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  2. Glossary of French words and expressions in English

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_French_words...

    a close relationship or connection; an affair. The French meaning is broader; liaison also means "bond"' such as in une liaison chimique (a chemical bond) lingerie a type of female underwear. littérateur an intellectual (can be pejorative in French, meaning someone who writes a lot but does not have a particular skill). [36] louche

  3. Hypotyposis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypotyposis

    A "figure of presence" for Chaïm Perelman and Lucie Olbrechts-Tyteca [4] 's Traité de l'argumentation, la nouvelle rhétorique, hypotyposis is, within a discourse (in writing but also to a certain extent in speech), the animated and vivid description of a subject, a scene, a real or fictitious character or an object of art.

  4. Stylistic device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stylistic_device

    The second chapter gives meaning to the first, as it explains other events the character experienced and thus puts present events in context. In Khaled Hosseini 's The Kite Runner , the first short chapter occurs in the narrative's real-time; most of the remainder of the book is a flashback.

  5. Smiling Angel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smiling_Angel

    The Smiling Angel (French: L'Ange au Sourire), also known as the Smile of Reims (Le Sourire de Reims) or Angel of the Annunciation, is a stone sculpture at the cathedral of Reims. Sculptors that were pioneers of the Gothic style came from workshops in Chartres, Paris and Amiens to work on the Reims Cathedral. [1]

  6. Écorché - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Écorché

    Some figures were created to strip away the layers of muscles and reveal the skeleton of the model. Many of the life-size scale écorché figures were reproduced in a smaller scale out of bronze that could be easily distributed. [6] Écorché figures were commonly made out of many different materials: bronze, ivory, plaster, wax, or wood. By ...

  7. Rococo painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rococo_Painting

    The main criticisms made since then and still made to the style were mainly directed at its French version or its more literal derivations. The French Rococo was an essentially aristocratic style, derived from a society that still carried a rigid social stratification and represented the final phase of the old feudal economic system.

  8. Gamine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamine

    The word gamine is a French word, the feminine form of gamin, originally meaning urchin, waif or playful, naughty child. It was used in English from about the mid-19th century (for example, by William Makepeace Thackeray in 1840 in one of his Parisian sketches), but in the 20th century came to be applied in its more modern sense.

  9. L'art pompier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L'art_pompier

    Leonidas at Thermopylae by Jacques-Louis David, 1814 French fireman helmet, 1825–1850. L'art pompier (literally 'fireman art') or style pompier is a derisive late-19th century French term for large 'official' academic art paintings of the time, especially historical or allegorical ones.