cadre origin - EAS

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  1. https://www.etymonline.com/word/cadre

    cadre (n.) "permanently organized framework of a military unit" (the officers, etc., as opposed to the rank-and-file), 1851; earlier "framework, scheme" (1830); from French cadre, literally "a frame of a picture" (16c.), so, "a detachment forming the skeleton of a regiment," from Italian quadro, from Latin quadrum "a square," which related to quattuor "four" (from PIE root *kwetwer- "four").

  2. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cadre

    Cadre traces to the Latin quadrum, meaning "square." Squares can make good frameworks—a fact that makes it easier to understand why first French speakers and later English speakers used …

  3. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/cadre

    Origin of cadre First recorded in 1905–10; from French: “frame, border, bounds, cadre” (metaphorically, the cadre being the framework into which temporary personnel are fit), from …

  4. https://www.wordsense.eu/cadre
    • Pronunciation
      1. (Brit. Eng.) IPA: /ˈkɑː.də/ 2. (Amer. Eng.) IPA: /ˈkæd.ɹi/
    • Noun
      1. A frame or framework. 2. (military) The framework or skeleton upon which a new regiment is to be formed; the officers of a regiment forming the staff. 3. (chiefly, in communism) The core of a managing group, or a memberof such a group. 4. A small group of people specially trained for a …
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