Home

hâtives

Hâtives is the feminine plural form of the French adjective hâtif, which denotes actions, decisions, or attitudes made or done with haste, often implying premature or ill-considered character. The masculine form is hâtif and the masculine plural is hâtifs; the feminine singular is hâtive. The related noun is la hâte (haste), and the adverb is hâtivement.

Usage in French is generally formal or literary. Hâtif and hâtive are used to qualify nouns such

Historical notes: some grammars describe a passé hâtif as a literary or historical past tense used to

See also: hâte, hastiness; hâtif as an adjective; hâtivement as an adverb.

as
décisions
hâtives,
mesures
hâtives,
or
réponses
hâtives,
signaling
that
the
action
or
decision
was
taken
quickly
and
possibly
without
full
consideration.
The
term
often
carries
a
negative
nuance,
emphasizing
impulsiveness
or
lack
of
deliberation
rather
than
efficiency.
The
adverbial
form
hâtivement
describes
the
manner
of
acting:
agir
hâtivement.
convey
immediacy
or
rapid
sequence
in
certain
texts.
This
usage
is
rare
in
contemporary
standard
French
and
is
primarily
of
philological
or
stylistic
interest
rather
than
a
common,
modern
tense.