Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Noblesse
1. 
Dignity; greatness; noble birth or condition. 
[Obs.] 
Chaucer. 
Spenser. 
B. Jonson.
 2. 
The nobility; persons of noble rank collectively, including males and females. 
Dryden.
 Definition 2025
Noblesse
Noblesse
noblesse
noblesse
See also: Noblesse
English
Noun
noblesse (usually uncountable, plural noblesses)
-  The quality of being noble; nobleness.
-  c. 1395, Geoffrey Chaucer, ‘The Clerk's Tale’, The Canterbury Tales, Ellesmere ms:
- I yow took/ out of youre pouere array / And putte yow / in estaat of heigh noblesse.
 
 -  1485, Sir Thomas Malory, chapter x, in Le Morte Darthur, book XIX:
- his moder had discouerd in her pryde / how she had wroughte that by enchauntement / soo that he shold neuer be hole vntyl the best knyghte of the world had serched his woundes / […] / And yf I fayle to hele hym here in this land I wylle neuer take more payne vpon me / and that is pyte for he was a good knyghte and of grete noblenes
 
 
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Ben Jonson to this entry?)
 
 -  c. 1395, Geoffrey Chaucer, ‘The Clerk's Tale’, The Canterbury Tales, Ellesmere ms:
 -  The nobility; peerage.
-  1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, I.8:
- Faire braunch of noblesse, flowre of cheualrie, / That with your worth the world amazed make, / How shall I quite the paines, ye suffer for my sake?
 
 
- (Can we find and add a quotation of John Dryden to this entry?)
 
 -  1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, I.8:
 
French
Etymology
Old French, see noble + -esse
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /nɔblɛs/
 
Noun
noblesse f (uncountable)