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Le Monde was founded in 1944, [8] [9] at the request of General Charles de Gaulle, after the German army had been driven from Paris during World War II.The paper took over the headquarters and layout of Le Temps, which had been the most important newspaper in France, but its reputation had suffered during the Occupation. [10]
Le Journal de l'île de la Réunion ; Le Journal de la Haute-Marne (Haute-Marne) Le Journal de Saône et Loire ; Le Journal du Centre ; Le Maine libre ; Le Parisien (Île-de-France, Oise) Le Petit Bleu d'Agen (Lot-et-Garonne) Le Populaire du Centre (Creuse, Haute-Vienne) Le Progrès (Auvergne, Burgundy, Franche-Comté, Rhône-Alpes)
(June 2023) Click [show] for important translation instructions. View a machine-translated version of the French article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting ...
From the 1820s, the dominance of the magazine was broken with an increasing number of rivals when the French fashion magazine industry exploded with a number of rivaling magazines, such as the Petit courrier des dames (1821-1868), Le Follet (1829-1892), La Mode (1829-1854) and Le Journal des demoiselles (1833-1922), and Journal des dames et des ...
Le Journal (The Journal) was a Paris daily newspaper published from 1892 to 1944 in a small, four-page format. Background. It was founded and edited by Fernand Arthur ...
Les Papyrus De La Mer Rouge: Le Journal De Merer (Papyrus Jarf A et B) [The Red Sea Papyri: The Diary of Merer] (PDF) (in French, English, and Arabic). Vol. 1. Translated by Clement, Colin; Lotfallah, Soheir. ISBN 9782724707069. Tallet, Pierre (2021).
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Libération (journal)]]; see its history for attribution.
Translation: A Transdisciplinary Journal, was a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal covering translation studies. [1] [2] Established in 2011, it was published by St. Jerome Publishing, Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, and the San Pellegrino University Foundation. The editor-in-chief was Siri Nergaard. [3]