The cast of Le voeu - 2003 includes: Mohamed Azizi Amar Ben Abdallah Keine Bouhiza as Habib Daouia Merrah
In English: This wish is sent to you In Creole: Mo souhaite twa sa voeu la
Stanislas Stanic has: Played Miroslav in "Une famille formidable" in 1992. Played Interne in "Julie Lescaut" in 1992. Played Ouvrier croate 1 in "Des hommes et des dieux" in 2010. Played Marek in "Cherchez Hortense" in 2012. Played Le professeur in "Le Voeu" in 2012.
Emile Bourgeois has written: 'History of modern France, 1815-1913' -- subject(s): Accessible book, History 'France under Louis XIV' -- subject(s): History, Civilization, Court and courtiers 'L'enseignement secondaire selon le voeu de la France. --' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'History Of Modern France 1815-1913 - Volume 1'
"Je vous veux pour toujours" - I want you forever ------------------------------------- Ugh. "Je vous veux pour toujours?" Vraiment? On peut faire mieux, je pense! Literal translation is NEVER the way to go. That sentence had little sense, and above all, it is so... unpoetic. Besides, if you are on the stage where you want to say something like that, using vous (formal) is a no no! That being said, there is no direct equivalent for "I want you forever", which even in English doesn't right. But here is something which I believe resembles what you want to say: "Mon voeu, c'est que tu sois toujours avec moi" - Roughly, "My wish is that you always be by my side"
The cast of Nos chers voisins - 2012 includes: Claudine Acs as Madame Dubreuil Nikos Aliagas as le patron de Karine Gil Alma as Alain Stuck Emmanuel Bonami as Philippe Talina Boyaci as Fleur Denis Brogniart as Le facteur Pauline Chappey as Ludivine Issa Doumbia Issa Doumbia as Issa Leguenec Damien Ferdel as Jean-Eudes Julien Frison as Jacques-Etienne Gwendolyn Gourvenec as Ariane Fauve Hautot as Violette Vincent Lagaf as Un technicien indiscret Francis Lalanne as Un artiste-peintre Martin Lamotte as Mr. Lambert Lucie Lucas as Adeline, la baby-sitter Jean Marc Genereux as Johnny Laouni Mouhid as Un squatteur philosophe Sandra Rosinsky as La baby sitter Thierry Samitier as Aymeric Isabelle Vitari as Karine
As usual, there is no single French word for the English wish. As a verb, it might be souhaiter, désirer, vouloir, demander or even prier, depending on the sense. As a noun, it could be souhait. désir, voeu or demande.
Dont you belive in santa then?Well listen up who puts all of those broken up parts of carrot outside?well i have a answer for that SANTA well basicly Rudolph who would dare to go outside in the cold and place it outside? um not me i saw his sleigh i heard a bang in my mum and dads bedroom it was the wadrobe next morning i found a bag of presents in there and who eats the mince pies? santa and including the beer he drinks that and when i went to open my presents i found all of his food on top of my HUGE present o ya that present was guitar hero HE IS REAL. that is all i need you too belive thanks sincerely your doc to belive xDefine 'real'.If by 'real' you mean 'alive', then Santa Claus was never real. Santa was invented by Coca Cola, based on the history's Saint Nicholas, or Nicholas of Myra. Saint Nicholas had a reputation of "secret gift-giving", which consisted of acts such as putting coins in people's shoes, hence the holiday tradition we embrace today. The name "Santa Claus" is based of the Dutch term "Sinterklaas", a Winter holiday figure in some countries.But 'real' does no necessarily mean 'alive'. For example, [although I, myself, am not a Christian] God can be real because people believe in Him. If no-one believed in God, then He would cease to exist in our consciousness, and therefore, cease to be 'real'. So, in this sense, Santa can be real; he is alive in the collective consciousness of the children of this world. He is not real if we do not believe in him, it's our own personal choice; a choice in what we believe in.Merry Christmas,- Voeu
Colors on the French FlagThe French flag is the official French pavilion since 1794. It was drawn by Jacques Louis David, famous French painter, but it has its origins in July 1789. Shortly after the fall of the Bastille, the king visited the Paris town hall and was handed a blue and red cockade - the long-time colours of the town - which he put on his hat next to the white cockade (French kingdom emblem at the time), as a gesture towards the people of Paris. The "cockade story" was witnessed by Thomas Jefferson on the 17th of July 1789. The newly created cockade became rapidly popular. Lafayette claimed the idea, but the diary of a bookseller notes that three days before, on the 14th of July, "the three-coulour cockade begins to replace the green one"(Since the reign of Henri IV, the red and blue could be found in the royal emblems, standing for the Kingdom of "Navarre".)The blue and red colors in Paris' flag were standing for the patron saints of the town (Saint Martin, Saint Denis). The popular "Garde Nationale", heir of the "Garde française" (regiment meant to protect the King) already had the three colours blue, white and red on their uniforms. Members of the Garde Nationale took part - and even led - in the storming of La Bastille.The white was associated at the time with the kingdom, or with France, more that with the kings, and indicated the dedication of the kingdom to the Virgin Mary ("voeu de Louis XIII", in 1638).The three colours were used in different orders (blue-red-white for the scarf of public officials in 1790, white-red-blue in horizontal bands for the 'Fête de la Fédération' on the 14th of July 1790. In 1790 were also adopted new versions of ship's pavilions, despite some traditionalists arguing that because of the colours, it would resemble too much the Dutch flag.The flag was adopted officially by the Convention as the national flag only in 1794 (15th of February).The white flag replaced the three-color flag in 1814-1815, and from 1815 to 1830, during the two first periods when the monarchy was reinstated.In 1830 the king Louis-Philippe came to power and reinstated the three-color flag.After the overthrow of the Emperor Napoleon III, a royalist majority offered the throne to the Count of Chambord. He said he would accept the throne on the condition that the tricolour be replaced by the white flag. This proved impossible to accommodate and France remained a republic.
Meaning of Colors on French FlagActually, it's blue, white and red - reading from the flagpole outwards.In the early days of the revolution, the people of Paris, fearful that the King was sending foreign mercenary soldiers to occupy the city, called out the local militia to defend them. This body needed some form of identification, so they made armbands and cockades in the colours of the city's coat of arms - blue and red. Later, when a brief accommodation was made between King and people, and the King had been forced to wear the cockade, a compromise was reached under which the new flag included the blue and red, with the addition of the white from the Bourbon family's royal flag. This proved popular and remained even after the execution of the King. Successive governments - the First republic, the Directory, the Consulate and Napoleon's Empire - adopted the tricolour, which disappeared for a time under the restoration, to return permanently in 1848.A common interpretation is that the blue, white and red stand for the principles of the French Revolution - liberty, equality, and fraternity respectively - but this is a poetic re-interpretation, rather than based on any historical evidence.I seem to answer this one on a regular basis.The coat of arms of Paris is blue and red. At the storming of the Bastille, those attackers who had no uniform wore blue and red cockades. Later, when the KIng was a prisoner of the Parisians, it was Lafayette who suggested that a good new flag for the reformed French state would be the blue and red of Paris, enclosing the white of the old régime's Bourbon flag. This seemed a good idea at the time, and has proved most durable.Note that the French flag is not red, white and blue, but blue, white and read (reading, as one does with flags, from the flagpole outwards).The red also means blood from the french revalotionCOMMENTOMG u totally coppyed and pasted that anyone could have done that themselves that person came to this webpage for some good info not something they could have found out themselves
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the french flag is white blue White stands for peace and honesty; red symbolises hardiness, bravery, valour and strength; blue stands for vigilance, truth, loyalty, perseverance and justice. Some sources claim that the three colours represent the three main estates of the original French aristocratic social and political system, .I'd. white for the clergy, red for the nobility and blue for the bourgeoisie. Red and blue are also the traditional livery colours of France's capital city, Paris. King Louis XVI wore a red, white and blue badge when he addressed a revolutionary gathering in Paris. The white was added as it is the traditional colour for French royalty.