-
subsequent War of the
Pyrenees polarised the
country in a
reaction against the
gallicised elites and
following defeat in the field,
peace was made with
France in...
-
Francization (in
American English,
Canadian English, and
Oxford English) or
Francisation (in
other British English), also
known as Frenchification, is...
-
oculaire from
Latin oculus /
ocularis However, a
historical tendency to
Gallicise Latin roots can be identified,
whereas English conversely leans towards...
- von Linné (Latinised as
Carolus a Linné), 'Linné'
being a
shortened and
gallicised version of 'Linnæus', and the
German nobiliary particle 'von' signifying...
- (புது) and cēri (சேரி)
meaning 'new slum'; its old name
Pondicherry is a
gallicised version of Pāṇḍi-cēri (பாண்டிச்சேரி)
meaning 'slum of Pandis'. Puducherry...
- Mons Martis,
Latin for "Mount of Mars",
survived into
Merovingian times,
gallicised as Montmartre.
Archaeological excavations show that the
heights of Montmartre...
- or "oath fellows", that is,
persons bound to each
other by an oath.
Gallicised into Huguenot,
often used deprecatingly, the word became,
during two and...
-
surname was
gallicised to Stuart. Mary
married Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, a
member of a
junior branch of the
Stewart family (who had also
gallicised their...
- to him at
Aubigny and Concressault, the
Darnley Stewarts'
surname was
gallicised to Stuart. Both Mary,
Queen of Scots, and Lord
Darnley had
strong claims...
-
aristocracy against the
native Occitan nobility. They have been
described as "
Gallicised".
Raimon Gaucelm supported the
Eighth Crusade and even
wrote a planh,...