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objets

Objets is the French plural of objet, used to denote things that can be perceived, used, or discussed. The term encompasses a wide range of items, including physical objects such as furniture and tools, as well as abstract entities such as ideas, goals, or data. In everyday and technical language, objets can refer to both tangible and intangible items.

From Latin objectum, via Old French objet, the word has long carried a general sense of “that

In grammar, l’objet refers to elements that receive the action of a verb, typically the direct object

In philosophy, the object is what is perceived, thought about, or known by a subject. The term

In art and design, objets appear as art objects or everyday items. Phrases such as objet d’art

In computing, objet translates to object in object-oriented programming. An object encapsulates data and behavior, created

toward
which
action
or
thought
is
directed.”
In
modern
French,
this
broad
semantic
field
covers
material
objects,
abstract
objects,
and
the
object
of
discourse
or
study.
(objet
direct)
or
indirect
object
(objet
indirect).
For
example,
in
Je
donne
le
livre
à
Marie,
le
livre
is
the
direct
object.
The
term
also
appears
in
discussions
of
sentence
structure
and
syntax
across
Romance
languages.
appears
in
ontology,
epistemology,
and
phenomenology
as
the
“object
of
knowledge”
or
the
correlate
of
perception,
distinguishing
it
from
the
thinking
subject.
(art
object)
and
objet
trouvé
(found
object)
reflect
historical
and
contemporary
usage,
including
movements
that
treat
ordinary
items
as
artistic
material
or
statements.
from
a
class
and
instantiated
as
a
distinct
entity
during
execution.