Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The strong part of a sword-blade or rapier, as opposed to the foible. Also spelled
fort . - noun That in which one excels; a peculiar talent or faculty; a strong point or side; chief excellence.
- In music, loud; with force: opposed to piano: used also as if an adverb. Abbreviated feminine
- noun In music, a passage that is loud and forcible or is intended to be so.
- noun In harmonium-making, a slide or cover in the chest containing one or more sets of reeds, so arranged as to be opened by a stop-knob or a knee-lever and thus to produce a forte effect. Frequently separate fortes are introduced for the treble and the bass ends of the keyboard.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adverb (Mus.) Loudly; strongly; powerfully.
- noun The strong point; that in which one excels.
- noun The stronger part of the blade of a sword; the part of half nearest the hilt; -- opposed to
foible .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
strength ortalent . - noun The strong part of a
sword blade , close to thehilt . - noun A
passage inmusic to beplayed loudly ; a loud section of music. - adverb music
loudly
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective used chiefly as a direction or description in music
- noun the stronger part of a sword blade between the hilt and the foible
- adverb used as a direction in music; to be played relatively loudly
- noun (music) loud
- noun an asset of special worth or utility
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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_e. g._, _crescendo poco a poco al forte ed un pochettino accelerando_, is seen to mean merely -- "increase gradually to _forte_ and accelerate a very little bit."
Music Notation and Terminology Karl Wilson Gehrkens 1928
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"They think he's not skilled from a sewing standpoint, but his forte is the draping," Garcia explains.
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For all his power, his forte is the short game — chipping and putting.
USATODAY.com - Superheavyweight takes to the golf course 2004
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As for the English word forte ` strength, 'it is not the feminine form of the French adjective fort ` strong' but an English "feminization" of the French noun fort
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LaMontagne's forte is a strain of wracked, fragile country-blues soaked in exquisite melancholy.
Ray LaMontagne Ian Gittins 2010
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Henry's forte is the edgy, bawdy, irreverent, and (he hopes) funny acoustic ballad, and unwittingly performing such material one day in a pizza joint before an audience of "Miniature Golfers for God" brings him to recalculate the dividends his career has brought him.
Joseph Smigelski: Film Review: Punching the Clown Joseph Smigelski 2010
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As it turned out, I filter the stories, while Tomislav's forte is theory and essays.
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Henry's forte is the edgy, bawdy, irreverent, and (he hopes) funny acoustic ballad, and unwittingly performing such material one day in a pizza joint before an audience of "Miniature Golfers for God" brings him to recalculate the dividends his career has brought him.
Joseph Smigelski: Film Review: Punching the Clown Joseph Smigelski 2010
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My real forte is for Super Smash Brothers, which scarcely qualifies as a fighter as all.
Fight! SVGL 2009
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Gailey's forte is coaching up teams with modest talent and devoid of stars -- i.e.,
Gailey to Bills just as unexpected as Dooley to Tennessee - sports 2010
seanahan commented on the word forte
Not that difficult to pronounce! Please, just try a little harder.
January 5, 2007
lorilori commented on the word forte
My husband & I have an ongoing argument about this one...I prefer "fawr-tey," and he prefers "fohrt." Good times at our house :)
January 5, 2007
chained_bear commented on the word forte
In fencing, the strong part of the blade, nearest the guard.
February 6, 2007
seanahan commented on the word forte
Found this interesting video on this word http://www.hotforwords.com/2008/10/09/forte-pronunciation/. Also uses nounized.
October 29, 2008
milosrdenstvi commented on the word forte
When used in music it is from the Italian and partakes of two syllables.
When used as a synonym for something one is good at it derives from the French through the sport of fencing, and only has one.
This is really not that difficult. This however continues to be one of the stock stupidities that people commonly refuse to correct because "everyone else does it that way". Well, everyone else who's uneducated, at least.
March 18, 2009
qroqqa commented on the word forte
Disyllabic pronunciation in all meanings: to pronounce common words differently from your neighbours is pedantry and ignorance. The English word is a blend of French and Italian, getting its spelling and pronunciation from Italian but its (primary) meaning from French.
The French for a strong point, in particular the strong point of a sword (as opposed to 'foible', the weak point) is fort fɔR, masculine.
As with numerous English words (locale, morale etc.), once it was borrowed into English it subsequently acquired an extra -e in the belief that this made it look more French.
The assimilation in pronunciation to the Italian-derived musical term forte is surely complete. The OED gives the pronunciations as (fɔːti, fɔːteɪ, formerly fɔːt), and I doubt anyone has said it as a monosyllable for many decades except those who have read someone else claiming that it was one. (I used to be one of those myself, in my ignorance, before I understood how language actually works.)
I have just edited out of some text the spelling forté, a natural next progression in confusing the two source languages.
March 30, 2009
rolig commented on the word forte
Well argued, Q.! I am an overly educated guy who is thought to be quite articulate and knowledgeable about languages, and I have always said this word with two syllables, with the stress on the first. But a couple of months ago someone whose opinion on such matters I respect said that it should be pronounced as one syllable when it meant "area of particular strength". But I don't believe that I have ever heard anyone say the word that way in the past thirty years. And I am sure that I and my educated friends have all said it disyllabically. Thanks for the confirmation.
But this makes me wonder: is this campaign to get people to say forte monosyllabically a recent fad? Is this a new bugbear?
March 30, 2009
sionnach commented on the word forte
See the giving tree initial rant.
March 30, 2009
rolig commented on the word forte
Sionnach, did you grow up saying (and hearing people say) one-syllable forte? I wonder if the one- vs. two-syllable divide is based on class distinctions or perhaps on the transatlantic rift, or both?
March 30, 2009
ezzackly commented on the word forte
As a French major, I have to side with the one-syllable.
May 9, 2009
PaulStatt commented on the word forte
The first definition of "forte," something at which a person excels, is pronounced "fort" not "fortay." There should be some way to indicate that.
May 20, 2009
ruzuzu commented on the word forte
I think I side with The Orthoepist (see the Pronunciations page for this word). I learned the one-syllable version from a former professor of English, but most of my other friends try to correct me when I use it that way.
For a usage example, see bunbury.
April 3, 2011
Jimmydiamond commented on the word forte
pronounced fort when strength or talent
pronounced forte when loud sound in music
September 21, 2013
bilby commented on the word forte
Would adding an -e to fart make it more French?
August 26, 2021
bilby commented on the word forte
Asking for a friend. It's ruzuzu, but I'm not allowed to mention.
August 26, 2021