raconteuse
English
    
    Etymology
    
Borrowed from French raconteuse.
Noun
    
raconteuse (plural raconteuses)
- A female storyteller.
- 1978, William Peter Archibald, Social psychology as political economy, page 229:- There is a fascinating passage in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing where four Canadians on their way up a river in the wilderness come upon a heron someone preceding them has killed and strung from a tree. Having surveyed its disgusting remains, the raconteuse asks herself "Why had they strung it up like a lynch victim, why didn't they just throw it away like the trash?"
 
- 2012, Tom Edwards, Tom:- Tom's mother was a superb raconteuse with the enviable gift of painting a verbal canvas of enchanting colours, transporting her audience into a realm of her own making that invariably enhanced the core of the tale.
 
- 2012, William Penn, Love in the Time of Flowers, →ISBN, page 51:- So, Shasta had reflected at once, Aunt Lily, by acclamation the family raconteuse, had certainly piqued her concern and puzzlement, if not exactly her surprise.
 
 
Anagrams
    
French
    
    Pronunciation
    
- Audio - (file) 
Further reading
    
- “raconteuse”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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