Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The earliest known use of the word foible is in the mid 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for foible is from before 1648, in the writing of Edward Herbert, diplomat and philosopher.

  3. Sep 28, 2017 · foible. (n.) 1640s, "weak point of a sword blade" (contrasted to forte), from French foible "a weak point, a weakness, failing," from noun use of Old French adjective feble "feeble" (see feeble). The spelling borrowed in English is obsolete in modern French, which uses faible.

  4. But forte is not the only word we get from the sword. Conversely, the weakest part of the blade—the part between the middle and the point—is called the foible. That word came to English through French, from the Old French feble, meaning “feeble.”

  5. That’s where foible comes in handy. Borrowed from French in the 1600s, the word originally referred to the weakest part of a fencing sword, that part being the portion between the middle and the pointed tip.

  6. Word Origin late 16th cent. (as an adjective in the sense ‘feeble’): from obsolete French, in Old French fieble, from Latin flebilis ‘lamentable’, from flere ‘weep’. This sense also formerly occurred as a sense of the word feeble and dates from the 17th cent.

  7. 5 days ago · A weakness or failing of character. Synonym: fault. Jesus is reverenced as the one man who has lived unspotted by the world, free from human. (fencing) Part of a sword between the middle and the point, weaker than the forte.

  8. It is believed to have originated from the French word 'faible,' which means 'weak' or 'feeble.' In its early use in English, 'foible' referred to a minor weakness or failing in a person's character or behavior, often used in a somewhat playful or endearing manner.

  1. People also search for