ProphetesAI is thinking...
poigne
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
poigne
† poigne Obs. rare. (pɔɪn) [a. OF. poigne, fem. form parallel to poing:—L. pugn-um fist.] The closed hand or fist: in phr. kept in poigne (fig.).a 1734 North Exam. i. ii. §139 (1740) 107 The Witnesses, which the Faction kept in Poigne (like false Dice, high and low Fullhams) to be played forth upon ...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Robert Poyntz (died 1520)
At the entrance to the chapel is sculpted in stone the canting crest of Poyntz, A hand clenched, from the French poigne, "fist".
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
punye
▪ I. † ˈpunye, punȝe, n. Sc. Obs. Also 4 poiné, punay. [a. F. poignée, in OF. also puinnie, pugnie, puignie, -nee, puygnye, etc. handful: = Pr. ponhada:—L. type *pugnāta, f. L. pugnus, F. poing fist: see poigne and -ade.] A handful of men (soldiers).c 1330 Arth. & Merl. 3241 Þe kinges..seyd, gret sc...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Valeria de Paiva
Poigne).
The Dialectica Categories. In Proc of Categories in Computer Science and Logic, Boulder, CO, 1987.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Ernest Henri Demanne
Madame Sans-Gêne by Victorien Sardou and Émile Moreau, Théâtre du Vaudeville
1900: Le fils de l'étrangère, by Desmirail, Théâtre du Gymnase
1900: La poigne
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
The Protectors
In Germany the series was known as Kein Pardon für Schutzengel (meaning "No Mercy for Guardian Angels") and in France as Poigne de fer et séduction ("Iron
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org