Gentil

/ˈdʒɛn.taɪl/ adjective

Definition

An archaic or specialized form meaning noble, graceful, or genteel, or referring to people of non-Jewish heritage in historical contexts.

Etymology

From Old French gentil, from Latin gentilis meaning 'of or belonging to a gens (clan),' evolved to mean noble or of good family.

Kelly Says

The word 'gentil' evolved into 'genteel' and 'gentle'—medieval Europe's class system literally encoded itself into language, where your family lineage determined your 'gentility,' and that linguistic class marker survives in today's words.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
አደን
a-den
ARالعربية
محترم
mohtaram
BNবাংলা
সুন্দর
sun-dor
CACatalà
amab
ah-mab
CSČeština
příjemný
pri-yem-ny
DADansk
venlig
ven-lig
DEDeutsch
freundlich
froi-nd-lich
ELΕλληνικά
ευγενικός
ev-ge-ni-kos
ESEspañol
gentil
hen-teel
FAفارسی
مهربان
meh-ra-ban
FISuomi
ystävällinen
ystä-vä-linen
FRFrançais
gentil
zhn-teel
GUGU
મિઠા
mee-tha
HAHA
alheri
al-he-ree
HEעברית
טוב
tov
HIहिन्दी
मधुर
madhur
HUMagyar
barátságos
bar-a-ts-o-gas
IDBahasa Indonesia
baik hati
baik ha-tee
IGIG
oma
oh-mah
ITItaliano
gentile
jen-teel-eh
JA日本語
親切な
shin-setsu-na
KKKK
жақсы
zhaq-sy
KMKM
ស្អុយ
s'a-u
KO한국어
친절한
chin-jeol-han
MRMR
चंगळा
chan-ga-la
MSBahasa Melayu
baik
baik
MYမြန်မာ
ကျေးဇူး
kye-zu
NLNederlands
vriendelijk
vren-deh-lijk
NONorsk
vennlig
venn-lig
PAPA
ਸਿਆ
see-ah
PLPolski
miły
mee-w
PTPortuguês
amável
ah-mah-vel
RORomână
prietenos
prie-te-nos
RUРусский
добрый
dobryy
SVSvenska
trevlig
trev-lig
SWKiswahili
mzuri
m-zoo-ree
TAதமிழ்
நல்ல
nalla
TEతెలుగు
నువ్వు
nuvvu
THไทย
친절한
chin-jeol-han
TLTL
mabuting
ma-boo-ting
TRTürkçe
iyi
ee-yee
UKУкраїнська
добрий
dobryy
URاردو
خوش
khush
VITiếng Việt
tốt bụng
tot bung
YOYO
oju
oh-joo
ZH中文
友好的
you-hao-de
ZUZU
musa
moo-sah

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Gentil derives from Latin gentilis (of a clan/tribe). In medieval Romance languages, it became associated with nobility and courtly masculinity; women were rarely described as gentil without markers like 'gentil dame' that made their gender explicitly marked, while men's nobility was assumed.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'genteel,' 'refined,' or 'courteous' depending on context. If describing historical texts using 'gentil,' acknowledge it reflected gendered assumptions about which people were presumed noble.

Inclusive Alternatives

["courteous","refined","noble","well-born"]

Empowerment Note

Medieval scholarship has recovered women's patronage of gentil literature and courtly culture—women were sophisticated patrons and performers, not passive recipients of courtliness.

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