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travaillée

Travaillée is the feminine form of the past participle of the French verb travailler. It is used in two main ways: as a participle in compound tenses and as an adjective meaning “worked” or “crafted.” The masculine form is travaillé; the plural forms are travaillés (masc.) and travaillées (fem.).

As an adjective, it describes objects that have undergone processing, shaping or decoration: bois travaillé, pierre

As part of passive voice, it appears with être: la pierre a été travaillée par l’artisan, meaning

Grammatical agreement follows standard French rules. With the auxiliary être, the past participle agrees in gender

Etymology: travail is the French noun for work or labor, derived from Old French travail and ultimately

In contemporary usage, travaillée appears across crafts and design to indicate that an object has been processed

travaillée,
tissu
travaillé.
It
conveys
that
the
material
has
been
transformed
through
some
craft
or
technique.
the
stone
was
processed
or
crafted
by
the
artisan.
and
number
with
the
subject:
la
pièce
travaillée
est
prête.
With
the
auxiliary
avoir,
the
participle
generally
does
not
agree
unless
the
direct
object
precedes
the
verb:
la
tâche
qu’elle
a
travaillée
était
longue.
from
Latin
tripalium.
The
verb
et
its
participle
tracéent
reflect
the
broader
sense
of
“to
work
on,”
“to
shape,”
or
“to
craft”
something.
or
finished
in
a
deliberate,
skilled
way,
from
woodworking
and
sculpture
to
textiles
and
decorative
arts.