- is a
traditional alternative for an
unmarried woman. The
plural is
Mesdemoiselles (Mlles).
Usage of "Mademoiselle"
varies based on
regions and ideology...
- Vincennes), Le juge prévenu (1754, The
Biased Judge), and Mémoires de
Mesdemoiselles de
Marsange (1757,
Memoirs of
Mlles de Marsange). La Jardinière de Vincennes...
- "my damsel", cf.
English "damsel");
pronounced [madmwazɛl]; plural:
mesdemoiselles,
pronounced [medmwazɛl]; abbreviation: Mlle or Mle; plural:
Mlles or...
- penser,
instituer /z/ Alsace, transat,
transiter Ø Island, mesdames,
mesdemoiselles,
Descartes (also /j/),
messieurs (not
considered double s), messeigneurs...
-
MoszWV 62 → A
composition for
piano divided in two
books dedicated to
Mesdemoiselles Marguerite and
Henriette Debrie.
Published by Leduc.
MoszWV 63 → A composition...
-
eccentric habits, they were
known as "Strapatsfröknarna" (approximately "
Mesdemoiselles Calamity").
During her
stays at
Rosersberg Palace and in
spite of her...
- and has
received the
visits of the
Queen and
Madame la
Dauphine The
Mesdemoiselles of
Nantes and of
Tours had been
raised together in a
private house on...
- New Jersey, the
Virginia Female Institute, the
Edgehill School, and
Mesdemoiselles Charbonniers, a
French finishing school in New York.
While studying...
-
friend of both Sand's and of her
lover Frédéric Chopin. «Oui, oui,
Mesdemoiselles,
hochez la tête tant qu'il vous plaira; la plus sage et la meilleure...
- of publications, including: Les
Maisons sur le
Sable (Sansot), 1914
Mesdemoiselles Daisne de
Constantinople (Sansot), 1917 Les
Oasis dans la
Montagne (Calmann-Lévy)...