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1 לוח השנה של הרפובליקה הצרפתית
French Republican Calendar, Revolutionary calendar, calendar adopted by the French in 1793 during the French Revolution and given up in 1805, calendar which had 12 months of 30 days and each month comprised of three 10 day weeks (the months were given names that hinted to nature and season weather) -
2 Young, Arthur
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 11 September 1741 London, Englandd. 20 April 1820 Bradford, England[br]English writer and commentator on agricultural affairs; founder and Secretary of the Board of Agriculture (later the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food).[br]He was the youngest of the three children of Dr Arthur Young, who was at one time Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons. He learned Latin and Greek at Lavenham School, and at the age of 17 was apprenticed to a mercantile house, an occupation he disliked. He first published The Theatre of the Present War in North America in 1758. He then wrote four novels and began to produce the literary magazine The Universal Museum. After his father's death he returned home to manage his father's farm, and in 1765 he married Martha Allen.Young learned farming by experiment, and three years after his return he took over the rent of a 300 acre farm, Samford Hall in Essex. He was not a practical farmer, and was soon forced to give it up in favour of one of 100 acres (40.5 hectares) in Hertfordshire. He subsidized his farming with his writing, and in 1768 published The Farmer's Letters to the People of England. The first of his books on agricultural tours, Six Weeks Tours through the Counties of England and Wales, was published in 1771. Between 1784 and 1809 he published the Annals of Agriculture, one of whose contributors was George III, who wrote under the pseudonym of Ralph Robinson.By this time he was corresponding with all of influence in agricultural matters, both at home and abroad. George Washington wrote frequently to Young, and George III was reputed to travel always with a copy of his book. The Empress of Russia sent students to him and had his Tours published in Russian. Young made three trips to France in 1787, 1788 and 1789–90 respectively, prior to and during the French Revolution, and his Travels in France (1792) is a remarkable account of that period, made all the more fascinating by his personal contact with people differing as widely as Mirabeau, the French revolutionary leader, and King Louis XVI.Unfortunately, in 1811 an unsuccessful cataract operation left him blind, and he moved from London to his native Bradford, where he remained until his death.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsChairman, Agricultural Committee of the Society of Arts 1773: awarded three Gold Medals during his career for his achievements in practical agriculture. FRS. Honorary Member of the Dublin, York and Manchester learned societies, as well as the Economic Society of Berne, the Palatine Academy of Agriculture at Mannheim, and the Physical Society of Zurich. Honourary member, French Royal Society of Agriculture. Secretary, Board of Agriculture 1793.BibliographyHis first novels were The Fair Americans, Sir Charles Beaufort, Lucy Watson and Julia Benson.His earliest writings on agriculture appeared as collected letters in a periodical with the title Museum Rusticum in 1767.In 1770 he published a two-volume work entitled A Course of Experimental Agriculture, and between 1766 and 1775 he published The Farmer's Letters, Political Arithmetic, Political Essays Concerning the Present State of the British Empire and Southern, Northern and Eastern Tours, and in 1779 he published The Tour of Ireland.In addition he was author of the Board of Agriculture reports on the counties of Suffolk, Lincoln, Norfolk, Hertford, Essex and Oxford.Further ReadingJ.Thirsk (ed.), 1989, The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Vol. VI (deals with the years 1750 to 1850, the period associated with Young).T.G.Gazeley, 1973, "The life of Arthur Young, 1741–1820", Memoirs, American Philosophical Society 97.AP -
3 assignat
[asiɲa] nom masculin -
4 João VI, king
(1767-1826)The second son of Queen Maria I and King-Consort Dom Pedro III, João was proclaimed heir to the throne in 1788, following the untimely death of his older brother Dom José.Although unprepared for the role, he was destined to rule Portugal during one of the country's most turbulent and difficult eras. His mother went insane in 1792, so Prince João had to assume greater responsibilities of governance. In 1799, he was officially named regent, but he was proclaimed king only upon his mother's death in 1816. By nature amiable and tolerant, he presided over a regime that was supposedly absolutist in an age of revolution. His reign occurred during the French Revolution and its many international consequences: Napoleon's invasion and conquest of Portugal; the flight of the royal family and court of Portugal by sea to Brazil in 1808, where they remained until 1821; civil strife in Portugal between constitutional monarchists and absolutists; and the independence of Brazil in 1822, a great blow against Portugal's overseas empire. When, in 1821, King João was obliged to return to Portugal after residing in Brazil for 13 years, he was forced to accept a constitution, which limited royal powers. A seesaw conflict between constitutionalists and absolutists, the latter faction led by his son, Prince Miguel and his Spanish wife, Carlota Joaquina, and the intervention of the military on behalf of one faction or another marked this turbulent era. When King João died in 1826, Portugal faced an uncertain political future as the country struggled to adjust to the new era of constitutional monarchy and liberal politics, following the nearly catastrophic loss of the richest overseas colony, Brazil. -
5 Breguet, Abraham-Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]baptized 10 January 1747 Neuchâtel, Switzerlandd. 17 September 1823 Paris, France[br]Swiss clock-and watchmaker who made many important contributions to horology.[br]When Breguet was 11 years old his father died and his mother married a Swiss watchmaker who had Paris connections. His stepfather introduced him to horology and this led to an apprenticeship in Paris, during which he also attended evening classes in mathematics at the Collège Mazarin. In 1775 he married and set up a workshop in Paris, initially in collaboration with Xavier Gide. There he established a reputation among the aristocracy for elegant and innovative timepieces which included a perpétuelle, or self-winding watch, which he developed from the ideas of Perrelet. He also enjoyed the patronage of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI. During the French Revolution his life was in danger and in 1793 he fled to Neuchâtel. The two years he spent there comprised what was intellectually one of his most productive periods and provided many of the ideas that he was able to exploit after he had returned to Paris in 1795. By the time of his death he had become the most prestigious watchmaker in Europe: he supplied timepieces to Napoleon and, after the fall of the Empire, to Louis XVIII, as well as to most of the crowned heads of Europe.Breguet divided his contributions to horology into three categories: improvements in appearance and functionality; improvements in durability; and improvements in timekeeping. His pendule sympathique was in the first category and consisted of a clock which during the night set a watch to time, regulated it and wound it. His parachute, a spring-loaded bearing, made a significant contribution to the durability of a watch by preventing damage to its movement if it was dropped. Among the many improvements that Breguet made to timekeeping, two important ones were the introduction of the overcoil balance spring and the tourbillon. By bending the outside end of the balance spring over the top of the coils Breguet was able to make the oscillations of the balance isochronous, thus achieving for the flat spring what Arnold had already accomplished for the cylindrical balance spring. The timekeeping of a balance is also dependent on its position, and the tourbillon was an attempt to average-out positional errors by placing the balance wheel and the escapement in a cage that rotated once every minute. This principle was revived in a simplified form in the karussel at the end of the nineteenth century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsHorloger de la marine 1815. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur 1815.BibliographyBreguet gathered information for a treatise on horology that was never published but which was later plagiarized by Louis Moinet in his Traité d'horlogerie, 1848.Further ReadingG.Daniels, 1974, The An of Breguet, London (an account of his life with a good technical assessment of his work).DV -
6 לוח השנה המהפכני בצרפת
Revolutionary calendar, French Republican Calendar, calendar adopted by the French in 1793 during the French Revolution and given up in 1805, calendar which had 12 months of 30 days and each month comprised of three 10 day weeks (the months were given names that hinted to nature and season weather) -
7 bleu
bleu, e [blø]1. adjectivea. [couleur] blueb. ( = meurtri) bruisedc. [steak] very rare2. masculine nouna. ( = couleur) blue• le grand bleu ( = mer) the blue depths of the seac. ( = vêtement) bleu(s) de travail overallse. ( = fromage) blue cheese3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When bleu is combined with another word, such as clair or ciel, to indicate a shade, there is no agreement with the noun: des yeux bleus, but des yeux bleu clair.* * *
1.
bleue blø adjectif1) ( couleur) blue2) Culinaire [entrecôte, viande] very rare
2.
nom masculin1) ( couleur) blue2) ( ecchymose) bruise3) ( vêtement)bleu (de travail) — ( combinaison) overalls (pl); ( veste et pantalon) workman's blue cotton jacket and trousers
4) ( fromage) blue cheese5) (colloq) ( nouvelle recrue) soldiers' slang rookie (colloq); ( débutant) beginner••avoir une peur bleue de quelque chose — to be scared stiff (colloq) of something
* * *blø bleu, -e1. adj1) (couleur, chose) blue3) (locution)2. nm1) (= couleur) blueLe bleu est ma couleur préférée. — Blue is my favourite colour.
2) (= contusion) bruiseIl a un bleu au front. — He's got a bruise on his forehead.
3) (= vêtement) (bleu de travail) overalls pl Grande-Bretagne coveralls pl USA4) CUISINE (= fromage) blue cheese3. nm/f(= novice) greenhorn4. nfla grande bleue (= la Méditerranée) — the Mediterranean
* * *A adj1 ⇒ Les couleurs ( couleur) blue; des yeux bleus blue eyes; bleu vert blue-green; j'ai les lèvres toutes bleues my lips are all blue; bleu de froid [personne, doigts] blue with cold; bleu de peur white with fear; ⇒ grand;2 Culin [entrecôte, viande] very rare.B nm1 ⇒ Les couleurs ( couleur) blue; le ciel était d'un bleu magnifique the sky was a magnificent blue;2 ( ecchymose) bruise; avoir un bleu sur le bras/la cuisse to have a bruise on one's arm/thigh; être couvert de bleus to be covered in bruises; se faire un bleu to bruise oneself;3 ( vêtement) bleu (de travail) ( combinaison) overalls (pl); ( veste et pantalon) workman's blue cotton jacket and trousers;4 ( fromage) blue cheese;5 ○( nouvelle recrue) soldiers' slang rookie○; ( débutant) beginner, greenhorn○; se faire avoir comme un bleu to be completely conned.bleu ardoise slate blue; bleu azur azure blue; bleu canard peacock blue; bleu ciel sky blue; bleu de cobalt cobalt blue; bleu électrique electric blue; bleu horizon sky blue; bleu lavande lavender blue; bleu marine navy blue; bleu de méthylène methylene blue; bleu noir blue-black; bleu nuit midnight blue; bleu océan ocean blue; bleu outremer ultramarine; bleu pétrole petrol-blue; bleu de Prusse Prussian blue; bleu roi royal blue; bleu saphir sapphire blue; bleu turquoise turquoise blue.avoir une peur bleue de qch to be scared stiff○ of sth; j'ai eu une peur bleue I had a bad scare.1. [coloré] blueavoir les yeux bleus to have blue eyes, to be blue-eyed3. (locution)avoir une peur bleue to have the fright of one's life, to be terrifiedavoir une peur bleue de quelque chose/quelqu'un to be terrified ou scared stiff of something/somebody————————, bleue [blø] nom masculin, nom fémininbleu nom masculin1. [couleur] blueadmirer le bleu du ciel/de la mer to admire the blueness of the sky/sea2. [ecchymose] bruiseêtre couvert de bleus to be black and blue, to be covered in bruises3. [vêtement]4. [fromage] blue cheese————————bleue nom féminin[mer]————————au bleu locution adjectivale————————les Bleus nom masculin plurielsport -
8 Bastille Day
14th July. Le quatorze Juillet The French national holiday, celebrating the fall of the Bastille during the French Revolution, on 14th July 1789. This date was not officially declared France's national day until almost a century later, in 1880. The day is traditionally celebrated by a flamboyant military parade along the Champs Elysées, in Paris, in the presence of the President of the Republic.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Bastille Day
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9 cocarde
cocarde [kɔkaʀd]feminine noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The cocarde was originally a red, white and blue rosette used as an emblem by revolutionaries during the French Revolution. It became a symbol of the French republic and appears on military aircraft, uniforms and official vehicles.* * *kɔkaʀdnom féminin ( sur uniforme) cockade; ( emblème national) ( sur un avion) roundel; ( sur un véhicule) official badgecocarde tricolore — Histoire revolutionary cockade; ( en tissu) rosette
* * *kɔkaʀd nf* * *cocarde nf ( sur uniforme) cockade; ( emblème national) ( sur avion) roundel; ( sur véhicule) official badge; cocarde tricolore Hist revolutionary cockade; ( en tissu) rosette.[kɔkard] nom féminin1. [en tissu] rosette2. [signe - militaire] roundel ; [ - sur une voiture officielle] official logo -
10 blanc
blanc, blanche [blɑ̃, blɑ̃∫]1. adjectivea. ( = sans couleur, pâle) whiteb. [page, bulletin de vote] blank ; [papier non quadrillé] plain• il a rendu copie blanche or sa feuille blanche he handed in a blank paperc. [domination, justice, pouvoir] white2. masculine nouna. ( = couleur) whitec. ( = espace non écrit, non enregistré) blank• il y a eu un blanc (dans la conversation) there was a lull in the conversation ; (dû à la gêne) there was an embarrassed silence• j'ai eu un blanc ( = trou de mémoire) my mind went blankd. ( = vin) white winef. ( = personne) un Blanc a white mang. ► à blanc3. feminine nouna. ( = femme) une Blanche a white woman* * *Blanche blɑ̃, blɑ̃ʃ nom masculin, féminin white man/woman* * *blɑ̃, blɑ̃ʃ (blanche)1. adj1) (couleur) white2) (race) white3) fig (sans les caractéristiques habituelles) (page, feuille) blank, (examen) mock, (vote, bulletins) blank4) (= innocent) pure2. nm/f(de race blanche) white, white man/woman3. nm1) (= couleur) whiteColette est habillée tout en blanc. — Colette is dressed all in white.
2) (= linge)3) (= espace non écrit) blankchèque en blanc — blank cheque Grande-Bretagne blank check USA
4) (blanc d'œuf) egg white5) (blanc de poulet) breast, white meat6) (vin blanc) white wine7)à blanc [chauffer] — white-hot, [tirer, charger] with blanks
4. nfMUSIQUE minim Grande-Bretagne half-note USA * (= drogue) smack* * *A adj1 ( couleur) white; fleurs/dents/chaussettes blanches white flowers/teeth/socks; blanc mat/brillant matt/glossy white; devenir blanc to go ou turn white; blanc de peur white with fear; ⇒ aspirine, cheveu, coudre, crapaud, loup, patte;2 ( occidental) gén white; Anthrop Caucasian; homme/quartier blanc white man/district; race/domination blanche white race/domination;3 ( innocent) il n'est pas blanc dans l'histoire he was certainly mixed up in it; ne pas être blanc to have a less than spotless reputation;4 ( vierge) blank; page/feuille blanche blank page/sheet; rendre feuille or copie blanc Scol, Univ to give in a blank script;C nm2 ( peinture) white paint; un tube de blanc a tube of white paint; peindre en blanc, passer au blanc to paint [sth] white [mur, meuble];3 ( linge) household linen; promotion de blanc household linen promotional sales; quinzaine du blanc household linen sales period;5 Culin ( de volaille) white meat; ( de poireau) white part; ( d'œuf) white; battre les blancs beat the whites; un blanc de poulet a chicken breast; je préfère le blanc I prefer white meat; ⇒ neige;6 Vin ( vin) white wine; ( verre de vin) glass of white wine; préférer le blanc to prefer white wine;7 Imprim ( espace entre des mots) ( volontaire) blank; ( involontaire) gap; laisser un blanc to leave a blank; remplir les blancs to fill in the blanks; il y a un blanc dans le texte there's a gap in the text; laisser en blanc to leave [sth] blank [nom, adresse];8 ○( liquide pour corriger les erreurs) correction fluid, Tipp-Ex®, white-out US; mettre du blanc sur qch to Tipp-Ex sth out, to white sth out US [texte, erreur];9 ( temps mort) lull;12 Bot ( moisissure) powdery mildew.D à blanc loc Mil ( sans projectile offensif) coup à blanc blank shot; tirer à blanc to fire blanks; charger à blanc to load [sth] with blanks.E blancs nmpl Jeux (aux échecs, aux dames) white (sg); les blancs gagnent white wins; je prends les blancs I'll be white.F blanche nf2 Jeux ( au billard) white (ball);3 ○( eau-de-vie) brandy;blanc de baleine spermaceti; blanc de blanc blanc de blancs; blanc cassé off-white; blanc de céruse white lead; blanc de chaux whitewash; blanc crémeux cream; blanc d'Espagne whiting; blanc laiteux milk white; blanc de l'œil white of the eye; blanc d'œuf egg white; blanc de plomb flake white; blanc de zinc zinc oxide.c'est écrit noir sur blanc it's there in black and white; quand l'un dit blanc, l'autre dit noir they can never agree on anything; avec lui/elle, c'est (toujours) tout blanc ou tout noir he/she sees everything in black-and-white terms; c'est un jour à marquer d'une pierre or croix blanche it's a red-letter day, it's a day to remember; regarder qn dans le blanc des yeux to look sb straight in the eye; se regarder dans le blanc des yeux to gaze into each other's eyes.( féminin blanche) [blɑ̃, blɑ̃ʃ] adjectif1. [couleur] whiteêtre blanc de peau to be white-skinned ou pale-skinneda. (sens propre) snow-white, (as) white as snow, (as) white as the driven snow3. [vierge] blankécrire sur du papier blanc to write on plain ou unlined paper4. [examen] mock7. [verre] plain8. LITTÉRATURE [vers] blankblanc nom masculin1. [couleur] white2. [matière blanche]3. [cornée]4. CUISINEblanc d'œuf egg white, white of an egg5. [linge]6. [vin] white wine[dans une conversation] blankblanc adverbeun jour il dit blanc, l'autre il dit noir one day he says yes, the next day he says no2. HISTOIRE [en Russie] White Russianblanche nom féminin2. (très familier & argot milieu) [héroïne]3. [eau-de-vie] colourless spirit————————à blanc locution adjectivale[cartouche] blank————————à blanc locution adverbiale1. ARMEMENT2. [à un point extrême]————————en blanc locution adjectivale1. [chèque, procuration] blank2. [personne]————————en blanc locution adverbiale[peindre, colorer] white[s'habiller, sortir] in whitelaisser une ligne/page en blanc to leave a line/page blank -
11 Marli
MARLI, MARLY LACEA very simple and light hexagonal mesh net, named after a village near Versailles, where it originated. The plain mesh ground was powdered with small round rosettes. Originally it was made of cotton, but at Bayeux it was also made of very fine linen yarn for a foundation to applique laces; during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era it was also made of silk, or of silk mixed with linen, and was called coarse or fine according to the size of the mesh. Marli which was the precursor of the tulle was greatly in vogue from the time of Louis XVI until the middle of the 19th century for dresses and trimmings. -
12 Marly Lace
MARLI, MARLY LACEA very simple and light hexagonal mesh net, named after a village near Versailles, where it originated. The plain mesh ground was powdered with small round rosettes. Originally it was made of cotton, but at Bayeux it was also made of very fine linen yarn for a foundation to applique laces; during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era it was also made of silk, or of silk mixed with linen, and was called coarse or fine according to the size of the mesh. Marli which was the precursor of the tulle was greatly in vogue from the time of Louis XVI until the middle of the 19th century for dresses and trimmings. -
13 arbre
arbre [aʀbʀ]masculine noun• arbre fruitier/d'ornement fruit/ornamental tree• faire son arbre généalogique to draw up one's family tree ► arbre de Noël ( = sapin) Christmas tree ; ( = fête d'entreprise) Christmas party for employees' children* * *aʀbʀnom masculin1) ( végétal) tree2) ( diagramme) tree (diagram)3) Technologie shaft•Phrasal Verbs:* * *aʀbʀ nm1) (végétal) tree2) TECHNIQUE shaft* * *arbre nm2 ( diagramme) tree (diagram);3 Tech shaft.arbre à cames Aut camshaft; arbre généalogique family tree; arbre d'hélice Naut propeller shaft; arbre de Judée Bot Judas tree; arbre de la liberté Hist tree planted during the French Revolution as a symbol of liberty; arbre de Noël ( sapin) Christmas tree; ( de puits de pétrole) Christmas tree; arbre à pain Bot breadfruit; arbre de transmission Aut transmission shaft, propeller shaft; arbre de vie Bible tree of life.grimper à l'arbre○ to be taken for a ride○; entre l'arbre et l'écorce il ne faut pas mettre le doigt Prov never meddle in other people's affairs.[arbr] nom masculinarbre moteur ou de couche engine shaftarbre de transmission drive ou propeller shaftarbre de vie nom masculin -
14 Opéra Bastille
large modern opera house in Paris, located on the Place de la Bastille, and opened in 1989, to mark the bicentenary of the falling of the Bastille, during the French Revolution.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Opéra Bastille
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15 Carmagnole
The dress of the Jacobins during the French Revolution of 1789. It consisted of a red cap blouse and a girdle of red white and blue. -
16 epope|ja
f (G pl epopei) 1. Literat. (poemat epicki) epic (poem)- epopeja heroiczna/komiczna/narodowa a heroic/mock/national epic2. Kino, Literat. (monumentalne dzieło) epic- epopeja o drugiej wojnie światowej/Rewolucji Francuskiej a World War II epic/an epic set during the French Revolution3. książk. (szereg doniosłych wydarzeń) epic- epopeja napoleońska the Napoleonic epic- □ epopeja fantastyczna Literat. fantasy epic- epopeja heroikomiczna Literat. mock-heroic epicThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > epope|ja
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17 מערפת
Guillotine, beheading device with a sharp blade which slides vertically in grooves (used mainly during the French Revolution) ; (British) paper cutter -
18 Blancs et les Bleus
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19 accusateur public
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20 accusateur
accusateur, -trice [akyzatœʀ, tʀis]adjective[doigt] accusing ; [documents] incriminating* * *
1.
- trice akyzatœʀ, tʀis adjectif [silence, doigt] accusing (épith); [présence, discours] accusatory
2.
nom masculin, féminin accuseraccusateur public — Histoire public prosecutor
* * *akyzatœʀ, tʀis (-trice)1. nm/f2. adj(doigt, regard) accusing* * *accusateur, - triceA adj1 [silence, mot, doigt, ton] accusing ( épith);2 [inscription, présence, discours] accusatory.B nm,f accuser.accusateur public Hist public prosecutor.( féminin accusatrice) [akyzatɶr, tris] adjectif[silence, regard] accusing[bilan] incriminating————————, accusatrice [akyzatɶr, tris] nom masculin, nom féminin[dénonciateur] accuseraccusateur nom masculin
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