How To Use Anglo-french In A Sentence
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Etymology: Middle English skopper - (in compounds), perhaps from Anglo-French * escopoir, from escopir to spit out
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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
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Anglo-French military co-operation has an inglorious postwar history.
Times, Sunday Times
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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
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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
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Yet Sir Richard wanted to expand into modern Anglo-French technical cooperation; Jeremy instinctively wanted nothing to do with it.
THE GWEN JOHN SCULPTURE
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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!
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And that is why I proposed, at the Ottawa Conference, a revival of the Anglo-French "entente".
The Future of the Western Alliance
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There was a week's exhibition at the Pompidou: Anglo-French cross-pollination at the time of the Restoration.
DISPLACED PERSON
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This treaty was a temporary truce in the Anglo-French conflict in India and North America.
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This policy was initiated when Chamberlain took office reached its climax in the Munich agreement of September last year and finally collapsed in the recent anglo-french - Soviet talks.
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Though of Western design, the ensemble had been created for the Old Summer Palace near Beijing, whose looting and destruction in 1860 by Anglo-French forces (led by General Cousin-Montauban and the eighth Lord Elgin, whose father acquired marbles from the Parthenon) has become a symbol of national humiliation for the Chinese.
The Affair of the Chinese Bronze Heads
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The show began with an Anglo-French rout: Costume design went to the British team behind "Elizabeth: The Golden Age.
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SAVE THE POUND (avoirdupois) If the word avoirdupois sounds a bit foreign too it is from French and Middle English (Anglo-French) avoir de pois, "goods of weight" or "goods sold by weight".
Archive 2007-10-21
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Etymology: Middle English braundisshen, from Anglo-French brandiss-, stem of brandir, from brant, braund sword, of Germanic origin; akin to Old English brand
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In appearance, London will give up €1.5billion a year from Britain's annual rebate, handbagged by Margaret Thatcher in 1984 after a traditional Anglo-French spat over farm cash and currently running at around €5billion a year.
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Middle English, from past participle of sacren to consecrate, from Anglo-French sacrer, from Latin sacrare, from sacr-, sacer sacred; akin to Latin sancire to make sacred, Hittite šaklāi- rite
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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
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To sum up, I advocate an immediate revival of the Anglo-French "entente", as an essential prelude to any wider European or Atlantic unity.
The Future of the Western Alliance
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There was a week's exhibition at the Pompidou: Anglo-French cross-pollination at the time of the Restoration.
DISPLACED PERSON
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But when they attacked in March 1915, Allied (Anglo-French) naval forces had been turned back by enemy minefields, and had called in land forces to help.
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The shared pattern of the first three Anglo-French wars helps explain their inconclusiveness.
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Regardless of its symbolic significance, however, Sangatte remains a pressing problem in its own right, and a running sore in Anglo-French relations.
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Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin sacrificium, from sacr -, sacer + facere to make -- more at DO
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