- Côt, Cot A
Queue Verte,
Cotes Rouges, Doux Noir, Estrangey, Gourdaux,
Grelot De Tours, Grifforin, Guillan, Hourcat, Jacobain, Luckens, Magret, Malbek...
-
Pierre Grelot (Paris, 6
February 1917 - Orléans, 22 June 2009) was a
French Catholic priest,
biblical scholar,
theologian and
Honorary Professor at the...
-
Great Meteoron Guillaume-Joseph
Grelot's engraving 1672,
looking east and
showing the apse
mosaic Guillaume-Joseph
Grelot's engraving 1672,
looking west...
- Villers-
Grélot (French pronunciation: [vilɛʁ ɡʁelo]) is a
commune in the
Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté
region in
eastern France. Communes...
-
point has been
discovered in
Aramaic papyri from
Egypt published by P.
Grelot, in
which several of the
Caspian names that are mentioned—and identified...
- Guillaume-Joseph
Grelot (c. 1630 ― 1680s) was a 17th-century
French Old
Masters artist. A
large majority of his
works were
dedicated to King
Louis XIV...
-
during Emperor Ingyō's reign: "Men wore
wristbands and
garters to
which grelots were attached, that a high
value was set for pearls, that
metal was used...
-
pandemic The 12
January 1890
edition of the
Paris satirical magazine Le
Grelot [fr]
depicted an
unfortunate person with
influenza bowled along by a parade...
- Manet's works, such as The Fifer.
Cendrillon la pantoufle. La
Petite aux
grelots. L’Oiseau bleu.
Trouver chaussure à son pied.
Histoire du
Petit Chaperon-Rouge...
-
storage leaf,
similar to
cloves of garlic. In
French they are
known as
oignon grelot. One English-speaking
reference also
mentions the term
petit poireau antillais...