Nowadays, no one refers to a "polite" looking glass or houses "polite" and in good repair, but polite (or polit or polyt, as it was spelled in Middle English) originally meant simply "polished" or "clean." By the early 1600s, polite was being used of polished and refined people, and politeness had been penned to name the shining quality of such people. Politesse (a French borrowing) debuted in the late 17th century. All three words stem from Latin polire, which means "to polish" (and which is, by way of the Anglo-French stem poliss-, an ancestor of the English polish). Today we tend to use politeness for everyday good manners and reserve politesse for more formal courtesies.
Examples of politesse in a Sentence
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And indeed, by that time, there was little need for such politesse.—
Charlie Tyson,
Harpers Magazine,
21 Apr. 2026 Not to mention the politesse of the ball requires these small exchanges.—
Danielle Parker,
CBS News,
24 Apr. 2026 Her social politesse transforms into a maternal fury and the air turns blue with inventive insults.—
Sophie Monks Kaufman,
IndieWire,
22 May 2025 The panel’s mid-century politesse is soothing, and the celebrity guests (Alfred Hitchcock!—
Dan Zak,
The Atlantic,
3 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for politesse
Word History
Etymology
French, from Middle French, cleanness, from Old Italian pulitezza, from pulito, past participle of pulire to polish, clean, from Latin polire