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Examples
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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As summer faded, there was local venison and wild boar and always the soft, white, tangy Boursault cheese; and of course they drank the local white wine, naturally dry and delicate with a slight taste of hazelnut.
Lace Shirley Conran 1982
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So under the transplanted trees, and beneath trailing vines of Virginia creeper and Boursault roses, there peeped the brown gables of a cottage, which arose and stood there as reposeful and weather-stained as if it had been built before the Revolution.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 72, October, 1863 Various
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Boursault, an amiable man but a mediocre playwright, envious of
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 11 John [Editor] Rudd 1885
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"Rue Boursault, Batignolles," he said to the coachman, lowering one of the windows; "after that, only to the Bois!"
His Excellency the Minister Jules Claretie 1876
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Boursault, which still exists contiguous to the stately edifice raised by Mme. Clicquot on the summit of the hill, was risked and lost on a single game at cards by this pertinacious gamester, whose pressing pecuniary difficulties compelled him to sell the remaining châteaux one by one.
Facts About Champagne and Other Sparkling Wines Henry Vizetelly 1857
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