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Sacrebleu or sacre bleu is a French expression used as a cry of surprise, irritation or displeasure. It is a minced oath form of the profane sacré Dieu (holy God), which, by some religions, is considered profane, due to one of the Ten Commandments in the Bible, which reads "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain."
Johanne Sacreblu is a 2025 Mexican comedy musical short film directed by filmmaker Camila Aurora [] and written by Héctor Guillén. [2] It was created as a parody of and protest against the French film Emilia Pérez.
Sacré bleu, an alternative spelling of Sacrebleu, may refer to: Sacre Bleu Cross, a theatrical cartoon of the 1960s' The Inspector series; Sacré Blues, a book by Taras Grescoe "Sacre Bleu", a song by The Balham Alligators; Sacré Bleu, a novel by Christopher Moore
Sacrebleu is the debut studio album by French electronic music producer Dimitri from Paris.It was first released on 11 June 1996 by Yellow Productions in France and later released by Atlantic Records in North America and EastWest Records in Europe and Japan.
"Lujon" is featured in the 1996 album Sacrebleu by Dimitri from Paris, Track 19, renamed "Epilogue". Belgian trip hop band Hooverphonic recorded a version of the song overlaid with vocals, "No More Sweet Music". [6] from the 2005 eponymous album. "Lujon" was recorded by Les Deux Love Orchestra and appears on the album, King Kong (2008). The Les ...
The exclamation became associated with the Madrid flamenco dancer and singer La Caramba in the 1780s. Her headdress of brightly colored ribbons became known as a caramba. [2] [3]
In 19th-century Saint Petersburg, a young girl named Sasha watches as her beloved grandfather – a noted explorer named Oloukine – departs upon a voyage to reach the North Pole on board the Davaï, a specially designed icebreaker built to withstand the harsh arctic conditions and paid for by the Tsar of Russia.
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