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Showing results for -elle. Search instead for b-s-el-e.

-elle

American  
  1. a noun suffix occurring in loanwords from French, where it originally formed diminutives, now often with a derivative sense in which the diminutive force is lost (bagatelle; prunelle; rondelle ); also in Anglicized forms of Latin words ending in -ella (organelle ).


Etymology

Origin of -elle

< French < Latin -ella, feminine of -ellus, forming diminutives corresponding to stems ending in -ul- -ule, -r- ( castellum ), -n- ( patella )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

I had photographed Elle a few years back.

From Los Angeles Times

“Elle Duncan’s proven ability to seamlessly move between hard-hitting sports analysis and warm, personality-driven cultural hosting makes her a perfect fit at Netflix,” Gabe Spitzer, Vice President, Sports, Netflix said in a statement.

From Los Angeles Times

“This has everything you want in a memoir and even more stuff you don’t — which is what made it so surprising and surprisingly enjoyable! Supermodel Christie Brinkley unpacks her supermodel career, four marriages and many, many wild romances that would put Elizabeth Taylor to shame. We jump on a boat with Billy Joel, run into Whitney Houston, Elle MacPherson and Muhammad Ali, plus experience magical sand that saves her from a traumatic helicopter crash. Bonus: What it’s like to get negged by Sylvester Stallone’s brother.”

From Los Angeles Times

These and many more tales from inside the maelstrom of megawatt stardom were the subject of The Envelope’s 2025 Oscar Actresses Roundtable, where Paltrow, Lopez and Blunt were joined by Sydney Sweeney, who transformed physically and emotionally to play boxing legend Christy Martin in “Christy”; Tessa Thompson, who tries to keep up appearances as the title character in “Hedda,” Nia DaCosta’s acclaimed new adaptation of “Hedda Gabler”; and Elle Fanning, who plays an American star struggling to find her way into a Norwegian art film in “Sentimental Value.”

From Los Angeles Times

Elle, in “Sentimental Value,” you play a Hollywood star who’s cast in an art-house European production.

From Los Angeles Times