lourd

French

Etymology

Inherited from Middle French lourd, from Old French lorz, lourt, from Late Latin lurdus, lordus, probably from Latin lūridus (sallow), possibly influenced by Frankish *lort (crooked, clumsy); related to Old English lort (crooked).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /luʁ/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -uʁ
  • Homophone: loure

Adjective

lourd (feminine lourde, masculine plural lourds, feminine plural lourdes)

  1. heavy
  2. loaded with
    lourd de conséquenceswith far-reaching consequences, with serious consequences, that has significant implications (literally, “loaded with consequences”)
    lourd de sensloaded with meaning
  3. clumsy, oafish
  4. (informal) annoying, a drag
    Synonyms: pénible, chiant, relou
    Ce type est vraiment lourd, il arrête pas de me parler sans remarquer que je m'en fous.This guy is really annoying, he won’t stop talking to me and doesn’t notice that I don’t give a shit.
  5. (weather) sultry, humid
  6. (boxing) heavyweight

Derived terms

See also

Further reading