Grande
proper noun
- family name
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɡɹænd/
adj
Etymology: From French grande, feminine of grand.
- Alternative form of grand.
“Almost symbolically, Lopahin still plays the peasant and Lyubov the grande mistress.”
“A supremely happy family waved goodbye to an elderly grande dame and a namesake who had just enrolled in her first lesson in becoming a grande lady.[…]In Litchfield, Connecticut, the Hutchinson brothers rushed to tell the grande old dame her daughter was making history.”
name
Etymology: Borrowed from Romance (either Spanish Grande or Italian Grande).
- A municipality in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
- A surname from the Romance languages.
noun
Etymology: From Spanish grande. Doublet of grand.
- Alternative form of grandee.
“Console yourself with the practical philosophy of our countryman, Private Curtis, who was the picture of a Spanish Grande of the first class, and whom I once heard after a Lenten dinner extemporize with great good-humour this Leonine distich:—“Quod deficit in ferculis / Supplebitur in poculis!””
“When we read in almost every book in which the life of Philip is described that he was a man of haughty character with an aversion to every vulgarity; when we read of his ability in courting ladies, his manly beauty, his fine dress as a Spanish grande, we incline to think that before us stands a nobleman of kindred feelings, of carefully fostered nobility.”