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Eau or EAU may refer to: The French word for water. O (Cirque du Soleil), a water-themed stage production; Eau (trigraph), a trigraph of the Latin script; EAU, the IATA code for the Chippewa Valley Regional Airport in Wisconsin, United States; East Africa University, a private university in Puntland, Somalia
In English, eau only exists in words borrowed from French, and so is pronounced similarly in almost all cases (like in plateau, bureau).Exceptions include beauty and words derived from it, where it is pronounced /juː/, bureaucrat where it is pronounced /ə/, bureaucracy where it is pronounced /ɒ/, [4] and (in some contexts) the proper names Beaulieu and Beauchamp (as /juː/ and /iː ...
Facebook's revenue depends on targeted advertising, which involves analyzing user data to decide which ads to show each user. Facebook buys data from third parties, gathered from both online and offline sources, to supplement its own data on users.
On September 16, 2007, The Washington Post reported that Wikipedia had become a focal point in the 2008 US election campaign, saying: "Type a candidate's name into Google, and among the first results is a Wikipedia page, making those entries arguably as important as any ad in defining a candidate. Already, the presidential entries are being ...
In French, however, eau de vie is a generic term for distilled spirits. The proper French term for fruit brandy is eau-de-vie de fruit, while eau-de-vie de vin means wine spirit , and several further categories of spirits (distilled from grape pomace, lees of wine, beer, cereals, etc.) are also legally defined as eau-de-vie in a similar fashion.
The Sandre service establishes the common water data language of the French national Water Information System (SIE: Système d’information sur l’eau). Sandre is a division of the National Agency of Water and Aquatic Environments (Onema: Office national de l’eau et des milieux aquatiques).
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Perrier (eau minérale)]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|fr|Perrier (eau minérale)}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
The Dictionnaire de la langue française (French pronunciation: [diksjɔnɛːʁ də la lɑ̃ɡ fʁɑ̃sɛːz]) by Émile Littré, commonly called simply the "Littré", is a four-volume dictionary of the French language published in Paris by Hachette.