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  2. The earliest known use of the word tête-à-tête is in the late 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for tête-à-tête is from 1697, in the writing of John Vanbrugh, playwright and architect. tête-à-tête is a borrowing from French.

  3. The meaning of TÊTE-À-TÊTE is a private conversation between two persons. How to use tête-à-tête in a sentence.

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    Etymology

    Borrowed from French tête-à-tête (“head-to-head”).

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /ˌtɛt.əˈtɛt/, /ˌteɪt.əˈteɪt/

    Noun

    tête-à-tête (plural tête-à-têtes) 1. A face-to-face meeting, or private conversation between two people, usually in an intimate setting; a head-to-head. 1.1. Synonym: head-to-head 1.1. 1794, Charlotte Smith, chapter XI, in The Banished Man.[…], volume II, London: […] T[homas] Cadell, Jun. and W[illiam] Davies, (successors to Mr. [Thomas] Cadell)[…], →OCLC, pages 225–226: 1.1.1. From the tête-à-tête with Mr. Thomas Tough, ſhe goes to her deſk again, and begins to write "With what appetite ſhe...

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /tɛ.ta.tɛt/, /te.ta.tɛt/

    Noun

    tête-à-tête m (plural tête-à-tête or tête-à-têtes) 1. tête-à-tête, head-to-head

    Further reading

    1. “tête-à-tête”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.

    Etymology

    Unadapted borrowing from French tête-à-tête.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /tɛt.aˈtɛt/ 2. Rhymes: -atɛt 3. Syllabification: tête-‧à-‧tête

    Adverb

    tête-à-tête (not comparable) 1. (literary) tête-à-tête (in private, between two people; head-to-head)

    Etymology

    Borrowed from French tête-à-tête.

    Noun

    tête-à-tête n (plural tête-à-tête-uri) 1. tête-à-tête, head-to-head

    Alternative forms

    1. tete-a-tete 2. tätatät

    Etymology

    From French tête-à-tête.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /tɛtaˈtɛːt/ 2. Rhymes: -ɛːt

  4. Tête-à-tête definition: a private conversation or interview, usually between two people.. See examples of TÊTE-À-TÊTE used in a sentence.

  5. Jun 20, 2020 · The tête in tête-à-tête comes from Old French teste, from testa “head” in Vulgar Latin, from Latin testa “terracotta pot, brick.” Tête-à-tête first occurs in French in a comédie-ballet by Molière entitled La comtesse d’Escarbagnas “The Countess of Escarbagnas” (1671).

  6. TÊTE-À-TÊTE meaning: 1. an informal private conversation between two people, especially friends: 2. in private with…. Learn more.

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