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J'ai vu le loup ("I saw the wolf") is a French folk song, and also a nursery rhyme. [1] Due to it having been transmitted orally, it is difficult to pinpoint its exact origin, though the earliest versions date back to the High Middle Ages . [ 2 ]
La Jument de Michao ("Michao's mare" in French) or Le Loup, le Renard et la Belette ("The Wolf, the Fox and the Weasel") is a recent (1973) Breton adaptation of two different Western French traditional songs, also found in Brittany, the original one may be a medieval French song of Burgundy origin: J'ai vu le loup, le renard, le lièvre.
Loup y es-tu?" (in French: Promenons nous dans les bois) is a popular French children's song, from at least the XIX century. [1] It sings about how a group enters a forest where no wolf is to be seen and "as long as he isn't there, he won't eat us".
that the first line is a corruption of the French "He bas! là le loup!" (Hush! There's the wolf!) that it was written by an English Mayflower colonist who observed the way Native American women rocked their babies in birch-bark cradles, suspended from the branches of trees [3] that it lampoons the British royal line in the time of James II.
Le loup-garou (The Werewolf) is a 19th Century opéra comique in one act in French with music by Louise Bertin and a libretto by Eugène Scribe and Jacques Féréol Mazas. [1] The work is a comedy inspired by the fairy tale of "Beauty and the Beast." [2] It was first performed on March 10, 1827 by the Opéra-Comique in Paris. [3]
Jean Leclerc (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ ləlu]; born May 14, 1961) is a Québécois singer-songwriter and author from Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada.He is popularly known as Jean Leloup (which he likes to translate to John the Wolf), a stage name he kept using until 2006, when he temporarily changed his name to Jean Leclerc, only to resurrect his wolf character in August 2008.
Leloup is a French surname meaning "the wolf". Notable people with the surname include: Colette Leloup (1924–2007), French film executive; Jean Leloup (born 1961), Canadian singer-songwriter; Roger Leloup (born 1933), Belgian comics artist; Hubert Le Loup de Beaulieu
The story was also made the subject of one of La Fontaine's Fables (Le loup et le chien, I.5), in which Master Wolf, on learning the forfeit necessary, "took to its heels and is running yet". [6] In modern times the text has been set for piano and high voice by the French composer Isabelle Aboulker. [7]