colour supplement

  • 61David Kossoff — (Londres, 24 novembre 1919 Hatfield, Hertfordshire, 23 mars 2005) est un acteur britannique. À la suite de la mort en 1976 de son fils Paul, un guitariste de rock britannique, il s est engagé dans la lutte anti drogue. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 62Evening Standard — (also infml the Standard) London’s only evening newspaper, started in 1827. It has stories on both local and national issues and has a colour supplement, called ES Magazine. It is owned by the publishers of the Daily Mail. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 63Sunday Express — a British Sunday paper, published by the same company as the Express. Like the Express, it is a tabloid newspaper that puts forward moderate right wing opinions. It has a colour supplement called the Sunday Express Magazine. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 64Sunday Mirror — a British Sunday paper, published by the same company as the Mirror. Like the Mirror, it is a tabloid newspaper that puts forward moderate left wing opinions. It has a colour supplement called the Sunday Mirror Magazine. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 65Sunday Telegraph — a British Sunday paper, published by the same company as the Daily Telegraph. Like the Daily Telegraph, it is a broadsheet newspaper that expresses right wing opinions and traditional, Conservative attitudes. It has a colour supplement and is… …

    Universalium

  • 66Sunday Times — a British Sunday paper, published by the same company as The Times. It is a broadsheet newspaper that expresses moderate right wing opinions. It is Britain’s best selling Sunday paper, and was the first British newspaper to introduce a colour… …

    Universalium

  • 67Michael Davie — (15 January 1924 Cranleigh, Surrey – 7 December 2005,[1] Ewelme, Oxfordshire) was a British journalist. Davie was the last of three children born to the head of a firm of stockbrokers.[2] Davie was educated at Haileybury public school and Merton… …

    Wikipedia

  • 68David Kossoff — Nacimiento 24 de noviembre de 1919 …

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  • 69fag — n 1. British a cigarette. In Middle English fagge meant, as a verb, to droop or, as a noun, a flap or remnant. These notions gave rise to fag end and subsequently, in the 19th century, to fag as a stubbed out or limp, low quality cigarette. In… …

    Contemporary slang

  • 70pussy — I. n 1. the female genitals. A cause of many double entendres and minor embarrass ments, this usage of the word derives from the resemblance of pubic hair to fur, perhaps reinforced by male notions of affection. (The French equivalent is chatte,… …

    Contemporary slang