159 résultats pour "grasses"
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Grasses - biology.
This, together with details of overall structure and less easily observed characteristics of anatomy, cytology, and chemistry, accounts for the tremendous number ofspecies of grasses. VI OTHER GRASSLIKE PLANTS Plants of two other groups, the sedges and the rushes, are superficially similar to grasses and are often confused with them. The three groups are easily distinguished,however, by examining their flowers, stems, and leaves. Rushes have flowers with six-part perianths (floral whorls) and...
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LES PLANTES GRASSES
Les plantes grasses ! Les épiphyl/ums poussent dans a les régions tropicales et subtropicales d'Amérique latine. Ce sont des cactacées épiphytes qui produisent de belles fleurs de couleurs variées, du rouge au blanc crème. ou encore le saguaro géant de l'Arizona, qui peut atteindre plus de 15 m de hauteur. Toutefois, les plantes grasses poussent aussi bien sur les versants arides des montagnes que dans les plaines désertiques et elles présentent une inf...
- Grasse.
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Les plantes grasses (Faune et Flore)
Les cactus globuleux du genre Mamillaria comptent plusieurs centaines d'espèces. Elles proviennent du Mexique pour la majorité d'entre elles et sont faciles à cultiver. Certaines sont très résistantes : la Mamillaria senilis pousse à plus de 2000 m d'altitude, souvent dans des crevasses rocheuses où la température descend pourtant très bas. Certains cactus sont suffisammentrustiques pour pouvoir être cultivés à l'extérieur, tout au moins dans les régions au climat très doux. C'est également...
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Günther Grass
Ces trois romans réunis sous le titre de la Tri logie de Dantzig , ont tous pour toile de fond les rivages de la Baltique et l'histoire de la première moitié de ce siècle. Ils s'inscrivent dans la grande tradition des romans picaresques de Grass. L'écrivain militant Un an avant l'érection du mur de Ber lin, en 1960, Günter Grass s'installe à Berlin-Ouest. Il s'engage politiquement en soutenant le parti social-
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Günter GRASS : Le Tambour
Photo Zeitlho fe r 1 Sipa-Icon o L e Ta mbour app ort a à Günter Grass l a g lo ir e, qu e la libert é d e ses idées et par fo is aussi la crudit é d e so n style sem blai ent dev oir lu i re fu se r. Ce rom an "d e jeu nesse ", éc rit lors d ' un séj o u r à Paris , fit l'effet d'un e b o mb e dans le s mi lieux littéraires all e mands , pu is dans le monde e n ti er (il f ut tr aduit en onze lan gues) . Le livre Une page d' hist...
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Grass Günter
Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)1 r ~ ' t J l t Série B-5 Fiche N• 839 17 novembre 1965 Grass (Günter)
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Walt Whitman: Leaves of Grass (Sprache & Litteratur).
Welcome is every organ and attribute of me, and of any man hearty and clean,Not an inch nor a particle of an inch is vile, and none shall be less familiar than the rest. I am satisfied . . . . I see, dance, laugh, sing;As God comes a loving bedfellow and sleeps at my side all night and close on the peep of the day,And leaves for me baskets covered with white towels bulging the house with their plenty,Shall I postpone my acceptation and realization and scream at my eyes,That they turn from gazing...
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Édouard Manet
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INTRODUCTION
Manet: Tradition and Innovation
French impressionist painter Édouard Manet shocked art audiences in Paris with Le déjeuner sur l'herbe (The Luncheon on
the Grass; 1863, Musée d'Orsay, Paris), which depicts a nude woman at a woodland picnic.
Le Déjeuner sur l’herbeLe Déjeuner sur l’herbe (Luncheon on the Grass) by Édouard Manet was painted in 1863. When it was first displayed, therough brushwork and undefined areas of color were as distressing to the public as the nude woman who was neither aclassical goddess nor a symbol in an allegory. Manet claimed that the real subject of the painting was light, and it was thatphilosophy that gave birth to impressionism.Bridgeman Art Library, London/New York After his father died in 1862, Manet...
- Giovannino de' Grassi
- Grass, Günter - littérature.
- Günter Grass (Sprache & Litteratur).
- Grassi, Giovanni Battista - sciences et techniques.
- Grassi, Giovanni Battista - savants et scientifiques.
- Grassi, Giovanni Battista - Biologiste / Naturaliste.
- Grass (Günter)
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- Grassé, Pierre Paul - sciences et techniques.
- Grassé, Pierre Paul - Biologiste / Naturaliste.
- Grasse, François Joseph Paul de
- Le Tambour de Günter GRASS (Résumé & Analyse)
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Commentaire - Grasse matinée - Jacques Prévert
Potin » qui est le nom d’une enseigne de grand magasin. Au vers 34 on fomente l’abondance avec une énumération d’aliments avec tout au pluriel, tout en abondance « ces pâtes, ces bouteilles, ces conserves ». Est-ce que l’abondance est la meilleure décision pour faire croître la société ? Où est-ce que l’abondance rend fou les gens ? L’exemple du vagabond est le meilleur exemple pour affirmer que la société se trompe. On nous met la « glace » vers 8, la « vitrine » vers 11, et des « vitres » vers...
- Günter Grass - idiomas.
- Grass Günter Ecrivain allemand
- lecture analytique Prevert grasse matinee
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- la grasse matinée
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Jacques Prévert, "La Grasse Matinée", Paroles, 1945.
La grasse matinée
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Jacques Prévert, "La Grasse Matinée", Paroles, 1945. La grasse matinée 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. Il est terrible le petit bruit de l'oeuf dur cassé sur un comptoir d'étain il est terrible ce bruit quand il remue dans la mémoire de l'homme qui a faim elle est terrible aussi la tête de l'homme la tête de l'homme qui a faim qu...
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La grasse matinée
ça dure trois jours trois nuits sans manger et derri ère ce vitres ces p âtés ces bouteilles ces conserves poissons morts prot égés par les bo îtes bo îtes prot égées par les vitres vitres prot égées par les flics flics prot égés par la crainte que de barricades pour six malheureuses sardines.. Un peu plus loin le bistrot caf écr ème et croissants chauds l'homme titube et dans l'int érieur de sa t ête un brouillard de mots un brouillard de mots sardines à manger oeuf dur caf écr ème...
- is the grass always greener on the other side of the fence
- Grass Günter, né en 1927 à Dantzig (aujourd'hui Gda?sk), écrivain allemand.
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Alberta - Geography.
C Climate Except for the mountain areas, summers throughout the province are quite warm. Winters are long and extremely cold. In July, average daily temperatures range fromabout 16°C (about 60°F) along the northern boundary to about 21°C (about 70°F) in the south. In the extreme southeastern section of the province, temperatures of43°C (110°F) have been recorded. In January, average daily temperatures range from about -14°C (about 6°F) at Grande Prairie to about -9°C (about 16°F) atCalgary. Tem...
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Alberta - Canadian History.
C Climate Except for the mountain areas, summers throughout the province are quite warm. Winters are long and extremely cold. In July, average daily temperatures range fromabout 16°C (about 60°F) along the northern boundary to about 21°C (about 70°F) in the south. In the extreme southeastern section of the province, temperatures of43°C (110°F) have been recorded. In January, average daily temperatures range from about -14°C (about 6°F) at Grande Prairie to about -9°C (about 16°F) atCalgary. Tem...
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Nebraska - geography.
by natural resource districts to limit the rate of pumping for irrigation. C Climate Nebraska has a typical continental climate with wide seasonal variations in temperature. C1 Temperature Winter temperatures below -20°C (0° F) and summer temperatures in the upper 30°s C (lower 100°s F) are common. The average January temperature varies from about -7° C (about 20° F) in the northeast to about -2° C (about 29° F) in the southwest. The average for July, thehottest month, ranges from about 26° C...
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Nebraska - USA History.
by natural resource districts to limit the rate of pumping for irrigation. C Climate Nebraska has a typical continental climate with wide seasonal variations in temperature. C1 Temperature Winter temperatures below -20°C (0° F) and summer temperatures in the upper 30°s C (lower 100°s F) are common. The average January temperature varies from about -7° C (about 20° F) in the northeast to about -2° C (about 29° F) in the southwest. The average for July, thehottest month, ranges from about 26° C...
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fromage - agriculture et agroalimentaire.
3.2 Fromages à pâte molle et à croûte fleurie Ce sont pour la plupart des fromages au lait de vache en forme de disque, souples sous le doigt. Leur croûte est blanche et duveteuse, parfois veinée de brun, ce quiprovient de l’ensemencement d’un mycelium ( Penicillium candidum, voir champignons) au moment du salage du caillé. Leur pâte varie, selon leur âge, du blanc crayeux au jaune ocre. Les plus connus sont le brie de Meaux, le coulommiers (Île-de-France) et le camembert (Normandie). Il exis...
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Cactus et Plantes grasses
1 Cactus et Plantes grasses ! Les épiphyllums poussent dans A tes régions tropicales et subtropicales d'Amérique Latine. Ce sont des cactacées épiphytes qui produisent de belles fleurs de couleurs var iées , du rouge au blanc crème. zona o u du N eva da, ty piqu es des paysages d e «wes tern>>: yuccas , agaves , m amill air es, opunti a o u en core le sag uaro géa nt de l'A r izo na, qui p e ut atteind re p lus de 1 5 rn d e ha ut. T o ute f...
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Saskatchewan (province) - Geography.
The length of the frost-free season varies within the province. In the southwest, particularly in the valley lands along the South Saskatchewan River, the frost-freeperiod ranges from 150 to 160 days. Regina enjoys about 123 frost-free days, and Saskatoon has about 111. The far north has only from 85 to 95 frost-free days. One important characteristic of Saskatchewan’s climate is the great variability in temperature and precipitation from year to year, which is often critical for agriculture.The...
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Saskatchewan (province) - Canadian History.
The length of the frost-free season varies within the province. In the southwest, particularly in the valley lands along the South Saskatchewan River, the frost-freeperiod ranges from 150 to 160 days. Regina enjoys about 123 frost-free days, and Saskatoon has about 111. The far north has only from 85 to 95 frost-free days. One important characteristic of Saskatchewan’s climate is the great variability in temperature and precipitation from year to year, which is often critical for agriculture.The...
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Iowa - geography.
Okoboji, Lost Island, Silver, and West Swan lakes. In addition, reservoirs have been created by damming several smaller Iowa rivers. There are a number of largereservoirs behind dams on the Mississippi River along the Iowa state line. C Climate Iowa’s climate is characterized by warm, generally moist summers and cold winters. Temperatures vary considerably from season to season and, at times, from day today. However, monthly averages are relatively uniform throughout the state and usually vary...
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Iowa - USA History.
Okoboji, Lost Island, Silver, and West Swan lakes. In addition, reservoirs have been created by damming several smaller Iowa rivers. There are a number of largereservoirs behind dams on the Mississippi River along the Iowa state line. C Climate Iowa’s climate is characterized by warm, generally moist summers and cold winters. Temperatures vary considerably from season to season and, at times, from day today. However, monthly averages are relatively uniform throughout the state and usually vary...
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Nevada - geography.
The Truckee, Carson, and Walker rivers flow out of the Sierra Nevada, thread their way around several of the desert ranges, and also end in closed basins. The Walkerflows into Walker Lake, the Carson into Lahontan Reservoir. The major part of the Truckee’s flow is now diverted to Lahontan Reservoir, although as required by lawsome of it empties into Pyramid Lake. Because these three streams flow constantly, the lakes into which they empty never dry up. Winnemucca Lake formerly receivedoverflow w...
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Nevada - USA History.
The Truckee, Carson, and Walker rivers flow out of the Sierra Nevada, thread their way around several of the desert ranges, and also end in closed basins. The Walkerflows into Walker Lake, the Carson into Lahontan Reservoir. The major part of the Truckee’s flow is now diverted to Lahontan Reservoir, although as required by lawsome of it empties into Pyramid Lake. Because these three streams flow constantly, the lakes into which they empty never dry up. Winnemucca Lake formerly receivedoverflow w...
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North Dakota - geography.
Bismarck, the growing season averages 134 days, as the average date of the last killing frost is May 11 and that of the first killing frost is September 22. The length ofthe growing season drops to about 110 days in the northerly reaches of the state. The long periods of summer sunshine at this latitude, providing as much as 16 hoursof daylight in summer, help crops to mature quickly, thus compensating somewhat for the relatively short growing season. Temperatures in the north are, on the averag...
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North Dakota - USA History.
Bismarck, the growing season averages 134 days, as the average date of the last killing frost is May 11 and that of the first killing frost is September 22. The length ofthe growing season drops to about 110 days in the northerly reaches of the state. The long periods of summer sunshine at this latitude, providing as much as 16 hoursof daylight in summer, help crops to mature quickly, thus compensating somewhat for the relatively short growing season. Temperatures in the north are, on the averag...
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Illinois - geography.
the state before joining the Mississippi River at Grafton. The Illinois has been deepened and straightened and forms part of the Illinois Waterway. The watershed between rivers that flow into the Mississippi river system and rivers that flow into the Great Lakes is low and in many places is not easily discernible. Inwhat is now the Chicago area, explorers had little difficulty portaging, or carrying, their canoes over the low watershed between the Des Plaines River, which flows intothe Illinois,...
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Illinois - USA History.
the state before joining the Mississippi River at Grafton. The Illinois has been deepened and straightened and forms part of the Illinois Waterway. The watershed between rivers that flow into the Mississippi river system and rivers that flow into the Great Lakes is low and in many places is not easily discernible. Inwhat is now the Chicago area, explorers had little difficulty portaging, or carrying, their canoes over the low watershed between the Des Plaines River, which flows intothe Illinois,...
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Louisiana - geography.
lakes are on the Red River and its tributaries. In addition, small oxbow lakes are numerous in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. Oxbow lakes are formed when a river cutsthrough the neck of one of its loops, or meanders, thus establishing a shorter course and leaving the former loop as a lake separate from the river. Louisiana also hassome artificially created reservoirs. C Coastline Louisiana’s long and irregular coastline extends along the Gulf of Mexico from the Pearl River on the east to the S...
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Louisiana - USA History.
lakes are on the Red River and its tributaries. In addition, small oxbow lakes are numerous in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. Oxbow lakes are formed when a river cutsthrough the neck of one of its loops, or meanders, thus establishing a shorter course and leaving the former loop as a lake separate from the river. Louisiana also hassome artificially created reservoirs. C Coastline Louisiana’s long and irregular coastline extends along the Gulf of Mexico from the Pearl River on the east to the S...
- La Cuisine grasse de Pieter Bruegel
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- Pierre BONNARD : LES CASCADES A GRASSE
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Colorado - geography.
Although the rivers of Colorado are navigable only by small boats, they are important as a source of irrigation water for use in Colorado and adjoining states. However,the water level of the rivers fluctuates seasonally and from year to year. The level is generally low in winter and high in spring and summer, during the runoff of meltedsnow from the mountains. Colorado has no large lakes of natural origin, but there are numerous small lakes in the mountains. The largest bodies of water in Colora...