Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mɛːˈsiː/ or as French
Interjection
merci
- (colloquial) thank you
2005, Victoria Laurie, A Vision of Murder: A Psychic Eye Mystery, →ISBN:Rebecca Rosen, merci for helping me to understand that connection between you and The Other Side, and making the character of Theresa come alive.
2008, Lewis H. Siegelbaum, Cars for Comrades: The Life of the Soviet Automobile, →ISBN:"Improve the roads! Merci for the reception!" With this insouciant remark and the banner he affixed to his automobile that read "Auto rally against roadlessness and slovenliness!"
2014, Art Wiederhold, Hunter: Quebec, →ISBN:“Merci, Bob. I'll inform Lauren,” Bergere said as he hurried out of the office.
Noun
merci (plural mercis)
- An extra card or set of cards that is allowed to play at the end of various card games.
1995, Peter Arnold, The Book of Card Games, →ISBN, page 15:Few games are won without the merci. In the final deal a King above a card of the same suit automatically blocks the game, and the merci should be used to free such a card.
Interjection
merci
- thank you
merci pour ton aide- thank you for your help
Noun
merci f (uncountable)
- mercy
- Synonyms: miséricorde, pitié
- grace
- Synonym: grâce
Descendants
- → Alemannic German: merci
- → Arabic: مرسي (mersī, “thanks (colloquial)”)
- → Armenian: մերսի (mersi, “thanks (colloquial)”)
- → Bulgarian: мерси́ (mersí, “thanks (colloquial)”)
- → Catalan: merci
- → Dutch: merci
- → German: merci
- Haitian Creole: mèsi
- → Japanese: メルシー (merushī)
- → Korean: 메르시 (mereusi)
- Louisiana Creole: mèsi, mærsi
- → Luxembourgish: merci
- → Ottoman Turkish: մէրսի (mersi)
- → Persian: مرسی (mersi, “thanks (colloquial)”)
- → Romanian: mersi
- → Russian: мерси́ (mersí, “thanks (colloquial)”)
Further reading
- “merci” in Duden online
- “merci” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
Pronunciation
- (archaic) IPA(key): /mɛɾˈt͡siθ/, (northern) /mɛɾˈt͡ʃiθ/
- (classical) IPA(key): /mɛɾˈt͡si/, (northern) /mɛɾˈt͡ʃi/
- (late) IPA(key): /mɛɾˈsi/, (northern) /mɛɾˈʃi/
Noun
merci oblique singular, f (nominative singular merci)
- mercy; clemency
c. 1176, Chrétien de Troyes, Cligès:Se vos metez an sa merci
Nus (fors le conte qui est ci)
de vos n'i a mort desservie
ja ne perdroiz manbre ne vie- If you throw yourselves on his mercy
None (apart from the count who is here)
of you deserve death;
you will lose neither life nor limb
13th century, Herman de Valenciennes, Assomption Nostre Dame, page 7, column 2, lines 16–17:ceo sacez m'amie tuit cil que te requerunt
a tun commandement merci auvrunt- this you know, my friend, that all those who are looking for you
upon your command will have mercy