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Équestre

Équestre is a French adjective meaning relating to horses or horseback riding. It derives from Latin equester, from eques, equitis, “horseman” or “cavalryman,” and is closely connected to the English term equestrian. In modern French it is used in a variety of compound terms describing activities, places, and arts connected to horses.

In everyday French, équestre appears in phrases such as centre équestre (equestrian center), activité équestre (equestrian

In English-language contexts, équestre is rarely used except in bilingual or scholarly writing. The standard English

activity),
and
épreuves
équestres
(equestrian
events),
which
cover
disciplines
like
dressage,
show
jumping,
and
eventing.
It
can
also
describe
horse-related
culture
or
professions,
for
example
art
équestre
(equestrian
art)
or
manège
équestre
(riding
arena).
The
noun
form
is
uncommon;
when
needed,
longer
phrases
or
loaned
terms
are
typically
used.
equivalent
is
equestrian.
A
common
translation
of
a
phrase
like
statue
équestre
is
equestrian
statue,
referring
to
a
sculpture
of
a
rider
mounted
on
a
horse,
a
motif
widely
employed
to
commemorate
rulers,
military
leaders,
or
symbolic
figures.
The
term
also
appears
in
art
history
and
heraldry
discussions
to
denote
horse-and-rider
subjects,
sometimes
as
an
indicator
of
French
influence
in
the
description
of
works
or
institutions
related
to
horses.