How To Use Gallic In A Sentence
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Squire Western, who, surrounded by piqueurs, and girt with the conventional cor de chasse of the Gallic sportsman, sings the following ariette, diversified with true
Fielding
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A gorgeous, old gallica rose with fully double-yet-flat, deep magenta-pink flowers.
Times, Sunday Times
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Bourbons, damasks, albas, gallicas, mosses and rugosas are all likely groups of roses to choose from for fragrance - the difficulty is narrowing down the candidates.
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It should be noted that the name Gallican has also been applied to two other uses: (1) a French use introduced by the Normans into
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
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He was at that time "a vehement anti-ministerialist," but, after the invasion of Switzerland, a more vehement anti-Gallican, and still more intensely an anti-Jacobin:
The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1838
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But the vegetable substance in which the gallic acid most abounds is _nutgall_, a kind of excrescence that grows on oaks, and from which the acid is commonly obtained for its various purposes.
Conversations on Chemistry, V. 1-2 In Which the Elements of that Science Are Familiarly Explained and Illustrated by Experiments
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In the play s celebrated central act they get riotously tipsy as they await the nocturnal arrival of the Gallic Romeo.
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Elisabeth Badinter's bestselling book champions France's so-so moms as the secret to high Gallic birth rates.
In Praise of the Mediocre Mother
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The light-haired, dark-eyed Bonnaire was just 15 when she caused a sensation among Gallic cinephiles.
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A galosh While Mr. Chisena's modern galoshes evolved in America, they're linguistically Gallic and culturally Slavic.
The Time May Be Right for Galoshes to Make a Splash Again
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He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm.
Times, Sunday Times
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Here as elsewhere, Pennac's aphoristic style puts the ooh-la-la in Gallic shrug:
Giving Up
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He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm.
Times, Sunday Times
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It appears to me that the paper will absorb its proper dose of iodine better when dry, and the glacial acetic acid will set free any small amount of alkaline potash there may be on the surface; so that it will not embrown on applying gallic acid.
Notes and Queries, Number 181, April 16, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
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Frisic, or northern Dutch, and the Germanic, in all its recondite phases, with the ancient Gothic, and its cognates, taking in very wide accessions from the Latin, the Gallic, and other languages of southern
Incentives to the Study of the Ancient Period of American History An address, delivered before the New York Historical Society, at its forty-second anniversary, 17th November 1846
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And so, with a Gallic shrug, Carrefour is closing up shop in much of South - East Asia.
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What are called Gallican ideas are ever sprouting up like noxious weeds; there is a malcontent
The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete Lourdes, Rome and Paris
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But many who took refuge at Paris became accustomed to a Gallican atmosphere, and hence perhaps some of the regalist views about the Oath of
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
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Old gallica rose with velvety deep-crimson flowers and yellow centres.
Times, Sunday Times
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Ichthyol internally, and external applications of the same drug, and of resorcin, chrysarobin, and pyrogallic acid, have been extolled.
Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
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He lifted his shoulders in a Gallic shrug.
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Brushing aside the Gallicism of his formal dip at her hand,
Tender is the Night
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the Gallic Wars
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Catherine Deneuve seemed to typify cool Gallic elegance.
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Each side fielded armies that were very similar in tactics, organization, and equipment, and both used African and Gallic auxiliary troops.
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Gallicanism and all forms of French and German regalism affected to look upon the Holy See as an alien power because it was beyond the
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
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Some purport to function as collections for the Frankish and Visigothic kingdoms, like the Vetus Gallica of c.700 or the Hispana, c.700, respectively.
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The region was famed in the 1970s for its raptor population, with four vulture species, lammergeier Gypaetus barbatus, black Aegypius monachus, Griffon Gyps fulvus and Egyptian Neophron peranopterus; four eagle species, golden Aquila chrysaetos, short-toed Circaetus gallicus, booted Hieraeetus pennatus and Bonelli's Hieraeetus fasciatus and breeding lanner falcons Falco biarmicus.
Meteora Group of Monasteries, Greece
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III. i.185 (151,7) [I fly not death, to fly his deadly doom] _To fly his doom_, used for _by flying_, or _in flying_, is a gallicism.
Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies
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Laxly e mail lists at nosohusial sphaerocarpos to relishing no striver in advancing intervention, a unmitigable litchee, they are so susceptible adverbially heterospory christless the old pyrogallic way.
Rational Review
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苂ypto Consul eorum abesset, Consul illic Gallicus existens, Vento nuncupatus, quamuis ante h鎐 tempora ne manus in Anglos mitteret mandatum nostrum fuerit datum, Angli sub vexillo et tutela nostra sunt inquiens, mandatum C鎠areum vili existimans, non cessauit perturbare Anglos.
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
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For more houses with Gallic charm, visit timesonline.
Times, Sunday Times
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a Gallic shrug
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The story generally followed Laila's -- with the normal Gallic exaggeration and dramatization.
COVER STORY
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Gallic chiefs, Dagalaiphus and Nevitta; and the most fatal consequences might be apprehended from the discord of two factions, so opposite in their character and interest, in their maxims of government, and perhaps in their religious principles.
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
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Quid? fi quis librum gallico aut hifjianico idi - omate fcriptum characiere noftro germanico exaratum traderec homiui harum linguarum ignaro, uum ita peregrinam illam linguam in - telligeret?
De origine versionis Septuaginta interpretum exercitatio historica [microform]
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Objective : To determine the content of gallic acid in Relinqing granules and Relinqing capsules by HPCE.
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Sudanese species include the trees Acacia nilotica, Grewia tenax, Grewia villosa, Cordia sinensis, Tamarix gallica and several species of Ficus.
Aïr and Ténéré Natural Reserves, Niger
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He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm.
Times, Sunday Times
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Yet an unprejudiced reader would naturally suppose, that Procopius means to describe a tribe of Germans in the alliance of Rome; and not a confederacy of Gallic cities, which had revolted from the empire.
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
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St Jerome’s traditional Gallican psalter from the Vulgate is given in the text of all the hours.
Update on the Baronius Latin-English Breviary
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In this scantily plotted movie, the nattily dressed American meets up with the Gallic twins at a protest in Paris at the Cinémathèque.
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This is turning out to be a great summer for lovers of cliches: France's football team is behaving with the kind of deliciously Gallic huffiness last seen from Pepe le Pew after being rejected by a suitor.
Just who is interested in politicians' sex lives?
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“Another forfeit for a Gallicism,” said a Russian writer who was present.
War and Peace
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Three of his songs were sweetly Gallic romantic ruminations.
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Other diseases that affect the overall health of finches, including pox and Mycoplasma galliceptum, cause males to grow a less red plumage.
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The collection brings together French underground pop/psych music that was ascendent as the Gallic sun was setting on the more brassy go-go sounds of the mid-60s.
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The more expensive works are chiefly illustrated 'standard' authors, such as Modestus ( 'De Vocabulis Rei Militaris,' 18s.), Vegetius (_gallice, cum picturis_, 16s., or in Latin _permultis picturis_, 20s.), and several medical works such as Galen (two at 20s.) and Jo.
The Book-Hunter at Home
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The measurement of gallic acid can provide reliable indexes for quality assay of TCM preparations.
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From this Gallic system of clientship there developed, in Frankish times, the conception of the ‘lord's man’ (homagium or hominium).
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Dr Jean-Louis Sebagh is famous for his Gallic charm and for having the adoration of supermodels and actresses.
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The conversion of alcohol into vinegar in the process of acetification and the production of gallic acid by the action of fungi on wet gall nuts, are already connected with this kind of phenomena.
The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology)
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The Saharomontane vegetation of the higher elevations supports the endemic Ficus teloukat, which grows on the south and southwestern slopes, Myrtus nivellei and Nerium oleander on the western slopes, and Tamarix ` gallica nilotica and Nerium oleander on the wetter northern slopes.
Tibesti-Jebel Uweinat montane xeric woodlands
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Our Gallic neighbours sipped disdainfully at orange juice.
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Henry might call a Gallican synod, instead of allowing the French ecclesiastics to attend, unless the Lutherans were also represented.
England under the Tudors
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Phytochemical studies made possible the isolation and identification of pygallic acid, commonly known as pyrogallol.
Chapter 12
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His books have none of the Gallic virtues of irony, juridical dryness and clarity of prose.
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Under Esa-Pekka Salonen's leadership, it gained considerable skills in executing sharply gauged, pointillistic effects, so important in Gallic orchestral works.
Rodney Punt: A Glowing Roméo et Juliette -- Charles Dutoit with the LA Philharmonic in Berlioz
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That is what an irate Euro - establishment in Brussels is asking as it watches the Gallic debate.
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First British women came under attack for being chubbier and less chic than their stylish Gallic sisters.
The parenting gap: why French mothers prefer to use the firm smack of authority
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Mme Arlette gave a Gallic shrug.
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By the use of such caustics as caustic potash, chloride-of-zinc paste, pyrogallic acid, arsenic, and the galvano-cautery; and by operative measures, such as excision and erasion with the dermal curette, and by the _x_-ray.
Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
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From these four types -- of Antioch, Alexandria, Rome, and the so-called Gallican Rite -- all liturgies still used are derived.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
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The humid valleys and guelta banks have Sudanian riverine vegetation: Tamarix gallica, and some Ficus sycomorus, Acacia nilotica, Salvadora persica and Hyphaene thebaica.
Tassili N'Ajjer National Park, Algeria
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It is an old gallica rose with velvety, deep-crimson flowers and yellow centres.
Times, Sunday Times
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And here are rose gallica, the red rose which blooms so profusely, and moon flowers which climb up trellises and open only at night
Mary Queen Of Scotland And The Isles
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Gallic migrations
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Is Gallic subtlety any match for the brute force of History?
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This dimidiation in the Gallican method of singing the Responsory led to some confusion of the sense of what was being sung, and Blessed Cardinal Tommasi, quoting from Amalarius, says that in consequence it became necessary to introduce some different verses in Gaul, so that there might be but one sense running through the words of both Respond and verse.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
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Before entering the Senate, he held (as stated in the chief inscription, given below) the decemvirate _litibus iudicandis_, the military tribunate in the third Gallic legion, and the title of Sevir in the Roman knighthood.
The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
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Bossuet called the firmest support of Gallican liberties.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 (From Barbarossa to Dante)
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The Gallic charge complete with battle cries was famous, but the discipline of the Roman legions was more effective.
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For more houses with Gallic charm, visit timesonline.
Times, Sunday Times
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English he seemed to write as readily as French, although a strong Gallicism would every now and then slip from his pen, as it slipped from his tongue.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 50, December, 1861
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His is the robust, Falstaffian humour of old England, which, I am glad to think, still exists in London and still pleases Londoners, in spite of efforts to Gallicize our entertainments and substitute obscenity and the salacious leer for honest fun and the frank roar of laughter.
Nights in London
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You know what the categories are - ultramontane, gallican, liberal, integriste, laicite, anticlerical, etc. - they were virtually invented here, and they never change.
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FLAVELLAGIC ACID, C_14H_6O_9, is obtained by the oxidation of gallic acid with concentrated sulphuric acid and potassium persulphate.
Synthetic Tannins
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There were also sermons in English (see next chapter); Jocelin de Brakelonde says in his chronicle that sermons were delivered in churches, "gallice vel potius anglice, ut morum fieret edificatio, non literaturæ ostensio," year 1200
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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The Iceni were a Gallic tribe; the Trinobantes were Gallo-Belgæ.
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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Ancient Gallic dialects
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On the other hand, in The King's English, orient is criticised as a 'Gallicism'.
On being orient(at)ed
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So guilt would have been irrational as I enjoyed the chef's artful crossruff of textures -- the chewy puffin playing against the more brittle sunchoke and hazelnuts, with an overall sea-saltiness prevailing amid the Gallic refinement of the sauce.
Icelandic Dining After the Collapse
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Larry Yachimec, in a Sterling award nominated turn, embodies the odd, denaturalized gallic intensity of this play.
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The ayre is very subtile, piercing and searching, so that if any corrupted or infected body, especially with the disease called Morbus Gallicus come there, it will presently breake forth and shew it selfe, and cannot there by any kind of salue or medicine be cured.
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of The English Nation, Vol. XII., America, Part I.
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Normannorum adventu derelicto proprio vulgari, construere gallice compelluntur; item quod filii nobilium ab ipsis cunabulorum crepundiis ad gallicum idioma informantur.
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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Gallic wit and subtlety are perfectly married to Russian soul in this performance.
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Germany was divided by the Rhine from the Gallic, and on the south, by the Danube, from the Illyrian, provinces of the empire.
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
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His style is nervous and original, not harassingly pointed like a chestnut-burr, but full of _esprit_ or wit diffused, -- that Gallic leaven which pervades whole sentences and paragraphs with an indefinable lightness and palatableness.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 23, September, 1859
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We may accept as certain that Aquileia had from the time of the formation of separate rites (fourth century) its own use, that this use was not the same as that of Rome, that probably it was one more variant of the large group of Western Rites, connected by (Eastern?) origin, which we call Gallican, that it was probably really related to the old Milanese Rite and perhaps still more to that of Ravenna.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 16 [Supplement]
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These three removes put a gulf impassable between her utmost skill and the impassioned irresolution of that inscrutable Northern nature which is in nothing so masculine as its feminine reluctances and hesitations, or so little French as in those obscure emotions which the English poetry expressed with more than Gallic clearness, but which the French words always failed to convey.
Literature and Life (Complete)
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Indeed anything remotely "operatic", it seems, is alluded to and/or crudely cross-fertilised with the final through-composed, through-sung, concoction behaving like late Strauss with a Gallic sensibility.
The Independent - Frontpage RSS Feed
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Though her English is fluent, I assumed this somewhat peculiar phrase was a Gallicism, and I merely nodded solemnly in agreement.
Winners
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Caesar [Commentaries on the Gallic War, 4,5], "The infirmity of the Gauls is that they are fickle in their resolves and fond of change, and not to be trusted.
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
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[261] "Acsi Gallice quis diceret, c'est trop plaider," as if any one should say in French, "This is to plead too much.
Commentary on Genesis - Volume 1
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Bourbons, damasks, albas, gallicas, mosses and rugosas are all likely groups of roses to choose from for fragrance - the difficulty is narrowing down the candidates.
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The region was famed in the 1970s for its raptor population, with four vulture species, lammergeier Gypaetus barbatus, black Aegypius monachus, Griffon Gyps fulvus and Egyptian Neophron peranopterus; four eagle species, golden Aquila chrysaetos, short-toed Circaetus gallicus, booted Hieraeetus pennatus and Bonelli's Hieraeetus fasciatus and breeding lanner falcons Falco biarmicus.
Meteora Group of Monasteries, Greece
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He sang poetic songs of love and regret in a warm, expressive voice laced with debonair Gallic charm.
Times, Sunday Times
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Sibukao contains much tannin and gallic acid, and a peculiar substance which distinguishes it from logwood, _brasilin_ (C_22_H_20_O_7_), which gives a red color to alkaline solutions instead of blue or purple.
The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
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Erano infatti: una fede in lui che lo mise in guardia dalle sottigliezze del quietismo e del gallicanesimo; una confidenza in Dio che gli rendeva familiare come palpito l'elevarsi continuato del suo spirito in Gesù, con continuate giaculatorie come dardi d'amore; una fortezza imperterrita, in circostanze angosciose, che gli fece dire col pugno serrato sul petto: color di porpora, color di sangue: e questo vi dica, che per la giustizia e per il buon diritto di Dio io sono disposto a sacrificare la mia vita; una carità fiammeggiante di padre e di pastore estesa alle forme molteplici e più varie della dedizione di un gran cuore di uomo insigne e di sacerdote venerabile.
Archive 2009-03-01
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Now it was only the one dark pink rose, gallica regalis, that claimed him.
THE DIAMOND
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Raptors amongst the stabilised sands include 15 breeding pairs (about a tenth of the world's population) of the Spanish imperial eagle Aquila heliaca adalberti (VU), black vulture Aegypius monachus, short-toed eagle Circaetus gallicus, booted eagle Hieraaetus pennatus, buzzard Buteo buteo, black kite Milvus migrans, black-shouldered kite Elanus caeruleus, red kite M. milvus, and hobby Falco subbuteo.
Doñana National Park, Spain
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Laxly e mail lists at nosohusial sphaerocarpos to relishing no striver in advancing intervention, a unmitigable litchee, they are so susceptible adverbially heterospory christless the old pyrogallic way.
Rational Review
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The rain rattled on a modern cagoule hood, rather than on a Gallic pattern helmet.
Zornhau: My Eagle of the Ninth
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To this one meets the familiar Gallic shrug we've seen most years since the fall of Paris.
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T. articulata and T. gallica are reported to grow well on moderately salty sites in Western Australia.
Chapter 8
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* Acsi Gallice quis diceret, c'est trop plaider: [1219] 1
Commentary on Genesis - Volume 1
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[Greek: b] - digallic acid, one of two dibasic isomers having the composition --
Synthetic Tannins
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For the Gallic _bébé_ certainly seems less "rampageous" than the English urchin.
Children's Books and Their Illustrators
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Gallica bellicosa esset, facile eos ad tale consilium adduci posse.
C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
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The Englishman can no more be trifling and light-hearted in the Gallic manner than a Polar bear can dance the _maxixe brésilienne_ in the jungle.
Nights in London
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Sports writer Paul Gallico wrote that Babe Ruth played ball in the same intense way that he lived his life.
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Objective An HPLC method is developed for the determination of gallic acid in Shiwuwei Longdanhua pill.
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I shall not discuss the cause of this change in the use of the possessive, though it seems to me an evident Gallicism, nor shall I open the question of whether it is a mere passing fad or the beginning of an actual alteration in the language.
A Librarian's Open Shelf
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From this side of the Channel, one can easily pour scorn on Gallic arrogance.
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Modern compositions use other unstable, albeit somewhat less hazardous, aromatic compounds such as gallic acid or the salts of aromatic acids including sodium salicylate and potassium benzoate.
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Each side fielded armies that were very similar in tactics, organization, and equipment, and both used African and Gallic auxiliary troops.
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They're spending millions to create consistent brands recognized around the world, while Gallic winegrowers are turning out too much low-quality table wine with mystifying labels.
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We also tossed the narcissistic Gallicism “memoir,” which we decided was a linguistic mongrel of “me” and “moi.”
Last Words
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This was a development of the mysterious attraction which weak light appearing in darkness had had for him since his boyhood, when he had, with his school fellows, warmed fluorine crystals to make them luminescent; and now he took up, with the astronomer W. Wolf, the study of the luminosity of pyrogallic acid when it is mixed with alkali and bisulphite for developing photographs.
Philipp Lenard - Biography
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[147] "Dixit per juramentum suum quod ita est terribilis figure et aspectus quod videbatur sibi quod esset figura cujusdam demonis, dicendo gallice _d'un maufé_, et quod quocienscumque videbat ipsum tantus timor eum invadebat, quod vix poterat illud respicere nisi cum maximo timore et tremore.
Secret Societies And Subversive Movements
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m coronae Francogallicae, quoque fecundum dinem alphabeticum; quarta, eodem ordine leviarium vitarum hominum rebus cuiuscun - je generis geftis clarorum.
Bibliotheca historica. A.I.G. Meuselio ita digesta ut pæne novum opus videri possit
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In 1789, he was elected by the clergy of the bailliage of Nancy to the States-General, where he coöperated with the group of deputies of Jansenist or Gallican sympathies.
The Journal of Negro History, Volume 4, 1919
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The text is larded with distracting verbal tics, including a smattering of needless Gallicisms—such as noting that she had problems with her "foie" aka, liver—local color thickened to impasto.
The Sound of France
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SIR W. NEW.ON, in the description of his calotype process, says: "Bring out with the saturated solution of gallic acid, and when the subject begins to appear, add the aceto-nitrate of silver solution.
Notes and Queries, Number 192, July 2, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc
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They were unspoken ingredient of contemporary Gallic gastronomy.
Times, Sunday Times
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She is especially fond of gallicas, damasks and ramblers.
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But the vegetable substance in which the gallic acid most abounds is _nutgall_, a kind of excrescence that grows on oaks, and from which the acid is commonly obtained for its various purposes.
Conversations on Chemistry, V. 1-2 In Which the Elements of that Science Are Familiarly Explained and Illustrated by Experiments
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To determine the content of gallic acid in fruit of Trapa manshurica by HPLC.
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Fairy spirits [gallice _faées_]; by others also she has been taught and imbued with wicked and pernicious errors of such spirits, insomuch that in the trial before you she confessed that up to this time she did not know that Fairies were evil spirits.
The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology
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This river has been absurdly enough by some supposed the Rubicon, in all probability from the description of that river in the Pharsalia of Lucan, who makes it the boundary betwixt Gaul and Italy — — et Gallica certus
Travels through France and Italy
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The proposal has provoked howls of Gallic indignation.
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In Western Europe the first attempt to give a symbolical meaning to the vestments of the Mass is found in what is called the Gallican explanation of the
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
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His music combined dazzling bursts of musical light with Gallic elegance and the rigorous formalism of a classicist.
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She added that she had it in Lagny: but that she afterwards wore the sword which had been taken from a Burgundian, which was a good sword for war and gave good strokes (_gallice, de bonnes bouffes_ and _de bons torchons_).
Jeanne D'Arc: her life and death
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This reminds me of long ago when I accidentally came upon a stash of St. Rose of Lima candles scented with real damask rose rather than the fake stuff which makes me have migraines or the Rosa gallica which makes me sneeze forty-two times in a row.
Making Light: Making light under difficult conditions
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Gallicus on either side of Septentrio; Supernas and Caecias to the right and left of Aquilo; Carbas, and at a certain period the Ornithiae, on either side of Solanus; while Eurocircias and Volturnus blow on the flanks of Eurus which is between them.
The Ten Books on Architecture
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Then you have no prejudices as to which is the best developer, pyrogallic acid or ferrous oxalate, not to mention such recent decoctions as eikonogen, quinol, and others?
One Day's Courtship
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[Arbor Fatalium, gallice _des Faées_], beside which is a spring [which cured fevers].
The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology
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But there's nuance to this display of Gallic carnality.
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There were also sermons in English (see next chapter); Jocelin de Brakelonde says in his chronicle that sermons were delivered in churches, "gallice vel potius anglice, ut morum fieret edificatio, non literaturæ ostensio," year 1200
A Literary History of the English People From the Origins to the Renaissance
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The story generally followed Laila's -- with the normal Gallic exaggeration and dramatization.
COVER STORY
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Unfortunately the BNF's Gallica site, which has some of the physiocrats' works in its index, doesn't provide the option of sorting its results by date.
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Scito quod orator Reginæ Angliæ in porta mea existens libellum supplicem ad portam nostram mittens significauit, quod cum ex Ægypto Consul eorum abesset, Consul illic Gallicus existens, Vento nuncupatus, quamuis ante hæc tempora ne manus in Anglos mitteret mandatum nostrum fuerit datum, Angli sub vexillo et tutela nostra sunt inquiens, mandatum Cæsareum vili existimans, non cessauit perturbare Anglos.
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 05 Central and Southern Europe
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Had never done anything with, or knew anything of, those who came in the air with the fairies [gallice _en l'erre avec les faées_].
The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology
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Its full frontal nudity is unlikely to cause the blink of a Gallic eyelid when the French see it this Christmas.
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Taking us from her childhood in Alsace-Lorraine to her summers in Provence and her busy life in New York and Paris, this book of scrumptious Gallic wisdom and wit shows how anyone anywhere can develop a healthy, holistic lifestyle.
French Women for All Seasons by Mireille Guiliano: Book summary
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In one of these trimly built cars was a party of four young men whose spirits seemed to be at present well above the level of successful Gallicism: in fact, these four young men were almost hilarious.
Dubliners
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The story is presented by nine choric dancers who, in their dark glasses and black skullcaps, resemble a sinister Gallic mime troupe.
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The latter has been called Gallican and attributed to the Province of
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
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Regional variations - Gallican or otherwise - were disapproved, whether liturgical, theological or pastoral.
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To this one meets the familiar Gallic shrug we've seen most years since the fall of Paris.
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The oaks were supposedly the remnants of a primeval forest, site of Druidic rites, home to Gallic tribes, and emblems of justice-dispensing monarchs like Saint Louis.
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Mal de Naples and Morbus Gallicus-una gallica being still the popular term in neo Latin lands-and the “French disease” in England.
The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
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In their absence, that influence will shrink to the inevitable detriment-in Gallic eyes-of the rest of world.
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Asked, if she did not pray that the sword might have good fortune: "It is good to know that I wish all my armour (_harnesseum meum; gallice, mon harnois_) to be very fortunate.
Jeanne D'Arc: her life and death
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Lansing, calmly -- "Gallicize it as you wish, make it smart and fashionable as you can.
A Young Man in a Hurry and Other Short Stories
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Liturgies are all modifications of a common type; they may all be classed together as forms of what is known as the Gallican Rite.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
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He is insouciant, cultured and full of Gallic flair, with a soupçon of je ne sais quoi.
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Desroches' alfresco restaurant lets you wiggle your toes in bare sand, while a chef with a tall toque and suitably Gallic accent does delicious things with the catch of the day and fresh local vegetables.
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Bourbons, damasks, albas, gallicas, mosses and rugosas are all likely groups of roses to choose from for fragrance - the difficulty is narrowing down the candidates.
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English sentiment began to bedim Gallic eyes, and so what we know as the Louis XVI style was born.
The House in Good Taste
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Paul Desenne, mixed Gallic suavity and Latin American brio for a chameleonic dash through various subdivisions of a nine-beat bar.
NYT > Home Page
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Taking us from her childhood in Alsace-Lorraine to her summers in Provence and her busy life in New York and Paris, this book of scrumptious Gallic wisdom and wit shows how anyone anywhere can develop a healthy, holistic lifestyle.
French Women for All Seasons by Mireille Guiliano: Book summary
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A manic mix-up of Gallic musette, American blues, gypsy jive and gin mill boogie-woogie, their sound may not be futuristic but it will trigger that primitive urge to shake a tail feather.
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What all this will do for President Nicolas Sarkozy's re-election chances is anyone's guess, and perhaps a strategy that appeals to Gallic class envy in the name of Teutonic fiscal rectitude will work.
French Tax Attack
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Dvoøák's Cello Concerto, performed alfresco in city parks, supported by a symphony of albas, gallicas, damasks, musks and, his favourite of all, Rosa primula, the incense rose.
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From a list of starters that included such Gallic staples as grilled snails and steamed mussels, we chose the French onion soup and the boudin noir (black pudding, to most of us) to kick off the meal in grand fashion.
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He could have withstood the impertinence of the fellow, but his affected Gallic pronunciation of the word `discord" was too much.
MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
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Gerard raised his voice in uttering this, and the company received the paradox in dead silence, and with a distrustful air, like any other stranger, during which the Burgundian, who understood German but imperfectly, made Gerard Gallicize the discussion.
The Cloister and the Hearth
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Gallic lordliness on all matters great and small isn't really sustained by the historical record.
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So the star's willingness to mess with her own image may be her best inoculation against the kind of Gallic gamine roles she's likely to be stuck with as the Audrey Hepburn of France.
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A second and related set of tensions divided Gallicans, who insisted on the independence of the national Church, and ultramontanes, who were more respectful of papal authority.
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‘Resume’ must be a Gallicism meaning ‘summarize’ — think ‘resume’ (three syllable) meaning ‘summary (of qualifications)’.
The Volokh Conspiracy » What Bulgarians Think of Us:
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By the use of such caustics as caustic potash, chloride-of-zinc paste, pyrogallic acid, arsenic, and the galvano-cautery; and by operative measures, such as excision and erasion with the dermal curette, and by the _x_-ray.
Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
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It is a great tree, a beech [fagus], from which comes the may [unde venit mayum, gallice _le beau may_].
The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology
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Coleridge has a note dated 1800 (_Literary Remains_, i. 292), on "egotizing in _tuism_" but it was not included in Southey's _Omniana_ of 1812, and must have been unknown to Byron.] {576} [778] [Sc. _toilette_, a Gallicism.] [779] [Byron loved to make fact and fancy walk together, but, here, his memory played him false, or his art kept him true.
The Works of Lord Byron. Vol. 6
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It is true that the Germanic tribes did take over that structure, but the Western Empire and the Roman and Gallic populations fought it every step of the way.
The Antikythera Mechanism
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He could have withstood the impertinence of the fellow, but his affected Gallic pronunciation of the word `discord" was too much.
MAN'S LOVING FAMILY
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Mr. Worthington, who made a full analysis, found veratria, gallic acid, extractive, etc. See Am. Journal Pharm.
Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical, and Agricultural. Being also a Medical Botany of the Confederate States; with Practical Information on the Useful Properties of the Trees, Plants, and Shrubs
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From the word sabot, comes the verb saboter: "to bungle," literally, "to walk noisily": with it, the reminder to no longer stomp, but to tiptoe past the Gallic culture that still whispers out from every French nook and cranny, to travel forward--light on my feet--so as not to "sabotage" this French experience.
Mother-in-law
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I particularly liked affecting a Gallic air and posing pretentiously with them in the library.
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In one room entitled "Adieu myths", the exhibition also debunks the idea that the cockerel was a Gallic emblem, even if gallus in Latin means "cockerel" and "Gaul".
Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
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Morbo Gallico laborantes, exponunt ad solem ut morbus exsiccent.
Anatomy of Melancholy
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They also applied to corporate bodies, such as the Gallican Church, whose property titles were over 1,000 years standing.