truie

French

Etymology

Inherited from Late Latin troia. Cognate with Italian troia, Occitan truèja, Catalan truja, Walloon troye. Further origin uncertain:

  • It has been compared to Latin porcus Troiānus (literally Trojan pig), a singularly attested name for a stuffed roast of pork, so called by humorous comparison to the “filled” Trojan horse.
  • More likely of Celtic origin, from a Gaulish *trogja, from a root meaning “to pull” and thence also “fertile," Proto-Celtic *trāglo-, for which see Latin traho.
  • Finally it might be an imitative formation after the sound of a pig's grunt.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tʁɥi/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

truie f (plural truies)

  1. sow (female pig)
  2. (derogatory) unclean woman

Hypernyms

Coordinate terms

Further reading