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  • 61 Lygdunum

    see Lugduni
    see also Lugduni Batauorum

    Latin place names > Lygdunum

  • 62 Valentie

    see Valentiae
    see also Valentiae Edetanorum

    Latin place names > Valentie

  • 63 Sahib

    Also sa'ab"; boss, often used to refer to person of higher status, see also "memsahib".

    Iभारतीय अंग्रेजी खिचड़ी (Indian-English slang) > Sahib

  • 64 Gendarmerie

       (see also Police). One of the two main branches of the police in France, the Gendarmerie is a national police force, responsible notably for policing the French road network, small towns and rural areas. It is also responsible for civil protection duties. Technically, the Gendarmerie is one of the French armed services. The policing of towns and cities is the responsibility of the Police Nationale, a different service.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Gendarmerie

  • 65 Police Municipale

       (see also Police)
       Local police forces, under the orders of the local mayor, Municipal Police exist to ensure the maintenance of order in towns and cities, and the application of local bylaws. They have traffic duties, civil protection duties (often on bicycles), and community liaison operations. They also carry out certain legal and administrative formalities for citizens, in municipal offices. They can issue fines and parking tickets, and take statements.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Police Municipale

  • 66 Préfecture

       (see also Préfet). Residence of a Préfet (Prefect), and building housing local offices of national government services. The word is also used to denote the chief town or capital of a Department or a region. For example, the city of Montpellier is described as the "Préfecture" of the department of Hérault, and the "Préfecture de région" for the Languedoc-Roussillon region.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Préfecture

  • 67 Préfet

       (see also Préfet de Police, Préfet Maritime)
       the Prefect, the chief representative of central government in a French department. His official residence is the Préfecture. Until the Decentralisation Law of 1982, the Prefect was the appointed chief executive of local government in each department and region of France; since decentralisation, and the passing of powers and financial responsibilities to departmental and regional councils, the role of prefects has been greatly diminshed. Nonetheless, Prefects retain considerable powers in matters of public order, immigration, and emergencies. The prefect is also responsible for the organisation of territorial and national elections, and for ensuring that local authorities do not exceed their powers, but act within the framework of the law. Prefects are in theory required to be a-political and neutral, but many appointments are politically inspired.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Préfet

  • 68 vidi također donju napomenu

    • see also Note below

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > vidi također donju napomenu

  • 69 Fonction Publique, la

       (see also Haut Fonctionnaire)
       The French civil service. Tenured state employees - all 1.75 million of them, including qualified teachers in the state education system - are called fonctionnaires; non-tenured employees are called " agents de la fonction publique" or " contractuels".. In 2005, state employees represented 22% of the workforce in France, more than in any other large European country. Recruitment, promotion and pension rights are all ordered according to arcane and complex rules, which successive governments have talked of modifying, though to little effect. President Sarkozy has promised major reforms of the French civil service, starting with a slimming down of the number of state employees, largely through the non-replacement of 50% of retiring civil servants. Faced with increasing shortfalls in the pensions budget, public sector pension rights are being slowly brought into line with those in the private sector.
       Jobs in the public sector have always been much sought after in France, notably on account of the job security of the tenured and other essential posts, and good retirement pension schemes. Tenured fonctionnaires have a job for life, and it is very unusual for a fonctionnaire to lose his job; this sanction is normally only applied in cases of serious professional misconduct. Within France, there is occasional animosity from private-sector workers towardsfonctionnaires, who are sometimes projected by the media as having a sheltered and relaxed working life - notably when there are public sector strikes.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Fonction Publique, la

  • 70 Haut Fonctionnaire

       (see also Fonction Publique)
       Senior civil servant, person occupying a senior post in the French public administration or in the corridors of power.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Haut Fonctionnaire

  • 71 Police Nationale

       (see also Police)
       The main national police force in France. The principal remit of the Police National in France is the maintenance of law and order in French towns and cities (In rural areas, this is the responsibility of the Gendarmerie (q.v.)). The National Police force comprises six main operational divisions: Public security (the DCSP), by far the largest division, and responsible for everyday policing duties. The riot police (CRS, Compagnie Républicaine de Sécurité), the Police Judiciaire (PJ, or "Pégie"), responsible for criminal investigations, the border police (Police aux Frontières), the Police training service, and the surveillance department, known since 2008 as the DCRI (Direction Centrale du Renseignement Intérieur).

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Police Nationale

  • 72 Protestantism

       See also Eglise Réformée de France. Since the spread of Protestantism in the 16th century, France has always had a Protestant minority, sometimes tolerated, sometimes persecuted. The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 led to a mass exodus of French Protestants (some estimates put the figure as high as a million), to neighbouring countries, and to the New World. Pockets of Protestantism survived in the Cévennes mountains of southern France, and in Alsace and the region of Montbéliard, in eastern France. These are France's main Protestant areas today.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Protestantism

  • 73 Sécurité Sociale, la

       (see also Caisse Primaire)
       the French national health insurance scheme. This expression does not usually translate into English as "social security", but is the French equivalent of Britain's NHS. All people in work pay must pay contributions into the Sécurité Sociale; as a result, they and their dependents receive largely subsidised or free health treatment. In recent years, the cost of running the health service has mushroomed, and the "trou" or hole in the Health Service budget has grown ; this has led to the introduction of token charges, a reduction in the reimbursement of certain medicines, and other cost-cutting measures. While the French health care system remains among the best in the world, and primary health care in France is generally excellent, waiting lists have begun to appear for certain types of specialist treatment, and some hospital services have been closed for economic reasons.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Sécurité Sociale, la

  • 74 Trente-cinq heures, les

       (see also RTT) In the year 2000, the socialist government of Lionel Jospin reduced the statutory working week in France from 39 hours to 35 hours - without loss of salary. Though the measure was accompanied by other changes in workplace legislation, including greater flexibility for employers and employees, and though the productivity of labour in France increased by over 4% as a result, the introduction of the 35-hour working week was not a good move for the French economy, particularly at a time of increasing globalization, and the rapid development of imports manufactured in low-labour-cost countries. The conservative Raffarin andVillepin governments tinkered with reform of the system that was much decried by employers, but failed to take any major action for fear of the trade unions and of hostile public reaction. It was not until the Sarkozy presidency that the official 35-hour working week legislation was to all intents and purposes rendered obsolete.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Trente-cinq heures, les

  • 75 Altemburgae*

    see also Altenburgi in Misnia
    Altenburg (Horn, Austria) [au]

    Latin place names > Altemburgae*

  • 76 Astae*

    see also Astae Regiae Asti (Italy)

    Latin place names > Astae*

  • 77 Aureliae*

    see also Aureliae Aquensi

    Latin place names > Aureliae*

  • 78 Bresciae*

    see also Brixiae
    Brzesc Litewski (Poland) [pl]
    = Brest (Belarus) [bw]
    [both valid AACR2 headings]

    Latin place names > Bresciae*

  • 79 Cantabrigiae*

    Cambridge (England) [enk]

    Latin place names > Cantabrigiae*

  • 80 Cordubae*

    see also Cordubae Tucumanorum
    Córdoba (Spain) [sp]

    Latin place names > Cordubae*

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