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Etymologies
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Examples
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Elderly readers might recognize Booth Tarkington as author of Monsieur Beaucaire, John Fox, Jr, for his Trail of the Lonesome Pine, Owen Wister for The Virginian, and Frank Norris for The Octopus, but it is safe to say that except for a handful of professorial literary specialists, nobody reads any of them today.
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Early in the 1300s, attending the fair at Beaucaire in the south of France, they encountered a group of people whose proclivity for travel made Kudra and Alobar seem as though they were chained to a stump.
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While renovating a house in the medieval village of Beaucaire, he was repairing a second-story floor when the rotting planche* on which he stood snapped.
French Word-A-Day: 2008
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While renovating a house in the medieval village of Beaucaire, he was repairing a second-story floor when the rotting planche* on which he stood snapped.
French Word-A-Day: 2008
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While renovating a house in the medieval village of Beaucaire, he was repairing a second-story floor when the rotting planche* on which he stood snapped.
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While renovating a house in the medieval village of Beaucaire, he was repairing a second-story floor when the rotting planche* on which he stood snapped.
French Word-A-Day: 2008
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M. Beaucaire lifted his shoulders in a mock shiver.
October 8th, 2006 2006
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While renovating a house in the medieval village of Beaucaire, he was repairing a second-story floor when the rotting planche* on which he stood snapped.
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Avignon, but there was a bridge of boats connecting Beaucaire with
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The major historical paintings on display include Supper at Beaucaire, 1869.
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