Advertisement

Advertisement

froideur

[frwa-dœr]

noun

French.
  1. an attitude of haughty aloofness; cold superiority.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of froideur1

First recorded in 1820–25; French: literally, “coldness”; equivalent to froid “cold” + -eur -eur ( def. )
Discover More

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.

That sounds a lot like the way Carson lived, based on the way a 1978 New Yorker profile summed up the venerated host’s jovial froideur.

Read more on Salon

Her publicist and I chat in the lobby of The Dorchester hotel in London, while I mentally prepare for the full force of her legendary froideur.

Read more on The Guardian

Or rather in the Mail on Sunday, where his former backer Arron Banks hinted that a certain froideur had developed between various Bad Boys of Brexit.

Read more on The Guardian

Such is the method of the movie: patient, composed, and cool to the point of froideur.

Read more on The New Yorker

Soon Ben and I would descend into six months of froideur as the financials got hammered out.

Read more on The Guardian

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


FrohmanFroissart