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fougère

American  
[foo-zher] / fuˈʒɛr /

noun

plural

fougères
  1. a family of perfumes usually including notes of lavender, oakmoss, and citrus.


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.

Fougere told the Las Vegas Review-Journal he was excited for another chance but questioned how many voters would participate again.

From Seattle Times

The 10 fragrances they’ve created — five for work and five for play — hit five key ingredient stories: a dry wood, a sweet wood, aquatic, citrus and fougère.

From Los Angeles Times

A spokesman for the curators, John Fougere, said Click stopped being paid Tuesday.

From US News

A spokesman for the curators, John Fougere, said Click’s pay ceases as of Tuesday.

From Washington Times

System spokesman John Fougere said officials have been “working tirelessly with our state legislators to rebuild confidence with them in the University of Missouri System.”

From Washington Times