affreux
English
Etymology
Borrowing from French
Noun
affreux pl (plural only)
- A group of particularly brutal mercenaries who were active in Africa and Asia during the 1960s.
- 1972, Jean-Claude Willame, Patrimonialism and Political Change in the Congo, →ISBN, page 74:
- As one Belgian journalist wrote: The affreux ["frightful ones"] are outstanding in combat.
- 1998, John Sturrock, The Word from Paris: Essays on Modern French Thinkers and Writers, →ISBN:
- I could no longer find anything affected in that long smooth white face but an extreme kindness and a sort of obstinate candour; Vian was as Herv in his detestation of the affreux [the frightful ones] as in loving what he loved.
- 2003, Máire O'Brien, The same age as the state, page 249:
- These were mostly, but not exclusively, members of the Baluba tribe and had fled the persecution of Munongo's mercenary affreux and their black rank-and-file.
- 2010, Martin Windrow, Our Friends Beneath the Sands, →ISBN:
- It takes a rather wilful ignorance to refuse to recognize the essential difference between, say, the affreux of mid-twentieth-century Africa and the Royal Gurkha Rifles, though both could loosely be described as mercenaries.
- 2014, Joseph Finder, The Zero Hour, →ISBN:
- He had once been one of the dreaded affreux, the “frightful ones,” the white freelance soldiers who helped keep dictators in power throughout Africa and Asia.
- 2015, Tor Sellström, Africa in the Indian Ocean: Islands in Ebb and Flow, →ISBN, page 169:
- France's return to Comoros was, above all, conspicuous through the actions of the mercenary leader Bob Denard and his team of affreux ('dreadful').
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Usage notes
Often, these mercenaries were called les affreux, using the French definite article.
Adjective
affreux (comparative more affreux, superlative most affreux)
- (rare) Dreadful; disturbing or frightening.
- 1830, The Cambrian Quarterly Magazine and Celtic Repertory:
- And when I signified my intention of making a tour of the whole province, they most earnestly advised me to alter my plans, and occupy my time in visiting some other part of the kingdom; for they assured me, that all travellers who attempted Basse Bretagne, returned in disgust before they went more thant a few stages into the country, for that its general aspect was that of desolation itself; the roads were impassable ; and the people dirty, ragged barbarians, living in filthy huts, and clothed in sheepskins; that, in short, everything was affreux.
- 1834, The London Quarterly Review - Issues 103-106, page 141:
- It was in rain that some common friends represented the tort affreux — the frightful mischief he would do the government of his own creation, if he published this work — all in vain: his honor, his conscience, and his patriotism, required that he should raise his voice in defence of the charter, which the king and his ministers equally violate — and the work is published!
- 2001, Julian Rushton, The Music of Berlioz, →ISBN, page 22:
- Orpheus calls the sound 'affreux'; the examiners may have agreed.
- 2011, Alan Furst, Red Gold, →ISBN:
- No doubt they would be talking about the affreux – dreadful – Germans. Not so affreux, of course, that one refused to get rich off them.
- 2012, Elizabeth Musser, Two Testaments: A Novel, →ISBN, page 300:
- As soon as they were in the courtyard, she whispered, “M. Hoffmann has just appeared looking affreux. And he brought with him his father of all things!”
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French
Etymology
affre (“great fear”) + -eux
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a.fʁø/
Audio (France, Paris) (file) - Rhymes: -ø
Derived terms
Further reading
- “affreux” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
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