Search references for FRUTTERO LUCENTINI. Phrases containing FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
See searches and references containing FRUTTERO LUCENTINI!FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
Italian writer
lifetime partner and, in 1952, Carlo Fruttero, with whom a lifelong literary collaboration began in 1957, when Lucentini moved to Turin, where both of them
Franco_Lucentini
Italian writer, journalist, translator and editor
(1999) Visibilità zero (1999; bylined as "Fruttero & Fruttero" – playing on the usual "Fruttero & Lucentini" – tells with more humour than satire the story
Carlo_Fruttero
Signature of Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, marked on joint work
Fruttero & Lucentini (or F. & L.) was the usual way for Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini to sign their joint work, including novels, short stories
Fruttero_&_Lucentini
1975 film
Comencini. It is based upon the novel of the same name by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini. Set in Turin and starring Marcello Mastroianni, Jacqueline
The_Sunday_Woman_(film)
Book by Carlo Fruttero
1989. Written in the form of a novel, by Italian authors Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, the book explores the Dickens mystery from the perspective
The_D_Case
Character created by G. K. Chesterton
in works not by Chesterton. In the novel The D Case by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, Father Brown joins forces with other famous fictional detectives
Father_Brown
1979 novel by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini
la notte is a mystery novel written by Italian authors Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini in 1979. It was published by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, and
A_che_punto_è_la_notte
Crime novel by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini
donna della domenica) is a crime novel by Italian authors Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, first published in 1972. It was subsequently translated into
The_Sunday_Woman
Catholic saint. Massimiliano Frezzato (born 1967), comic book author. Carlo Fruttero (1926–2012), writer. Guido Fubini (1879–1943), mathematician. Margherita
List_of_people_from_Turin
1870 novel by Charles Dickens
Case (1989) offered a humorous literary critique by the Italian duo Fruttero & Lucentini. On 7 January 1914, the Dickens Fellowship organised a dramatic "trial"
The_Mystery_of_Edwin_Drood
Italian daily newspaper (founded 1867)
Battaglia Enzo Bettiza Norberto Bobbio Antonio Carluccio Carlo Fruttero Franco Lucentini Lorenzo Soria Vincenzo Buonassisi Giovanni Arpino Mario Bassi [it]
La_Stampa
selected by the renowned Italian writers and intellectuals Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, who also appeared in the magazine with a few short stories
Urania_(magazine)
German crime writer (born 1950)
starke Blondine. New Yorker Geschichten. Haffmans, 1989 Franco Lucentini, Carlo Fruttero: Ein Hoch auf die Dummheit. Porträts, Pamphlete, Parodien. Piper
Pieke_Biermann
Annual Italian awards for the arts
Gaetano Afeltra 1988: Lorenzo Mondo, Giorgio Soavi 1989: Maria Corti, Fruttero & Lucentini 1990: Luigi Malerba, Claudio Magris 1991: John Banville, Francesca
Premi_Flaiano
German actor
beißen – Director: Martin Zylka (Hörspiel – WDR) 2003: Carlo Fruttero/Franco Lucentini: Die Farbe des Schicksals (Inzaghi) – Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
Christian_Redl
luogo di mare) and The D Case (La verità sul caso D) by Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini, and Francesco Da Mosto's travel books Francesco’s Italy and
Gregory_Dowling
by Nanni Loy, a detective story in two episodes from the novel by Fruttero & Lucentini. Marcello Mastroianni resumes the role of the superintendent Santamaria
1994_in_Italian_television
Weekly Italian magazine
Cirio Umberto Eco Carlo Fruttero Massimiliano Fuksas Daria Galateria Fabrizio Gatti Tahar Ben Jelloun Naomi Klein Franco Lucentini Sandro Magister Alberto
L'Espresso
featured comic books. After six months, he was replaced by writers Fruttero and Lucentini, who had previously been the Italian translators of the comic strips
Il_Mago_(magazine)
è la notte (literally, "At which point is the night") Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini Bible: Isaiah 21:11 After Many a Summer Dies the Swan Aldous
List of book titles taken from literature
List_of_book_titles_taken_from_literature
English language translator (1923–2013)
amore, solo per amore, 1983.) Ballantine (ISBN 0-345-36336-1). Fruttero, Carlo & Lucentini, Franco The Sunday Woman (1973). (La donna della domenica, 1972
William_Weaver
City in Piedmont, Italy
Levi, Natalia Ginzburg, Fernanda Pivano, Beppe Fenoglio, Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini. In more recent years, writers active in the city are Giovanni
Turin
víctima Alan Dean Foster – Alien (movie novelization) Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini — A che punto è la notte Brian Garfield – The Paladin William
1979_in_literature
convinced atheist, he had discussed the possibility of suicide with his friend Fruttero in the past, at one time contemplating driving his car into a canal with
List_of_atheist_authors
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Fretter, an occupational name for a maker of ornaments (especially for the hair) consisting of jewels set in a lattice network, from an agent derivative of Middle English frette, Old French frete ‘interlaced work’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a player on the rote (see Root 2).English : nickname for an unscrupulous person, from Old French ro(u)tier ‘robber’, ‘highwayman’, ‘footpad’.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch rut(t)er ‘freebooter’, ‘footpad’, cognate with 2. Compare Reuter 2.
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
Girl/Female
Tamil
Celestial Apsara, Wide, Spacious
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Tamil
Sun
Boy/Male
Indian
Intelligent
Girl/Female
English American
Fair; good-looking.
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Angel
Boy/Male
Indian
Grand.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Inevitable, Lion, Powerful
Girl/Female
Greek English
Liberator. Feminine of Lysander.
Surname or Lastname
German, Dutch, and Jewish (Ashkenazic)
German, Dutch, and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from Middle High German or Middle Low German banc, or Yiddish bank ‘bench’, ‘table’, ‘counter’, in any of various senses, e.g. a metonymic occupational name for anyone whose work required a bench or counter, for example a butcher, baker, court official, or money changer.Danish and Swedish : topographic name from bank ‘(sand)bank’ or a habitational name from a farm named with this word.Danish and Swedish : from bank ‘noise’, hence a nickname for a loud or noisy person. Compare Bang.Danish : habitational name from the German place name Bänkau.English : probably a variant of Banks.Americanized spelling of Polish Bąk, literally ‘horsefly’; perhaps a nickname for an irritating person.Hungarian (Bánk) : from a pet form of the old secular personal name Bán.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Tamil, Traditional
Monday Moon; Eternal
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
FRUTTERO LUCENTINI
v. t.
To fritter; -- with away.
n.
Bustle; confusion; tumult; flutter; bother.
n.
Fruit, taken collectively; fruitage.
pl.
of Fruitery
v. i.
To flutter.
v. i.
To flutter; to rove on the wing.
n.
A repository for fruit.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Fritter
n.
One who, or that which, flutters.
v. i.
To sigh; to flutter; to languish.
v. t.
To flutter over.
n.
Hurry; tumult; agitation of the mind; confusion; disorder.
adv. & a.
In a flutter; agitated.
imp. & p. p.
of Fritter
n.
Fruit, collectively; fruit, in general; fruitery.
v. t.
To vibrate or move quickly; as, a bird flutters its wings.
v. i.
To flutter as a hawk; to bait.
v. i.
To flutter, as a bird.
v. t.
A small quantity of batter, fried in boiling lard or in a frying pan. Fritters are of various kinds, named from the substance inclosed in the batter; as, apple fritters, clam fritters, oyster fritters.
n.
The act of fluttering; quick and irregular motion; vibration; as, the flutter of a fan.