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sousjacent

Sousjacent is an English adjective and, less commonly, a noun in some bilingual texts. It denotes something that lies beneath another feature or is underlying in a latent sense. Because the form blends French and English morphology, it appears primarily in francophone–or bilingual contexts rather than as a standard term in English-language science.

Etymology: The term appears to be a blend of the French sous meaning under and the English

Usage: In practice, sousjacent tends to be used in speculative or literary writing rather than formal scientific

Examples: The sousjacent strata were detected only after drilling. A sousjacent political tension shaped the negotiation.

See also: subjacent, underlying, beneath.

suffix
-jacent,
related
to
the
Latin
jacere
to
lie.
It
is
not
widely
attested
in
major
dictionaries,
and
its
usage
seems
confined
to
niche
or
stylistic
contexts
where
authors
intend
to
signal
an
underlying
layer
with
a
francophone
flavor.
prose.
It
can
appear
when
an
author
wants
to
emphasize
a
latent
or
underlying
layer
that
remains
adjacent
to
a
surface.
In
geology
or
archaeology,
the
standard
term
is
subjacent;
sousjacent
is
considered
nonstandard
and
may
confuse
readers
outside
bilingual
contexts.
Note
that
some
readers
may
view
sousjacent
as
a
misspelling
of
subjacent.