france Alternative forms
* Fraunce (obsolete)
Proper noun
( Frances)
A country in Western Europe which borders Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco, Andorra and Spain, is a member state of the European Union and has a population of 62 million inhabitants. Official name: French Republic ().
* 1998 , Shanny Peer, France on Display: Peasants, Provincials, and Folklore (ISBN 0791437108), page 2:
- Although scholars have offered different chronologies and causalities for the move toward modernity, most have resolved the paradox of the two Frances' by placing them in sequence: "diverse '''France''' gave way over time as modern centralized ' France gathered force."
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=April 23
, author=Angelique Chrisafis
, title=François Hollande on top but far right scores record result in French election
, work=the Guardian
citation
, page=
, passage=Hollande told cheering supporters in his rural fiefdom of Corrèze in south-west France' that he was best-placed to lead ' France towards change, saying the vote marked a "rejection" of Sarkozy and a "sanction" against his five years in office.}}
- , a French poet, journalist, and novelist
Related terms
* Franco-
* francophobe
* Francophone
* Frankland
* French
* Frenchman
* New France
* Tour de France
See also
*
*
References
Statistics
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susan English
Proper noun
( en proper noun)
.
* ~1591 William Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet : Act I, Scene III:
- Susan' and she - God rest all Christian souls! - / Were of an age. Well, ' Susan is with God; / She was too good for me.
* 1855 , North and South , Bernhard Tauchnitz 1855, page 382:
- "With all my heart, though I have not an idea who little Susan' may be. But I have a kindness for all '''Susans''', for simple ' Susan' s sake.
* 1932 , Words and Names , J.Murray 1932, page 84:
- My own 'reaction' to the name Susan' is a vision of a sturdy young woman garbed in 'print' and armed with a mop or other domestic implement, a picture compounded of a succession of domestic '''Susans''' passing before the eyes of early childhood. - - - It is symptomatic of the game of general post now being played by the classes and the masses that ' Susan is taking refuge, with Betty, Peggy, Jane and Ann, among the aristocracy, while Gladys and Muriel reign below stairs,
* 2006 , Digging to America , Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0307263940, pages 10, 62:
- Susan', they called her. They chose a name that resembled the name she had come with, Sooki, and also it was a comfortable sound for Iranians to pronounce. "' Su-san !" Maryam would sing when she went in to get her from her nap. "Su-Su-Su!"
- - - - Even on issues pertaining to their daughter, the Yazdans took a very different approach. Imagine changing that charming name, Sooki, part of her native heritage, to plain old Susan !
Usage notes
* In continuous use since the Middle Ages, with the latest popularity peak in the mid-twentieth century.
Related terms
* variants: Susanna, Susannah, Susanne, Suzanne
* pet forms: Sue, Susie, Susy, Suzi, Suzie, Suzy
Anagrams
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