banlieusard
English
Etymology
From French banlieusard.
Adjective
banlieusard (comparative more banlieusard, superlative most banlieusard)
- suburban
- 2017, Masha Belenky, Kathryn Kleppinger, & Anne O’Neil-Henry, French Cultural Studies for the Twenty-First Century, →ISBN, page 84:
- These dynamics create a new “pornotrope” that distinguishes the colonial nostalgia production from the banlieusard production: the difficult Arab boy, far removed from the always-available Arab boy of yesteryear.
-
French
Etymology
banlieue + -ard
Adjective
banlieusard (feminine banlieusarde, masculine plural banlieusards, feminine plural banlieusardes)
- (relational) suburb; suburban
Noun
banlieusard m (plural banlieusards, feminine banlieusarde)
- suburbanite, commuter
Further reading
- “banlieusard”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.