Bordelese

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) A person from Bordeaux.
 * 2) * 1827, Charles Angélique François Huchet comte de La Bédoyère, Memoirs of the Public and Private Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, page 787:
 * [...] the Bordelese flattered themselves with being seconded by the troops of the line [...] affrighted Bordelese then requested a capitulation, [...]
 * 1) * 1885, Guizot (M., François), Madame de Witt (Henriette Elizabeth), The History of France from the Earliest Times to 1848, page 298
 * Bordeaux and Bayonne held out for some weeks; but, on the 12th of June, a treaty concluded between Bordelese and Dunois secured to the three estates of the district the liberties and privileges which they had enjoyed under English supremacy [...]
 * 1) * 1885, Guizot (M., François), Madame de Witt (Henriette Elizabeth), The History of France from the Earliest Times to 1848, page 298
 * Bordeaux and Bayonne held out for some weeks; but, on the 12th of June, a treaty concluded between Bordelese and Dunois secured to the three estates of the district the liberties and privileges which they had enjoyed under English supremacy [...]
 * Bordeaux and Bayonne held out for some weeks; but, on the 12th of June, a treaty concluded between Bordelese and Dunois secured to the three estates of the district the liberties and privileges which they had enjoyed under English supremacy [...]

Adjective

 * Of, from, or pertaining to Bordeaux.
 * 1) * 1963, Hunt Botanical Library, Adanson:
 * Linnaeus was also in correspondence with a Bordelese physician, Jean-Baptiste Aymen,
 * 1) * 1963, Hunt Botanical Library, Adanson:
 * Linnaeus was also in correspondence with a Bordelese physician, Jean-Baptiste Aymen,