Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The same day the two brothers of the King went to register the edicts in the Cour des Comptes and the _Cour des Aides_.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 26, December, 1859 Various
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I spent a couple off days with the orvis folks in Cour D alene Iadho last years all I can say is top notch.
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I spent a couple off days with the orvis folks in Cour D alene Iadho last years all I can say is top notch.
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Many plantings were pulled out to make room for more popular varieties like chardonnay and sauvignon blanc, but in a tiny Loire appellation called Cour-Cheverny a small clutch of romorantin vines have been preserved.
Archive 2008-01-01 2008
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South of the Cour Royale is a small court called Cour des Princes, and divides the wing built by Louis XVIII. from the main body of the southern wing.
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The principal entrance to the palace opens out from the Place Solferino and gives access immediately to the Cour du Cheval Blanc of Chambiges, which, since that eventful day in Napoleonic history nearly a hundred years ago, has become better known as the Cour des Adieux.
Royal Palaces and Parks of France Blanche McManus
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It is also called the Cour des Adieux, because here Napoleon I., forsaken by nearly all his generals, took leave, on the 20th of April 1814, of the ever-faithful soldiers of his Old Guard, from whom he tore himself away amidst sobs and tears, and threw himself into his carriage.
The South of France—East Half C. B. Black
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Généraux was called Cour des Aides, and by the changes of 1705 it was joined to the Cour des Comptes in the Rue des Carmes, and the new
The Story of Rouen Theodore Andrea Cook 1897
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The palace in which he was born and which he inhabited frequently during life, was known as the Cour du Prince.
Seeing Europe with Famous Authors, Volume 4 France and the Netherlands, Part 2 Various 1885
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They took her thus into the court called Cour de Justice, where there was a scaffold and which was crowded with spectators.
The Queen's Necklace Alexandre Dumas p��re 1836
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