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FOIBLE

Volume 7 · 155 words · 1797 Edition

a French term, frequently used also in our language. It literally signifies weak; and in that sense is applied to the body of animals and the parts thereof, as foible reins, foible flight, &c. being derived from the Italian *foible*, of the Latin *flebilis*, to be "lamented, pitied."

But it is chiefly used with us substantively, to denote a defect or flaw in a person or thing. Thus we say, Every person has his foible; and the great secret consists in hiding it artfully: Princes are gained by flattery, that is their foible: The foible of young people is pleasure; the foible of old men is avarice; the foible of the great and learned is vanity; the foible of women and girls, coquetry, or an affectation of having gallants: You should know the forte and the foible of a man before you employ him: We should not let people perceive that we know their foible.