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21 patron
• isä• asiakas• mesenaatti• suojelija• suosija* * *'peitrən1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) suojelija2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) kanta-asiakas•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint -
22 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) patrons, mecenāts, atbalstītājs2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) pastāvīgs klients•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint* * *mecenāts, patrons, atbalstītājs; pastāvīgs apmeklētājs, klients -
23 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) globėjas, patronas, mecenatas2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) nuolatinis klientas•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint -
24 patron
n. patron; skyddshelgon; stamkund; stöttare* * *['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) beskyddare, gynnare, mecenat2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) stamkund, stamgäst•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint -
25 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) mecenáš2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) stálý zákazník•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint* * *• patron -
26 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) mecenáš2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) stály zákazník•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint* * *• úcastník -
27 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) mecena2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) client•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint -
28 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) προστάτης,υποστηρικτής2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) (τακτικός)πελάτης•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint -
29 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) mécène2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) client/-ente•- patronize - patronise - patronizing - patronising - patronizingly - patronisingly - patron saint -
30 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) patrono2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) cliente, freguês•- patronize - patronise - patronizing - patronising - patronizingly - patronisingly - patron saint -
31 patron
сущ.1) общ. покровитель, заступник, меценат2) марк. постоянный клиент [посетитель\], завсегдатайPatrons receive a $50 discount. — Постоянные покупатели получают скидку в размере 50 долларов.
See:
* * *
1) патрон, покровитель, шеф; 2) постоянный клиент, завсегдатай.* * * -
32 fostering
fostering ['fɒstərɪŋ](b) (of the arts etc) patronage m, encouragement m -
33 Boulle, André-Charles
SUBJECT AREA: Domestic appliances and interiors[br]b. 11 November 1642 Paris, Franced. 29 February 1732 Paris, France[br]French cabinet-maker noted for his elaborate designs and high-quality technique in marquetry using brass and tortoiseshell.[br]As with the Renaissance artists and architects of fifteenth-and sixteenth-century Italy, Boulle worked as a young man in varied media, as a painter, engraver and metalworker an in mosaic techniques. It was in the 1660s that he turned more specifically to furniture and in the following decade, under the patronage of Louis XIV, that he became a leading ébéniste or cabinet-maker, In 1672 the King's Controller-General, Jean-Baptiste Colbert, recommended Boulle as an outstanding cabinet-maker and he was appointed ébéniste du roi. From then he spent the rest of his life working in the royal palaces, notably the Louvre and Versailles, and also carried out commissions for the French aristocracy and from abroad, particularly Spain and Germany.Before the advent of Boulle, the quality furniture made for the French court and aristocracy had come from foreign craftsmen, particularly Domenico Cucci of Italy and Pierre Colle of the Low Countries. Boulle made his name as their equal in his development of new forms of furniture such as his bureaux and commodes, the immense variety of his designs and their architectural quality, the beauty of his sculptural, gilded mounts, and the development of his elaborate marquetry. He was a leading exponent of the contemporary styles, which meant the elaborately rich baroque forms in the time of Louis XIV and the more delicate rococo elegance in that of Louis XV. The technique to which Boulle gave his name (sometimes referred to in its German spelling of Bühl) incorporated a rich variety of veneering materials into his designs: in particular, he used tortoiseshell and brass with ebony. Even greater richness was created with the introduction of an engraved design upon the brass surfaces. Further delicate elaboration derived from the use of paired panels of decoration to be used in reverse form in one piece, or two matching pieces, of furniture. In one panel, designated as première partie, the marquetry took the form of brass upon tortoiseshell, while in the other (contre-partie) the tortoiseshell was set into the brass background.[br]Further ReadingJ.Fleming and H.Honour, 1977, The Penguin Dictionary of Decorative Arts: Allen Lane, pp. 107–9.1982, The History of Furniture: Orbis (contains many references to Boulle).DY
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