aigu

See also: àigù

French

Etymology

From Middle French aigu, agu, from Old French agu, from Latin acūtus (sharp); related to English acute. The original Old French result was (preserved in the toponym Montheu < Latin Mons acutus (sharp mountain)), which was likely modified into the form agu based on the Latin, and then influenced by words like aigre, or aiguiser, as with aiguille.

Doublet of acut.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɛ.ɡy/, /e.ɡy/
  • (file)

Adjective

aigu (feminine singular aiguë or aigüe, masculine plural aigus, feminine plural aiguës or aigües)

  1. sharp, pointy
  2. (of intelligence) acute, keen, discerning
  3. (of sound) sharp, loud and high-pitched
  4. (medicine) acute
  5. (mathematics, of an angle) acute
  6. (linguistics, of an accent) acute

Derived terms

Further reading


Livvi

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *aika

Noun

aigu

  1. time

Declension

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