How To Use Anglo-French In A Sentence
- Etymology: Middle English skopper - (in compounds), perhaps from Anglo-French * escopoir, from escopir to spit out Think Progress » Analysis: Strong Carbon Cap Would Cut Iran’s Petrodollars By Over $100 Million A Day
- Middle English, from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French, acolit, from Medieval Latin acoluthus, from Middle Greek akolouthos, from Greek, adjective, following, from a -, ha - together (akin to Greek homos same) + keleuthos path Judge Rules In Favor Of Vegas Strip Caucus Sites
- Anglo-French military co-operation has an inglorious postwar history. Times, Sunday Times
- Ben-Gurion agreed to drop paratroops deep into the Sinai, seeming to threaten the Canal; in response the British and French would issue an ultimatum to both the Israelis and the Egyptians, demanding that the Israelis withdraw their troops—and that the Egyptians allow Anglo-French forces to occupy key positions along the Canal. Crossing Mandelbaum Gate
- The surge came after the group confirmed that shareholders had given their backing to a deal that will save the Anglo-French group from collapse. Times, Sunday Times
- Yet Sir Richard wanted to expand into modern Anglo-French technical cooperation; Jeremy instinctively wanted nothing to do with it. THE GWEN JOHN SCULPTURE
- Etymology: Middle English conversacioun, from Anglo-French conversacion, from Latin conversation -, conversatio, from conversari to associate with, frequentative of convertere to turn around Pirates! Man your Women!
- And that is why I proposed, at the Ottawa Conference, a revival of the Anglo-French "entente". The Future of the Western Alliance
- There was a week's exhibition at the Pompidou: Anglo-French cross-pollination at the time of the Restoration. DISPLACED PERSON
- This treaty was a temporary truce in the Anglo-French conflict in India and North America.