See also: bâronne

English

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Etymology

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From French baronne.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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baronne (plural baronnes)

  1. A French baroness.
    • 1864 October 15, Mariet, “Madame La Baronne de V⸺’s Diamond Bracelets. (A True Incident.)”, in Once a Week. An Illustrated Miscellany of Literature, Art, Science, & Popular Information, volume XI, number 277, London: Bradbury & Evans, [], page 475, column 1:
      They [the bracelets] now by right belonged to the dowager baronne, but she had insisted on giving them to her son for his bride, who, therefore, wore them on such occasions as the one we are describing.
    • [1870], Alexandre Dumas, [unknown, transl.], “Count Waldeck”, in The Page of the Duke of Savoy (The Waverley Dumas), London: The Waverley Book Company, Ltd., [], →OCLC, page 33:
      He certainly was not a herald of peace, and did not bring an olive branch by any means; on the contrary, he brought the news that—by means of threats, and even of violence—Count Waldeck and his sons had forced the Baronne to give up her jewels, her plate, and all the money there was in the château, and then, when she thought that that was a sufficient ransom to buy her liberty from the guests who had come and asked her hospitality, the poor woman had been seized, gagged, tied to her bed-post, and told that if she did not find another two hundred gold crowns within two hours the château would be set on fire, and burned to the ground with her in it.
    • 1901, [Nathaniel] Newnham-Davis, “The Carlton (Pall Mall)”, in Dinners and Diners: Where and How to Dine in London, 2nd edition, London: Grant Richards, []; Office of the Pall Mall Publications, [], page 8:
      A German Prince, a little dancer who is rehearsing for a new piece at one of the theatres, the Ambassador of one of the Great Powers, the proprietor of one of the great daily papers, the most popular of our English composers—these were some of the men and ladies whose faces I recognised, while the Princess, who had bowed and smiled to people she knew at half a dozen tables, told me the names of a score of marquis and marquises, and barons and baronnes, who, I if knew my Almanach de Gotha, which I do not, would no doubt have had much significance to me.
    • 1995, Elizabeth Colwill, “Laws of Nature / Rights of Genius: The Drame of Constance de Salm”, in Elizabeth C. Goldsmith, Dena Goodman, editors, Going Public: Women and Publishing in Early Modern France (Shari Benstock and Celeste Schenck, editors, Reading Women Writing), Ithaca, N.Y., London: Cornell University Press, →ISBN, page 239:
      The murderer had forced the baronne into a compromising correspondence, enlisted his friends as allies in the epistolary exchange, and displayed her signature to imply her consent.
    • 2001, Anne Conover Carson, “Halcyon Days No More: Between the Turn of the Century and the Great War”, in Olga Rudge and Ezra Pound, New Haven, Conn., London: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 27:
      Olga [Rudge] and her mother [Julia Rudge] were always welcome in Parisian society; they rated high on guest lists that included barons and baronnes, comtes and comtesses, and the occasional prince or princess.

Coordinate terms

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French

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ba.ʁɔn/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɔn

Noun

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baronne f (plural baronnes)

  1. baroness

Derived terms

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Further reading

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Anagrams

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