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Gentry Meaning in English

word

/ˈdʒɛntɹi/
JEN-tree
/dʒˈɛntɹi/
JEN-tree

التعريف

A social class of people just below the nobility, often landowners or well-off, especially in historical England. It can also mean people from a higher social background who are respected in their local area.

الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة

'Gentry' is dated and mostly used in historical or literary contexts. It refers to landowners or rural upper-middle class, not the nobility. In modern speech, rarely used except in phrases like 'country gentry'. Often confused with 'nobility' (higher rank) or 'gentlemen' (polite men, not social class).

جمل نموذجية

The gentry owned most of the land in the village.

basic

Many members of the gentry had large houses and servants.

basic

He married into the local gentry.

basic

The old manor belonged to the gentry for generations.

natural

In classic novels, the gentry often hosts grand parties.

natural

She comes from the gentry, so people in town respect her family.

natural