Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at vallier.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Vallier.
Examples
-
In Heidegger's poem, as in Cézanne's paintings of the same man, the gardener Vallier becomes the peculiarly appropriate embodiment or symbol of a serene life led in attunement to truth.
Archive 2009-04-01 enowning 2009
-
In Heidegger's poem, as in Cézanne's paintings of the same man, the gardener Vallier becomes the peculiarly appropriate embodiment or symbol of a serene life led in attunement to truth.
enowning enowning 2009
-
Education MEC Cameron Dugmore joined Vallier on the first leg of the
-
Spokesman Gert Witbooi said Vallier will attempt to fly a single engine aircraft to 30 communities all round the country in 30 days, raising funds from the international community along the way.
-
The current incarnation of the hardware is based on a custom media-access controller developed by Vallier and running on an Analog Devices Sharc DSP working with an FPGA designed by Schmidt and standard 100-Mbit/s Ethernet PHY chips.
Boing Boing: January 26, 2003 - February 1, 2003 Archives 2003
-
"The protocol itself is kind of complex," said Vallier.
Boing Boing: January 26, 2003 - February 1, 2003 Archives 2003
-
At that moment, M. de Charlus, looking as noble as a St. Vallier or a St. Mégrin, was erect, rigid, solemn, spoke gravely, making none of those gestures and movements which reveal those of his kind.
Time Regained 2003
-
From St. Vallier the road makes very circuitous windings on the steep sides of the mountains, ascending nearly all the way to Escragnolles,
The South of France—East Half C. B. Black
-
No longer ambitious of pursuing the lord of St. Vallier in flank, we hoped at least that a front view of his castle from the road to Avignon might afford some remains of feudal splendour.
Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone Made During the Year 1819 John Hughes
-
Like the Lilienthal and Pilcher gliders this machine was fitted with wings which could be folded; the first flight made, as already noted, on October 9th, 1890, took place in the grounds of the chateau d'Amainvilliers, near Bretz; two fellow-enthusiasts named Espinosa and Vallier stated that a flight was actually made; no statement in the history of aeronautics has been subject of so much question, and the claim remains unproved.
A History of Aeronautics Evelyn Charles Vivian 1914
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.