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We've found 28 definitions containing the term: lachaise, fran (0.16 seconds)

bonaparte  (ˈboʊ nəˌpɑrt) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François Charles Joseph,
boucher  (ˈʃeɪ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1703–70, French painter.
villon  (ˈyɔ̃) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1431–63?, French poet.
truffaut  (ˈfoʊ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1932–84, French film director.
couperin  (əˈrɛ̃) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1668–1733, French composer.
gounod  (ˈgu noʊ, guˈnoʊ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Charles François, 1818–93, French composer.
quesnay  (ɪˈneɪ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1694–1774, French economist and physician.
rabelais  (ˈræb əˌleɪ, ˌræb əˈleɪ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, c1490–1553, French satirist and humorist.
auber  (ʊˈbɛər) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Daniel François Esprit, 1782–1871, French composer.
rodin  (ʊˈdæn, -ˈdɛ̃) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(François) Auguste (René), 1840–1917, French sculptor.
la rochefoucauld  (ɑ ˌrɔʃ fuˈkoʊ, ˌroʊʃ-) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 6th Duc de, 1613–80, French moralist and composer of epigrams and maxims.
robespierre  (ˈroʊbz pɪər, -piˌɛər, ˌroʊ bəs piˈɛər) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Maximilien François Marie Isidore de, 1758–94, French revolutionary leader.
mauriac  (ɔˈryɑk) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, 1885–1970, French novelist: Nobel prize 1952.
voltaire  (ʊlˈtɛər, vɒl-) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(François Marie Arouet), 1694–1778, French writer and philosopher.
delavigne  (ə lɑˈvin yə) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(Jean François) Casimir, 1793–1843, French poet and playwright.
fourier  (ˈfʊər iˌeɪ, -i ər) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François Marie Charles, 1772–1837, French socialist and reformer.
maintenon  (ɛ̃təˈnɔ̃) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Marquise de (Françoise d'Aubigné), 1635–1719, second wife of Louis XIV.
comte  (ɔ̃t) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(Isidore) Auguste (Marie François), 1798–1857, French founder of philosophical positivism.
sully-prudhomme  (üˈli prüˈdɔm) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
René François Armand, 1839–1907, French poet: Nobel prize 1901.
eugène  (œˈʒɛn) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Prince (François Eugène de Savoie-Carignan), 1663–1736, Austrian general, born in France.
récamier  (ˌreɪ kæmˈyeɪ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Madame (Jeanne Françoise Julie Adélaïde Bernard), 1777–1849, influential French salon hostess.
mitterrand  (ˌmi təˈrɑ̃, ˈmi təˌrɑ̃, -ˌrænd) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François (Maurice Marie), 1916–96, president of France 1981–95.
chopin  (ˈʃoʊ pæn; for) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Frédéric François, 1810–49, Polish composer and pianist, in France after 1831.
duvalier  (ˌdu vælˈyeɪ, duˈvæl yeɪ) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
François, (“Papa Doc”), 1907–71, Haitian dictator: president 1957–71.
prévostd'exiles  (ɪˈvoʊ dɛgˈzil) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Antoine François (“Abbé Prévost”), 1697–1763, French novelist.
sade  (ɑd, sæd) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Donatien Alphonse François, Comte de (Marquis de Sade), 1740–1814, French novelist: notorious for his tales of sexual gratification through the infliction of pain.
napoleon  (əˈpoʊ li ən, -ˈpoʊl yən) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Napoleon II, (François Charles Joseph Bonaparte) (Duke of Reichstadt) 1811–32, titular king of Rome (son of Napoleon I).
fourierism  (ˈfʊər i əˌrɪz əm) Random House Webster's College Dictionary
the social system proposed by François Marie Charles Fourier under which society was to be organized into self-sufficient phalanxes large enough for all industrial and social requirements.
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