Anglais Leçon 1 : Colors & Fruits
Fiche : Anglais Leçon 1 : Colors & Fruits. Recherche parmi 300 000+ dissertationsPar anitnit • 13 Mars 2019 • Fiche • 499 Mots (2 Pages) • 610 Vues
Yellow = Jaune = Banana
Red = Rouge = Cherry
Blue = bleu = Bluberry of course
Green = Vert = Apple
Grey = Gris = There are no grey fruit lol
Purple = Violet = Grappe
Orange = Orange = Orange for those who really need this lesson
Pink = Rose = Lychee maybe
White = Blanc = I can't think of a white fruit
Black = Noir = Blackberry lmao
Marron = Brown = Kiwi fruit they are brown outside
Multicolored = Multicouleur = Skittles I know Skittles are candy but it taste so good can you blame me ?
Navy = Bleu marine
Salmon = Saumon
Chocolate = Chocolat
Aqua = Bleu turquoise
Fire brick = écarlate
Plum = prune
Silver = Argent
Gold = Doré
Lime = citron Vert
Steel blue = bleu acier
Crimson = Cramoisi
Coral = Corail
Light = Clair
Dark = Foncé
Bright = Vif
Plain = Uni
Shades = Nuances = You know what I mean haha
NOW SEE IF YOU CAN TRANSLATE THAT LOL
Anyone who reads Old and Middle English literary texts will be familiar with the mid-brown volumes of the EETS, with the symbol of Alfred's jewel embossed on the front cover. Most of the works attributed to King Alfred or to Aelfric, along with some of those by bishop Wulfstan and much anonymous prose and verse from the pre-Conquest period, are to be found within the Society's three series; all of the surviving medieval drama, most of the Middle English romances, much religious and secular prose and verse including the English works of John Gower, Thomas Hoccleve and most of Caxton's prints all find their place in the publications. Without EETS editions, study of medieval English texts would hardly be possible.
As its name states, EETS was begun as a 'club', and it retains certain features of that even now. It has no physical location, or even office, no paid staff or editors, but books in the Original Series are published in the first place to satisfy subscriptions paid by individuals or institutions. This means that there is need for a regular sequence of new editions, normally one or two per year; achieving that sequence can pose problems for the Editorial Secretary, who may have too few or too many texts ready for publication at any one time. Details on a separate sheet explain how individual (but not institutional) members can choose to take certain back volumes in place of the newly published volumes against their subscriptions. On the same sheet are given details about the very
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