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sujets

Sujets is a French noun with several related meanings, all centered on the idea of a bearer or focus of activity. In everyday use it most often translates as subject or topic: the subject of a discussion, the subject of a book, or a person studied in research. In grammar, sujet denotes the element of a sentence that performs or is described by the verb, typically a noun phrase or pronoun. In philosophy and social theory, le sujet refers to the bearer of subjectivity or agency. The plural form is sujets.

Etymology and historical usage trace suj et from Latin subiectus, meaning “placed underneath,” through Old French

Grammatical sense: In French syntax, the sujet typically agrees with the finite verb in person and number

Philosophical and social use: In phenomenology and related fields, le sujet is the experiencing, thinking agent

In sum, sujets encompasses topics and participants across language, thought, and social practice, anchored by the

sujet.
This
origin
reflects
a
shift
from
a
literal
under
position
to
more
abstract
senses
of
subordination,
theme,
and
person
as
the
focus
of
discourse.
Historically,
sujets
also
referred
to
subjects
of
a
monarch
or
empire,
i.e.,
people
living
under
authority,
and
the
term
remains
common
in
political
and
legal
language.
and
may
be
a
simple
noun,
a
noun
phrase,
or
a
pronoun.
French
allows
subject-fronting
for
emphasis,
and
it
uses
impersonal
constructions
with
an
expletive
il
when
there
is
no
concrete
subject,
as
in
il
faut
partir.
capable
of
intentionality.
In
research
contexts,
sujets
are
the
individuals
or
units
who
participate
in
studies,
experiments,
or
surveys,
and
from
whom
data
are
gathered.
core
idea
of
a
focus,
bearer,
or
agent.