Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at rodolphe.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Rodolphe.
Examples
-
Rodolphe from the warring families 'murderous pursuit and restore him to his beloved.
Lewis/Gounod's Bleeding Nonne: An Introduction and Translation of the Scribe/Delavigne Libretto 2005
-
Meanwhile, Rodolphe is told that he may marry Agnes because his older brother Theodore has been killed in battle.
Lewis/Gounod's Bleeding Nonne: An Introduction and Translation of the Scribe/Delavigne Libretto 2005
-
Rodolphe is supposed to be a creep, but surely he never spoke the French equivalent of late-twentieth-century American slang: And anyway there's all those problems, all that expense, as well.
-
Rodolphe is supposed to be a creep, but surely he never spoke the French equivalent of late-twentieth-century American slang: And anyway there's all those problems, all that expense, as well.
-
"Your Rodolphe is a rather base fellow," said she to Mimi.
Bohemians of the Latin Quarter Henry Murger 1841
-
The character of his companion, whom we will call Rodolphe, presented
Albert Savarus Honor�� de Balzac 1824
-
The character of his companion, whom we will call Rodolphe, presented a strong contrast with Leopold’s, and their antagonism had no doubt had the result of tightening the bond that united them.
Albert Savarus 2007
-
The character of his companion, whom we will call Rodolphe, presented a strong contrast with Leopold’s, and their antagonism had no doubt had the result of tightening the bond that united them.
Albert Savarus 2007
-
All of this stuff was brought into being by real, actual striving human beings: Rodolphe Lindt, C.J. Van Houten, Domingo Ghirardelli, Milton Hershey and, of course, Nestlé and Cadbury.
Deborah Cadbury's "The Chocolate Wars," reviewed by Carolyn See Carolyn See 2010
-
All of this stuff was brought into being by real, actual striving human beings: Rodolphe Lindt, C.J. Van Houten, Domingo Ghirardelli, Milton Hershey and, of course, Nestlé and Cadbury.
Deborah Cadbury's "The Chocolate Wars," reviewed by Carolyn See Carolyn See 2010
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.