gentilhomme - significado y definición. Qué es gentilhomme
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Qué (quién) es gentilhomme - definición

MAN SAID TO HAVE GOOD, COURTEOUS CONDUCT
Gentlemen; Gentilhombre de la casa del príncipe; Gentilhombre; Gentilhombre de la casa del principe; Gentle man; Gentle men; English Gentleman; British Gentleman
  • The coat of arms of William Shakespeare.]]
  • Gentlemen of the [[Chapel Royal]] at the [[funeral procession]] of [[Elizabeth I of England]].
  • ''The Complete English Gentleman'' (1630), by Richard Brathwait, shows the exemplary qualities of a gentleman.
  • [[Raja Ravi Varma]], ''Painting of a Gentleman''; India, 19th century.

Gentlemen         
·pl of Gentleman.
Le bourgeois gentilhomme (Strauss)         
ORCHESTRAL SUITE BY RICHARD STRAUSS
Der Bürger als Edelmann; Der Burger als Edelmann; Le Bourgeois gentilhomme (Strauss)
Le bourgeois gentilhomme (in German, Der Bürger als Edelmann), Op. 60, is an orchestral suite compiled by Richard Strauss from music he wrote between 1911 and 1917.
Un gentilhomme         
BOOK BY OCTAVE MIRBEAU
Un gentilhomme is a novel by the French novelist and playwright Octave Mirbeau, published by Flammarion in 1920, after his death. Only three chapters were published.

Wikipedia

Gentleman

A gentleman (Old French: gentilz hom, gentle + man) is any man of good and courteous conduct. Originally, gentleman was the lowest rank of the landed gentry of England, ranking below an esquire and above a yeoman; by definition, the rank of gentleman comprised the younger sons of the younger sons of peers, and the younger sons of a baronet, a knight, and an esquire, in perpetual succession. As such, the connotation of the term gentleman captures the common denominator of gentility (and often a coat of arms); a right shared by the peerage and the gentry, the constituent classes of the British nobility.

Therefore, the English social category of gentleman corresponds to the French gentilhomme (nobleman), which in Great Britain meant a member of the peerage of England. In that context, the historian Maurice Keen said that the social category of gentleman is "the nearest, contemporary English equivalent of the noblesse of France." In the 14th century, the term gentlemen comprised the hereditary ruling class, which is whom the rebels of the Peasants' Revolt (1381) meant when they repeated:

When Adam delved and Eve span,
Who was then the gentleman?

In the 17th century, in Titles of Honour (1614), the jurist John Selden said that the title gentleman likewise speaks of "our English use of it" as convertible with nobilis (nobility by rank or personal quality) and describes the forms of a man's elevation to the nobility in European monarchies. In the 19th century, James Henry Lawrence explained and discussed the concepts, particulars, and functions of social rank in a monarchy, in the book On the Nobility of the British Gentry, or the Political Ranks and Dignities of the British Empire, Compared with those on the Continent (1827).

Ejemplos de uso de gentilhomme
1. When they say a simple word like shamaim (sky), they do not know they are quoting the Book of Genesis – much like Monsieur Jourdain in "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" spoke in prose his entire life without knowing it was prose.
2. LONDON Like Monsieur Jourdain in Molière‘s "Bourgeois Gentilhomme," who was surprised to discover he had been speaking prose all his life, I have been taken aback to find that I have been living in the "Anglo–Saxon model." Voters in the French referendum on the EU constitution, of course, know that model as a world of pitiless competition, of low salaries, of precarious employment and hyper–flexibility of the labor market.