-
1 mine
I.mine1 [min]feminine noun( = physionomie) expression• ... dit-il, la mine réjouie... he said with a cheerful expression on his face• tu as bonne mine maintenant ! now you look a complete idiot!il est venu nous demander comment ça marchait, mine de rien he came and asked us all casually (inf) how things were going• mine de rien, il n'est pas bête you wouldn't think it to look at him but he's no fool (inf)• mine de rien, ça nous a coûté 1 500 € believe it or not it cost us 1,500 eurosII.mine2 [min]1. feminine nouna. ( = gisement) mineb. ( = source) [de renseignements] minec. [de crayon] leadd. ( = explosif) mine2. compounds* * *min
1.
1) ( expression) expression; ( aspect) lookfaire triste mine — to have a gloomy expression, to look gloomy
elle nous a dit, mine de rien (colloq), que — she told us, casually, that
il est doué, mine de rien — (colloq) it may not be obvious, but he's very clever
2) ( apparence)avoir mauvaise mine, avoir une sale (colloq) or petite mine — to look a bit off-colour [BrE]
avoir bonne mine — [personne] to look well; [tarte, rôti] to look appetizing
j'aurais bonne mine! — iron I would look really stupid!
3) ( pour dessiner) leadcrayon à mine dure/grasse — hard/soft pencil
4) ( gisement) minemine d'or — lit, fig gold mine
5) ( source) sourcemine d'informations — fig mine of information
6) Armée mine
2.
mines nom féminin pluriel ( minauderies) simpering [U]Phrasal Verbs:••ne pas payer de mine — (colloq) not to look anything special (colloq)
* * *min1. nf1) (= physionomie) expression, lookElle avait une mine fatiguée. — She was looking tired.
avoir bonne mine > [personne] — to look well, ironique to look an utter idiot
Tu as bonne mine. — You look well.
Il a mauvaise mine. — He doesn't look well.
Elle a fait mine de le croire. — She pretended to believe him.
2) (apparence) [personne] appearanceIl ne faut pas juger les gens d'après leur mine. — You shouldn't judge people by their appearance.
3) [crayon] lead4) (= gisement, exploitation) minemine à ciel ouvert — opencast Grande-Bretagne mine, open-air USA mine
5) (= explosif) minemine de rien; Mine de rien, il est vraiment efficace. — You wouldn't think so but he's really efficient.
Elle a réussi mine de rien à le faire parler de lui. — Somehow or other she got him to talk about himself.
Il s'est installé, mine de rien, et il a tout réorganisé. — He settled in, cool as you please, and ended up reorganizing everything.
2. mines nfplpéjoratif simpering* * *A nf1 ( expression) expression; ( aspect) look; avoir la mine boudeuse to have a sulky expression, to look sulky; faire triste mine to have a gloomy expression, to look gloomy; tu en fais une mine! why are you looking like that?; ne fais pas cette mine! don't look like that!; sous sa mine aimable, c'est quelqu'un de très dur beneath his/her pleasant exterior, he/she is very hard; juger les gens sur leur mine to judge people by appearances; faire mine d'accepter/de ne pas comprendre to pretend to accept/not to understand; faire mine de partir/frapper to make as if to go/to hit; elle nous a dit, mine de rien○, que she told us, casually, that; il est doué, mine de rien○ it may not be obvious, but he's very clever; mine de rien○, elle arrive toujours à ses fins without being obvious about it, she always gets her way; elle a raison, mine de rien○ she's right, you know;2 ( apparence) avoir mauvaise mine to look a bit off-colourGB; avoir une sale○ or petite mine to look a bit off-colourGB; avoir une mine resplendissante to be glowing with health; avoir une mine de papier mâché to look washed out; avoir bonne mine [personne] to look well; [tarte, rôti] to look appetizing; j'aurais bonne mine! iron I would look really stupid!;3 ( pour dessiner) lead; crayon à mine dure/grasse hard/soft pencil;4 Mines gén mine; ( de charbon) gén colliery GB, mine; ( puits) pit GB, mine; mine à ciel ouvert opencast mine; travailler à la mine to be a miner, to work in a mine; l 'exploitation des mines mining; une région de mines a coal-mining area; mine d'or lit, fig gold mine;5 ( source) source; mine d'informations fig mine of information; une mine d'adresses utiles a source of useful addresses;6 Mil mine; sauter sur une mine to be blown up by a mine; mine terrestre land mine; mine antichar/antipersonnel antitank/antipersonnel mine.B mines nfpl1 ( minauderies) simpering ¢; faire des mines to simper;2 Admin les Mines official body responsible for regulating weights and measures and changes made to motor vehicles; ⇒ école.mine de crayon lead; mine de plomb graphite ¢.ne pas payer de mine○ not to look anything special○.[min] nom fémininfaire mine de: elle fit mine de raccrocher, puis se ravisa she made as if to hang up, then changed her mindne fais pas mine de ne pas comprendre don't act as if ou pretend you don't understandmine de rien (familier) : mine de rien, ça finit par coûter cher it may not seem much but when you add it all up, it's expensivemine de rien, elle était furieuse although ou though she didn't show it, she was furious2. [teint]tu as bonne mine, avec ta veste à l'envers! (figuré & ironique) you look great with your jacket on inside out!je lui trouve meilleure mine I think she looks better ou in better healthavoir une mine réjouie to beam, to be beamingmine de charbon ou de houille coal mine4. [source importante]une mine de a mine ou source of5. [d'un crayon] leadcrayon à mine grasse/dure soft/hard pencilmine de plomb graphite ou black lead[explosif] minemine aérienne/sous-marine/terrestre aerial/submarine/land mine7. [explosif]————————mines nom féminin pluriel1. [manières]il m'énerve à toujours faire des mines he irritates me, always simpering around2. GÉOGRAPHIE mining area, mines -
2 truffer
truffer [tʀyfe]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verbb. ( = remplir) truffer qch de to pepper sth with• truffé de fautes or d'erreurs riddled with mistakes* * *tʀyfe1) Culinaire to stuff [something] with truffles [pâté, dinde]2) ( remplir)* * *tʀyfe vtCUISINE to garnish with truffles* * *truffer verb table: aimer vtr1 Culin to stuff [sth] with truffles [pâté, dinde];2 ( remplir) il a truffé son discours de citations he stuffed his speech with quotations; la pièce était truffée de micros the room was larded with bugging devices; ta lettre est truffée de fautes your letter is riddled with mistakes.[tryfe] verbe transitif2. [emplir] to fill -
3 ocuparse de
v.1 to take care of, to deal with, to look after, to address.Nos ocupamos de la limpieza We take care of the cleaning.2 to go about, to get about, to attend to, to be concerned with.Ocuparse de sus negocios Go about one's business* * *1 (encargarse de) to take care of; (tratar) to deal with* * *to attend, take care of* * *(v.) = be concerned with, deal with, indulge in, preoccupy, turn to, concern, take + a turn at, care (about/for), become + engaged (in/with), engage with, see toEx. Now we are concerned in this work with the organisation of knowledge and information retrieval in a specific context.Ex. Part II deals with entry and heading for all types of materials.Ex. Each library must make policy decisions concerning whether it will indulge in analytical cataloguing.Ex. Abstracting agencies citation recommendations may be preoccupied with the practices desirable for periodical articles.Ex. We shall turn to this distinction very shortly.Ex. The first issue concerns the consistent description of subjects.Ex. Journeyman printers generally specialized as compositors or pressmen and, although a compositor might on occasion take a turn at the press (especially in a small shop), few pressmen could set type efficiently.Ex. Many authors, especially since the mid nineteenth century, have cared about the details of their punctuation and have bothered to correct it.Ex. There is a strong demand for information about Asia as Australia becomes engaged with countries of the Asia-Pacific region.Ex. In order to overcome isolation and develop a community oriented approach, libraries will need to engage with people.Ex. They should see to the social reintegration of children who are victims of foreign occupation, anti-personnel mines and sexual abuse.* * *(v.) = be concerned with, deal with, indulge in, preoccupy, turn to, concern, take + a turn at, care (about/for), become + engaged (in/with), engage with, see toEx: Now we are concerned in this work with the organisation of knowledge and information retrieval in a specific context.
Ex: Part II deals with entry and heading for all types of materials.Ex: Each library must make policy decisions concerning whether it will indulge in analytical cataloguing.Ex: Abstracting agencies citation recommendations may be preoccupied with the practices desirable for periodical articles.Ex: We shall turn to this distinction very shortly.Ex: The first issue concerns the consistent description of subjects.Ex: Journeyman printers generally specialized as compositors or pressmen and, although a compositor might on occasion take a turn at the press (especially in a small shop), few pressmen could set type efficiently.Ex: Many authors, especially since the mid nineteenth century, have cared about the details of their punctuation and have bothered to correct it.Ex: There is a strong demand for information about Asia as Australia becomes engaged with countries of the Asia-Pacific region.Ex: In order to overcome isolation and develop a community oriented approach, libraries will need to engage with people.Ex: They should see to the social reintegration of children who are victims of foreign occupation, anti-personnel mines and sexual abuse. -
4 Dörell, Georg Ludwig Wilhelm
SUBJECT AREA: Mining and extraction technology[br]b. 17 December 1793 Clausthal, Harz, Germanyd. 30 October 1854 Zellerfeld, Harz, Germany[br]German mining engineer who introduced the miner's elevator into the Harz Mountains.[br]After studying at the Freiberg Mining Academy he returned to his home region to serve in the mining administration, first at Clausthal. In 1848 he became an inspector of mines in Zellerfeld. He had become aware that in the early nineteenth century, when 500 m (1,640 ft) shafts were no longer unusual, devices other than ladders were needed for access to mines. Dörell found out that miners, in terms of physical strength, had to consume almost one-third more of their energy to climb up the shaft than they had to spend at work during the shift in the mine. Accordingly, in 1833 he constructed the miner's elevator. Two timbered bars, similar to those used for pumps, were installed in the shaft and were driven by water-wheel and moved in opposite directions. They were placed at such a distance from each other that the miners could easily step from one to the other in order to go up or down the shaft as desired.Dörell's elevators worked with great success and their use soon became widespread among Central European mining districts. Their use is particularly associated with Cornish tin-mines, where several such elevators operated over considerable distances.[br]Bibliography1837, "Über die seit dem Jahre 1833 beim Oberharzischen Bergbau angewendeten Fahrmaschinen", Die Bergwerks-Verwaltung des Hannoverschen Ober-Harzes in den Jahren 1831–1836, ed. W.A.J.Albert, Berlin, pp. 199–214.Further ReadingC.Bartels, 1992, Vom frühneuzeitlichen Montangewerbe zur Bergbauindustrie. Erzbergbau im Oberharz 1635–1880, Bochum: Deutsches Bergbau-Museum, esp. pp. 382–411 (elaborates upon the context of contemporary technological innovations in Harz ore mining).WKBiographical history of technology > Dörell, Georg Ludwig Wilhelm
-
5 Ercker, Lazarus
[br]b. c.1530 Annaberg, Saxony, Germanyd. 1594 Prague, Bohemia[br]German chemist and metallurgist.[br]Educated at Wittenberg University during 1547–8, Ercker obtained in 1554, through one of his wife's relatives, the post of Assayer from the Elector Augustus at Dresden. From then on he took a succession of posts in mining and metallurgy. In 1555 he was Chief Consultant and Supervisor of all matters relating to mines, but for some unknown reason was demoted to Warden of the Mint at Annaberg. In 1558 he travelled to the Tyrol to study the mines in that region, and in the same year Prince Henry of Brunswick appointed him Warden, then Master, of the Mint at Goslar. Ercker later moved to Prague where, through another of his wife's relatives, he was appointed Control Tester at Kutna Hora. It was there that he wrote his best-known book, Die Beschreibung allfürnemisten mineralischen Ertz, which drew him to the attention of the Emperor Maximilian, who made him Courier for Mining and a clerk of the Supreme Court of Bohemia. The next Emperor, Rudolf II, a noted patron of science and alchemy, promoted Ercker to Chief Inspector of Mines and ennobled him in 1586 with the title Von Schreckenfels'. His second wife managed the mint at Kutna Hora and his two sons became assayers. These appointments gained him much experience of the extraction and refining of metals. This first bore fruit in a book on assaying, Probierbüchlein, printed in 1556, followed by one on minting, Münzbuch, in 1563. His main work, Die Beschreibung, was a systematic review of the methods of obtaining, refining and testing the alloys and minerals of gold, silver, copper, antimony, mercury and lead. The preparation of acids, salts and other compounds is also covered, and his apparatus is fully described and illustrated. Although Ercker used Agricola's De re metattica as a model, his own work was securely based on his practical experience. Die Beschreibung was the first manual of analytical and metallurgical chemistry and influenced later writers such as Glauber on assaying. After the first edition in Prague came four further editions in Frankfurt-am-Main.[br]BibliographyDie Beschreibung allfürnemisten mineralischen Ertz, Prague. 1556, Probierbuchlein.1563, Munzbuch.Further ReadingP.R.Beierlein, 1955, Lazarus Ercker, Bergmann, Hüttenmann und Münzmeister im 16. Jahrhundert, Berlin (the best biography, although the chemical details are incomplete).J.R.Partington, 1961, History of Chemistry, London, Vol. II, pp. 104–7.E.V.Armstrong and H.Lukens, 1939, "Lazarus Ercker and his Probierbuch", J.Chem. Ed.16: 553–62.LRD -
6 prospecter
prospecter [pʀɔspεkte]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verbb. [+ marché] to explore ; [+ région, clientèle] to canvass* * *pʀɔspɛkte1) ( pour vendre) to canvass2) ( pour trouver) to prospect* * *pʀɔspɛkte vt1) (rechercher des gisements minéraux) [région] to prospect in2) COMMERCE, [marché] to explore* * *prospecter verb table: aimer vtr2 ( pour trouver) to prospect; prospecter un sol pour y trouver du pétrole to prospect for oil in an area of ground;3 ( examiner) to scrutinize [fichier]; prospecter les petites annonces to search through ou trawl the small ads.[prɔspɛkte] verbe transitif[clientèle] to canvass2. MINES to prospect————————[prɔspɛkte] verbe intransitif -
7 déboiser
déboiser [debwaze]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb[+ montagne, région] to deforest ; [+ forêt] to clear of trees* * *debwazeverbe transitif to clear [something] of trees [terrain]; to deforest [région]* * *debwaze vt[terrain] to clear of trees, [région] to deforest* * *déboiser verb table: aimerA vtr to clear [sth] of trees [terrain]; to deforest [région].B se déboiser vpr to become deforested.[debwaze] verbe transitif -
8 ciel
ciel [sjεl]masculine nound. ( = providence) ciel ! good heavens!• c'est le ciel qui vous envoie ! you're heaven-sent!* * *sjɛl, sjønom masculin1) (pl ciels) Météorologie skyciel clair or dégagé — clear sky
entre ciel et terre — fig between heaven and earth
à ciel ouvert — [piscine, musée] open-air; [égout] open; [mine] open-cast GB, strip US
4) ( providence) liter heaven••* * *sjɛl cieux {ou} ciels pl1. nmSee:1) (= air) sky2) (= réseau de liaisons aériennes)3) RELIGION heavenà ciel ouvert (piscine) — open-air, (mine) opencast
tomber du ciel [météorites, ange] — to fall out of the sky
Ils croient encore que l'Europe est un eldorado où l'argent tombe du ciel. — They still think Europe is an Eldorado where money grows on trees.
2. ciels nmplART skies* * *ciel nm1 (pl ciels) Météo sky; ciel clair or dégagé clear sky; les ciels d'Afrique/de Dali African/Dali's skies; carte du ciel star chart;2 (pl cieux) liter ( firmament) sky; les cieux étoilés the starry skies, the starry heavens littér; être suspendu entre ciel et terre to be hanging in midair; entre ciel et terre fig between heaven and earth; sous d'autres cieux in other climes; sous des cieux plus cléments ( climat) liter in a kinder clime, in kinder climes; ( lieu plus sûr) in safer waters; vivre sous le ciel de Toscane/la Guadeloupe liter to live in Tuscany/Guadeloupe; à ciel ouvert [piscine, musée] open-air; [égout] open; [mine] open-cast GB, strip US;3 (pl cieux) ( paradis) Relig heaven; être au ciel to be in heaven; le royaume des cieux the kingdom of heaven; notre Père qui êtes aux cieux our Father, which ou who art in heaven;4 ( providence) liter heaven; le ciel m'est témoin que heaven knows that; remercier le ciel to thank heaven; le ciel soit loué! thank heavens!; (juste) ciel! (good) heavens!; c'est le ciel qui t'envoie you are a godsend; ⇒ aider.remuer ciel et terre to move heaven and earth (pour faire to do).1. [espace] skyentre ciel et terre in the air, in midairlever les yeux au ciel [d'exaspération] to roll one's eyesa. [arriver opportunément] to be heaven-sent ou a godsendb. [être stupéfait] to be stunned2. [cielssjɛl]ciel clair/nuageux clear/cloudy sky3. ASTRONOMIE sky5. (littéraire) [fatalité] fate[providence]6. [cielssjɛl][plafond]————————(juste) ciel! heavens above!, (good) heavens!————————ciels nom masculin pluriel(littéraire) [temps]————————cieux nom masculin plurielà ciel ouvert locution adjectivale2. [piscine, stade] open-air -
9 infester
infester [ɛ̃fεste]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb* * *ɛ̃fɛsteverbe transitif to infest, to overruninfesté de rats/requins — rat-/shark-infested
infesté de puces — flea-ridden (épith)
* * *ɛ̃fɛste vtinfesté de moustiques — infested with mosquitoes, mosquito-ridden
* * *infester verb table: aimer vtr1 gén to infest, overrun; infesté de rats/requins rat-/shark-infested; infesté de puces flea-ridden; jardin infesté d'orties garden overrun with nettles; zone infestée de mines area littered with mines; zone infestée de pirates area overrun with pirates; les vices qui infestent la société the vices that plague society;[ɛ̃fɛste] verbe transitif[suj: pillards] to infestla région est infestée de sauterelles/moustiques the area is infested with locusts/mosquitoes -
10 Amazonia
SF Amazonia* * *Amazonia* * *Amazonia nf[región]la Amazonia the AmazonAMAZONIAAmazonia is a massive geographical area covering the basins and tributaries of the Amazon River. It extends over eight South American countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Equador, Guyana, French Guiana, Peru and Venezuela. Today, unfortunately, the natural resources of Amazonia are being mismanaged, and the problem is reaching crisis proportions, as the area is becoming less sustainable. The clearing of land for agriculture and extensive logging have led to deforestation; working mines pollute the rivers, and the commercial sale of rare flora and fauna has devastated its ecosystems. Urgent action may be necessary if the unique natural beauty and biological diversity of the region are to be maintained for future generations. -
11 niveau
1. masculine nouna. level• il faut se mettre au niveau des enfants you have to put yourself on the same level as the children• le euro a atteint son niveau le plus haut depuis trois ans the euro has reached its highest point for three yearsb. [de connaissances, études] standard• les préparatifs de passage à l'euro au niveau de l'entreprise preparations at company level for adopting the euroc. ( = instrument) level ; ( = jauge) gauge2. compounds* * *pl niveaux nivo nom masculin1) ( hauteur) levelniveau de l'eau/d'huile — water/oil level
au niveau du cou — [blessures] in the neck region
2) ( étage) storey GB, story USbâtiment sur deux niveaux — two-storey GB ou two-story US building
3) ( degré) ( d'intelligence) level; ( de connaissances) standard‘niveau bac + 3’ — baccalaureate or equivalent plus 3 years' higher education
de haut niveau — [athlète] top (épith); [candidat] high-calibre [BrE] (épith)
4) ( échelon) levelau plus haut niveau — [discussion] top-level (épith)
les négociations se dérouleront au plus haut niveau — there will be negotiations at the highest level
5) Linguistique register6) ( instrument) level•Phrasal Verbs:* * *nivoniveaux pl nm1) (spatialement, d'un taux) levelLe niveau de l'eau a baissé. — The water level has gone down.
2) (= étage) level3) (qualitatif) levelCes deux enfants n'ont pas le même niveau. — These two children aren't at the same level.
au niveau de (personne, travail) — on a level with
4) [programme, enseignement] standardavoir le niveau bac + 2 — to have the baccalauréat plus 2 years' higher education
5) (= outil) level* * *1 ( hauteur) level; niveau de l'eau/d'huile water/oil level; au niveau du sol/de la chaussée at ground/street level; être de niveau to be level; mettre de niveau to make [sth] level; dix mètres au-dessus/au-dessous du niveau de la mer ten metresGB above/below sea level; être au même niveau que to be level with; arrivé au niveau du car when he drew level with the coach GB ou bus; l'eau nous arrivait au niveau des chevilles/genoux the water came up to our ankles/knees; au niveau du cou/de l'abdomen [blessures] in the neck/abdominal region; accroc au niveau du genou tear at the knee;3 ( degré) ( d'intelligence) level; ( de connaissances) standard; niveau culturel/intellectuel cultural/intellectual level; niveau d'éducation/de formation standard of education/of training; niveau bac○ baccalaureate or equivalent; ‘niveau bac + 3’ baccalaureate or equivalent plus 3 years' higher education; au-dessous du niveau exigé pour below the required standard for; niveau de production/d'inflation level of production/of inflation; d'un bon niveau of a good standard; mettre à niveau Ordinat to upgrade; mise à niveau Ordinat upgrade; remise à niveau ( d'élève) recap, refresher; remettre qn à niveau to bring sb up to the required standard; se mettre au niveau de qn to put oneself on the same level as sb; de haut niveau [équipe, athlète] top ( épith); [candidat] high-calibreGB ( épith); niveau des revenus/salaires income/wage levels (pl);4 ( échelon) level; à tous les niveaux at every level; au niveau national/européen at national/European level; au plus haut niveau [discussion, intervention] top-level ( épith); les négociations se dérouleront au plus haut niveau there will be negotiations at the highest level; au niveau de la commercialisation/des investissements controv as regards marketing/investment;5 Ling register; niveau familier/soutenu informal/formal register;6 Tech ( instrument) level.niveau (à bulle d'air) spirit level; niveau de langue Ling register; niveau à lunette theodolite; niveau de maçon mason's level; niveau de rémunération wage level; niveau social social status; niveau sonore Audio sound level; niveau de vie Écon standard of living, living standards.( pluriel masculin niveaux) [nivo] nom masculin1. [hauteur] levelfixer les étagères au même niveau que la cheminée put up the shelves level with ou on the same level as the mantelpiece3. [degré] levella natalité n'est jamais tombée à un niveau aussi bas the birth rate is at an all-time low ou at its lowest level ever4. [étape] level, stage5. [qualité] level, standardj'ai un bon niveau/un niveau moyen en russe I'm good/average at Russianles élèves sont tous du même niveau the pupils are all on a par ou on the same level6. GÉOGRAPHIE level11. [instrument] level (tube)————————au niveau locution adjectivaledans deux mois, vous serez au niveau in two months' time you'll have caught up————————au niveau locution adverbiale————————au niveau de locution prépositionnelle1. [dans l'espace]au niveau du carrefour vous tournez à droite when you come to the crossroads, turn right————————de niveau locution adjectivalela terrasse est de niveau avec le salon the terrace is (on a) level with ou on the same level as the lounge -
12 prospection
prospection [pʀɔspεksjɔ̃]feminine nounb. [de marché] exploring* * *pʀɔspɛksjɔ̃nom féminin Commerce canvassing; Industrie prospecting* * *pʀɔspɛksjɔ̃ nf1) (pétrolière, minière) prospecting2) [marchés] exploration* * *prospection nf1 Comm (de clientèle, région) canvassing;2 Géol prospecting.[prɔspɛksjɔ̃] nom féminin1. MINES prospectingprospection minière/pétrolière mining/oil exploration2. COMMERCE [de la clientèle] canvassing[des tendances] exploringprospection du marché surveying ou exploring the market
См. также в других словарях:
Mines Advisory Group — Type Non Governmental Organisation Industry Landmine relief Founded 1989 Headquarters … Wikipedia
Mines de cuivre de Banca — Coordonnées 43° 07′ 43″ Nord 01° 22′ 24″ Ouest … Wikipédia en Français
Mines ParisTech — Devise Théorie et pratique Informations Fondation 1783 Type École d’ingénieurs … Wikipédia en Français
Mines De Rammelsberg — et la ville historique de Goslar 1 Patrimoine mondial Mines de Rammelsberg Latitude Longitude … Wikipédia en Français
Mines de rammelsberg — et la ville historique de Goslar 1 Patrimoine mondial Mines de Rammelsberg Latitude Longitude … Wikipédia en Français
Mines du Rammelsberg — Mines de Rammelsberg Mines de Rammelsberg et la ville historique de Goslar 1 Patrimoine mondial Mines de Rammelsberg Latitude Longitude … Wikipédia en Français
Region d'Ancash — Région d Ancash Region Ancash Régions du Pérou Président Ricardo Narváez Soto … Wikipédia en Français
Region d'Apurimac — Région d Apurímac Region Apurímac Régions du Pérou Président … Wikipédia en Français
Région d'Ancash — Region Ancash … Wikipédia en Français
Région d'Apurimac — Région d Apurímac Region Apurímac Régions du Pérou Président … Wikipédia en Français
Region de Moldavie — Région de Moldavie Pour les articles homonymes, voir Moldavie (homonymie). Moldavie Région historique 500 ans entre 1359 et 1859 … Wikipédia en Français