French

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited from Middle French seoir, from Old French seoir, from earlier sedeir, from Latin sedēre, from Proto-Italic *sedēō, from Proto-Indo-European *sed-.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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seoir (defective)

  1. (literary) to be suitable for; to be proper for
    • 1640, Pierre Corneille, Horace, act I, scene I:
      L’ébranlement sied bien aux plus fermes courages
      To waver is fitting for those of firmest courage
  2. (law) to be situated
  3. (dated or literary) sit down (see also s’asseoir)
    • 1785, Jean Baptiste Rousseau, Annales poétique depuis l’origine de la poésie françoise, Tome 33[1], page 225:
      Au carabet, lorſque je ſis à table,
      Je ne bois qu’à ma ſoif, & que le cœur m’en dit:
      Mais quand Margot me tient au lit,
      Tout-ci, tout-ca,
      Par-ci, par-là !
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • 1848, Honoré de Balzac, L’Envers de l’Histoire contemporaine, premier épisode:
      Les trois personnages se levèrent, la maîtresse de la maison se leva ; puis quand le prêtre eut avancé pour Godefroid un fauteuil, quand le futur locataire se fut assis sur un geste de Mme de La Chanterie, accompagné de ce vieux mot : « Seyez-vous, monsieur ! » le Parisien se crut à une énorme distance de Paris, en Basse-Bretagne, ou au fond du Canada.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Conjugation

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Further reading

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Anagrams

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Middle French

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Etymology

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From Old French seoir, from earlier sedeir, from Latin sedēre.

Verb

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seoir

  1. to be; to be situated
    • c. 1369, Jean Froissart, Chroniques:
      Vous devés savoir que assés près de la ou ils estoient, siet la ville de Iuberot
      You should know that quite close to there where they were, is the city of Juberot
  2. (reflexive, se seoir) to sit down (be sitting)

Old French

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Etymology

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From an earlier sedeir, from Latin sedēre.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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seoir

  1. (transitive) to sit (make someone sit)
  2. (reflexive, se seoir) to sit down

Conjugation

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This verb conjugates as a third-group verb. This verb has a stressed present stem sie distinct from the unstressed stem se, as well as other irregularities. Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.

Descendants

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  • Middle French: seoir
  NODES
see 10