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.
|
| BTW, Why won't you become an editor? |