inflected
forms
have
long
been
linked
to
concepts
of
political
control,
administration,
and
leadership,
and
the
feminine
form
gouvernée
is
part
of
that
family
of
terms.
typically
used
as
a
standalone
noun.
It
is
most
common
in
phrases
indicating
that
a
place,
entity,
or
group
is
governed
by
someone
or
something.