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Definition 2024
entente_cordiale
entente cordiale
See also: entente-cordiale and Entente Cordiale
English
Alternative forms
Noun
entente cordiale (plural ententes cordiales)
- A friendly relationship, especially one between parties who might otherwise be adversaries or, at least, wary of one another.
- 1861 Feb. 21,"The Incoming Administration: Mr. Lincoln in New-York," New York Times (retrieved 8 July 2015):
- His Reception and Speech at the City Hall. Entente Cordiale Between the Mayor and the President.
- 1895, John Kendrick Bangs, Mr. Bonaparte of Corsica, ch. 9:
- Bonaparte's first act after providing lucrative positions for his family was to write another letter, couched in language of a most fraternal nature, to the King of England, asking for peace. "Dear Cousin George," he wrote, ". . . let us restore the entente cordiale and go about our business without any further scrapping."
- 1902, William Dean Howells, "The Man of Letters as a Man of Business" in Literature and Life:
- [F]ewer and fewer authors are turning from journalism to literature, though the ‘entente cordiale’ between the two professions seems as great as ever.
- 1913, Louis Joseph Vance, The Day of Days, ch. 10:
- [H]e grew unpleasantly sensitive to a drop in the temperature of the entente cordiale which had thus far obtained between himself and the gambler.
- 1918, Peter B. Kyne, The Valley of the Giants, ch. 24:
- [E]mbarrassment . . . had decided Bryce not to mention the matter of the girl to John Cardigan until the entente cordiale between Pennington and his father could be reestablished.
- 1963 Feb. 15, "The Press: Through a Keyhole Darkly," Time (retrieved 8 July 2015):
- After a decade of scorched-earth warfare, Louella ("Lollipop") Parsons had sat down to public lunch with her rival, Hedda Hopper. The entente cordiale did not last, of course.
- 2009 April 30, Matt Scott, "Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsène Wenger will be sharing a pizza next," Guardian (UK) (retrieved 8 July 2015):
- The new and surprising entente cordiale between Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsène Wenger, whose mutual antipathy has been a recurring feature of the Premier League era, appears to have its roots on a Scottish golf course.
- 1861 Feb. 21,"The Incoming Administration: Mr. Lincoln in New-York," New York Times (retrieved 8 July 2015):
Usage notes
- Originally used as a common noun, this term has also become a proper noun, specifying the formal 1904 Anglo-French understanding. See Entente Cordiale.