midinette


Also found in: Dictionary.
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • noun

Words related to midinette

a Parisian salesgirl

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Car le Parisien, et surtout la Parisienne, quelque soit son niveau social, pense bien en detenir le secret et le monopole: voyez la midinette, "un rien l'habille", dit-on.
In "La France et la morale de midinette," for example, Montherlant talks disparagingly about the cliched phrase, "la douce France"--sweet France.
In "La morale de midinette," Montherlant describes a feminine France that has been corrupted and is now ruled by Christianity and its variants: pacifism, humanitarianism, "irrealisme." According to Montherlant, all of these "isms" have in common their soft, passive approach and their aversion to reality--each in its own way creates an alternative world and refuses to face the real one.
Contents: Les metallos / paroles de Madeleine Riffaud--Les midinettes / paroles de Madeleine Riffaud--Les mineurs / paroles de Madeleine Riffaud--Les boulangers / paroles de Madeleine Riffaud--Les cheminots / paroles de Madeleine Riffaud--La remmailleuse / paroles de Rene Paul Dil--Le vitrier / paroles de Helene Bourgeois--Le soldat / paroles d'Albert Vidaly [i.e., Vidalie]--Le charpentier / paroles d'Albert Vidaly--Le menuisier / paroles de Charles Dorat--Le coiffeur / paroles et musique de Jean Wiener--Le boucher / paroles d'Albert Vidaly.
Ainsi, la greve des 5000 midinettes declenchee en 1937 pour de meilleures conditions de travail permet a l'auteure de se pencher sur l'engagement militant des femmes.
La ville, affirme Jean-Luc Nancy, n'est que le "decor indifferent" d'histoires de flics, de tueurs, de midinettes et d'avocats (Nancy 20).
Visioni: un quieto pomeriggio solatio--una passeggiata al Valentino--Piazza Castello--Le "midinettes" I pasticcini!
It is in order that his humble colleagues in the draper's shop--the calicots of 1929, the small employees, the midinettes, and also the hurried business men--should not have to wait forty years like he did that M.
Drawing on unpublished letters and charity records in America and Europe, Mr Price brings before us a war correspondent, an organiser of workshops for unemployed midinettes in Paris, the founder of homes for war orphans, American hostels for refugees, hospitals for tubercular ex-soldiers, an organiser of concerts for out-of-work musicians and an indefatigable fund-raiser for charity.