Word
Of
The
Day
métier
métier \MET-yay\
noun
Métier, sometimes styled
metier, is a formal word that refers to something that a person does very well.
// After trying several careers, she found her true
métier in computer science.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Turning from his father’s trade of corset-making,
[Thomas] Paine tried his hand at business, met and impressed Benjamin Franklin in London, sailed to America, and there found his true
metier as a pamphleteer and radical.” — Matthew Redmond,
The Conversation, 9 Oct. 2025
Did you know?
Over the centuries, English has borrowed several French words related in some way to work or working, among them
oeuvre (“a substantial body of work of a writer, an artist, or a composer”) and
travail (“work of a laborious nature, toil”).
Métier (pronounced /MET-yay/) is another. It is sometimes translated from its original French as “job” or “career” but in that language it more accurately refers to the trade or profession in which one works (it traces back to the Old French
mistier, meaning “duty, craft, profession”). In English we tend toward a narrower meaning for
métier, referring either to a job for which one is perfectly suited or a particular field in which one is extremely skilled. This makes it a synonym of another French borrowing,
forte.