à trompe l'œil
111Trompe — Trọm|pe 〈f.; Gen.: , Pl.: n; Arch.〉 von einem Bogen überwölbte Nische im Winkel zweier rechtwinklig aneinander stoßender Mauern …
112trompe de chasse — фр. [тронп дэ шас] охотничий рог …
113trompe-l’oeil — (Fr.) Painting designed to deceive the viewer into thinking that the object depicted is not painted but real; pronounced tromp loy …
114Trompe l'œil — Drame psychologique de Claude D Anna, avec Max von Sydow, Laure Deschanel, Micheline Presle, François Arnal, Monique Fluzin, Claire Wauthion. Pays: France et Belgique Date de sortie: 1975 Technique: couleurs Durée: 1 h 45 Résumé… …
115trompe-la-mort — n. Malade âgé …
116trompe l'oeil — fr. [[t]trɔ̃p ˈlœ yə[/t]] eng. [[t]ˈtrɔmp ˈleɪ, ˈlɔɪ[/t]] n. 1) fia visual deception, esp. in paintings, in which objects are rendered in extremely fine detail emphasizing the illusion of tactile and spatial qualities 2) fia a painting, mural, or …
117trompe — /trɒmp/ (say tromp) noun the apparatus by which the blast is produced in one type of forge. The principle is that water can be made to fall through a pipe in such a way that it will draw in through side openings a considerable amount of air which …
118trompe l'oeil — /trɒmp ˈlɜjə/ (say tromp leryuh) noun a type of painting intended to deceive the eye; illusionism. {French: trick the eye} …
119trompe-l'oeil — deceives the eye ; n. type of painting exactly imitating reality, and of interior decoration producing an illusion of space, height, length, etc …
120trompe — n. an apparatus for producing a blast in a furnace by using falling water to displace air. Etymology: F, = trumpet: see TRUMP(1) …