cavour: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Extremely Low (Proper Noun / Historical Reference)
UK/kəˈvʊə/US/kəˈvʊr/

Formal, Historical, Academic

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Quick answer

What does “cavour” mean?

The word 'cavour' is not a standard English lexical entry. It is a proper noun, specifically the surname of Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour (1810–1861), a leading figure in the Italian unification (Risorgimento).

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Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

The word 'cavour' is not a standard English lexical entry. It is a proper noun, specifically the surname of Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour (1810–1861), a leading figure in the Italian unification (Risorgimento).

In extended, non-standard usage, it may occasionally be encountered as a literary or historical reference to statesmanship, political strategy, or Italian unification.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No difference in usage. Recognition is likely slightly higher in UK contexts due to historical European studies.

Connotations

Historical statesmanship, diplomatic cunning, Italian nationalism.

Frequency

Vanishingly rare in general discourse; appears almost exclusively in historical texts.

Grammar

How to Use “cavour” in a Sentence

[Proper Noun] + 's' + [Noun] (possession)[Preposition] + Cavour

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
Count CavourCavour's policyCavour and Garibaldi
medium
the era of Cavourinspired by Cavour
weak
Cavour figureCavour-like

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Not used.

Academic

Used in historical and political science contexts discussing 19th-century Europe.

Everyday

Virtually never used.

Technical

Not used in technical fields.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “cavour”

Strong

architect of Italian unification

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “cavour”

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “cavour”

  • Using it as a common noun (e.g., 'a cavour of the project').
  • Misspelling as 'caviour', 'cavor'.
  • Mispronouncing the final 'r' in non-rhotic (British) contexts.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

It is not a standard English common noun. It is the Anglicised spelling of an Italian proper name, used in English historical discourse.

In British English, it is /kəˈvʊə/ (kuh-VOOR). In American English, it is /kəˈvʊr/ (kuh-VOOR), with a clearer final /r/ sound.

No, it is exclusively a proper noun. Any adjectival form (e.g., 'Cavourian') is highly specialised and rare.

To demonstrate the treatment of low-frequency proper nouns and historical terms, and to clarify common misconceptions about their lexical status.

The word 'cavour' is not a standard English lexical entry. It is a proper noun, specifically the surname of Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour (1810–1861), a leading figure in the Italian unification (Risorgimento).

Cavour is usually formal, historical, academic in register.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • None. As a proper noun, it does not form idioms.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think: 'A Count (Cavour) who accounted for Italy's unification.'

Conceptual Metaphor

CAVOUR IS AN ARCHITECT (of a nation).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
, alongside Garibaldi, is considered a founding father of modern Italy.
Multiple Choice

In which context is the word 'Cavour' primarily used?