Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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France-Soir suggested Sarkozy was attempting to present himself as "President Protector" in a bid to improve his popularity in the run-up to next May's presidential election.
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Later he and his friends started an underground newspaper; it would become France-Soir, the most important daily newspaper in Paris.
Jesse Kornbluth: Holidays '09: Ten Books I'll Bet No One Else Will Suggest Jesse Kornbluth 2010
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Later he and his friends started an underground newspaper; it would become France-Soir, the most important daily newspaper in Paris.
Jesse Kornbluth: Holidays '09: Ten Books I'll Bet No One Else Will Suggest 2010
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Later he and his friends started an underground newspaper; it would become France-Soir, the most important daily newspaper in Paris.
Holidays '09: Ten Books I'll Bet No One Else Will Suggest 2010
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Arafat in a cable to Khomeini (France-Soir, Paris, 13 February 1979):
On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with... 2009
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Later he and his friends started an underground newspaper; it would become France-Soir, the most important daily newspaper in Paris.
Jesse Kornbluth: Holidays '09: Ten Books I'll Bet No One Else Will Suggest 2009
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(According to Jane, Serge bought the papers every day and loved when he was in them, and after this heart attack he personally called a journalist from France-Soir and conducted a bedside interview at the hospital.)
The Secret World of Serge Gainsbourg Robinson, Lisa 2007
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And doubtless the British foreign secretary also appreciates the “sensitivity” of the owner of France-Soir, who fired his editor for republishing the Danish cartoons.
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“They have gone so far in their delirium that they might not be able to get their feet back on the ground,” Marie-Claire Moisel, a police official in charge of observing sects, told the daily France-Soir.
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Unsuccessful, that is, for the participants and perhaps for the world, but not for the little corps of correspondents—such as Ned Russell of the New York Herald Tribune, Sydney Gruson and later A. M. Rosenthal of the New York Times, Arnaud de Borchgrave of Newsweek, and among the few Europeans allowed into our inner sanctum, Michel Gordey of the Paris newspaper France-Soir.
Staying Tuned Daniel Schorr 2001
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