adjective General Slang

Venere

/venɛʀ/ · adjective · slang

Verlan for 'enerve' (angry/annoyed) — means pissed off or worked up.

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Definitions

1

From the standard French 'enerve' (annoyed, irritated, angry). Verlan reshuffles e-ner-ve to ve-ne-re. It means angry or pissed off.

“Il est venere contre toi. = He's pissed off at you.”
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2

Describes a tense or heated mood or atmosphere.

“L'ambiance etait venere apres le match. = The mood was heated after the match.”
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3

Used reflexively, 'se venere', to mean to get worked up or lose one's temper.

“Te venere pas pour ca. = Don't get worked up over that.”
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Venere In A Sentence

Je suis trop venere, ils ont annule.
Quand il perd, il devient venere.
Calme-toi, t'as pas a etre venere.

Origin & Usage

Banlieue verlan from 'enerve', widespread since the 1990s. A three-syllable example showing verlan can reorder all the syllables of a word, not just swap two.

Variants enerve

People Also Ask

What does venere mean?

It's verlan for 'enerve' and means angry, annoyed, or pissed off.

How do you use venere as a verb?

Reflexively: 'se venerer', e.g. 'te venere pas' meaning 'don't get worked up'.

Where did venere come from?

From verlan, the syllable-shuffling slang of the French banlieues.

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