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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Leman

Leman \Le"man\ (l[=e]"man or l[e^]m"an; 277), n. [OE. lemman, lefman; AS. le['o]f dear + mann man. See Lief, and Man.] A sweetheart, of either sex; a gallant, or a mistress; -- usually in a bad sense. [Archaic]
--Chaucer.
--Spenser.
--Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
leman

"sweetheart, paramour" (archaic), late 13c., from Middle English leofman (c.1200), from Old English leof "dear" (see lief) + man "human being, person" (see man (n.)). Originally of either gender, though deliberate archaic usage tends to limit it to women.

Wiktionary
leman

n. (context archaic English) One beloved; a lover, a sweetheart of either sex (especially a secret lover, gallant, or mistress).

Wikipedia
Léman (department)

Léman was a department of the First French Empire. Its name comes from the French name of Lake Geneva, Lac Léman. It was formed in 1798, when the republic of Geneva was occupied by the French. Léman also included districts that were previously part of the departments of Mont-Blanc (northern Savoy) and Ain (around Gex). Its territory corresponded with the present Swiss canton of Geneva and parts of the present French departments of Ain and Haute-Savoie.

The capital of the Léman department was Geneva. The department was subdivided into the following arrondissements and cantons (situation in 1812):

  • Geneva, cantons: Carouge, Chêne-Thônex, Collonge, Frangy, Lens, Geneva (3 cantons), Gex, Reignier and Saint-Julien.
  • Bonneville, cantons: Bonneville, Chamonix, Cluses, Megève, La Roche, Sallanches, Samoëns, Taninges and Viuz-en-Sallaz.
  • Thonon, cantons: Douvaine, Évian, Saint-Jean-d'Aulps and Thonon.

Its population, in 1812, was 210,478 and its area was 280,000 hectares.

After the final defeat of Napoleon in 1815, the former republic of Geneva became a Swiss canton, and Savoy was returned to the Kingdom of Sardinia. The area around Gex returned to department of Ain.

Léman

Léman may refer to:

  • Léman (department)
  • Lake Geneva
  • Canton of Léman
    • Collège du Léman
  • Léman Manhattan Preparatory School
  • Léman International School - Chengdu
Leman (surname)

Leman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Albert Leman (1915–1998), Russian composer
  • Bob Leman (1922–2006), American science fiction and horror author
  • Dennis Leman, English footballer
  • Gérard Leman (1851–1920), Belgian general
  • J Leman (born 1985), American football linebacker
  • John Leman (died 1632), English tradesman
  • Kevin Leman, American psychologist and author
  • Loren Leman (born 1950), American politician
  • Martin Leman (born 1934), British artist
  • Richard Leman (born 1959), English field hockey player,
  • Ulrich Leman (1885–1988), German painter
  • Father (Pere) Jules Leman, founder of Blackrock College secondary school in Dublin

Category:Jewish surnames Category:Levitic surnames

Usage examples of "leman".

It was then journeying to Italy, and as its members hung over the view of the Leman, with its accessories of Chillon, Chatelard, Blonay, Meillerie, the peaks of Savoy, and the wild ranges of the Alps, they had felt regret that the fairy scene was so soon to pass away.

The year was in its fall, according to a poetical expression of our own, and the morning bright, as the fairest and swiftest bark that navigated the Leman lay at the quay of the ancient and historical town of Geneva, ready to depart for the country of Vaud.

Our Leman winds are fickle friends, and the wise take them while in the humor.

Our Leman winds will not wait for king or noble, bishop or priest, and duty to those I have in the bark commands me to quit the port as soon as possible.

The games at Vevey have called every craft on the Leman to the upper end of the lake, and a little mother-wit led me to trust to the last turn of the wheel, which, as you see, Signore has not come up a blank.

At the time of which we write, the whole coast of the Leman, if so imposing a word may be applied to the shores of so small a body of water, was in the possession of the three several states of Geneva, Savoy, and Berne.

Geneva, the port from which the reader has just seen her take her departure, is divided by that river as it glances out of the blue basin of the Leman again, to traverse the fertile fields of France, on its hurried course towards the distant Mediterranean.

The whole of the centre of the broad deck, a portion of the Winkelried which, owing to the over-hanging gangways, possessed, in common with all the similar craft of the Leman, a greater width than is usual in vessels of the same tonnage elsewhere, was so cumbered with freight as barely to leave a passage to the crew, forward and aft, by stepping among the boxes and bales that were piled much higher than their own heads.

We have already said, that the point just described was at the place where the Leman fairly enters its eastern horn, and where its shores possess their boldest and finest faces.

Beyond the limits of the Leman, the Alps shot up into still higher pinnacles, occasionally showing one of those naked excrescences of granite, which rise for a thousand feet above the rest of the range--a trifle in the stupendous scale of the vast piles--and which, in the language of the country are not inaptly termed Dents, from some fancied and plausible resemblance to human teeth.

It is true that a hundred chalets dotted the Alps, or those mountain pasturages which spread themselves a thousand fathoms above the Leman, on the foundation of rock that lay like a wall behind Montreux, shining still with the brightness of a bland even, but all below was fast catching the more sombre colors of the hour.

A streak of dull, unnatural light was seen in the quarter which lay above the meadows of the Rhone, and nearly in a direction with the peak of Mont Blanc, which, though not visible from this portion of the Leman, was known to lie behind the ramparts of Savoy, like a monarch of the hills entrenched in his citadel of rocks and ice.

They think us be-stirring ourselves like stout men, and those used to the water, while, in truth, we are as undisturbed as if the bark were a rock that might laugh at the Leman and its waves.

It was fortunate for those in the bark that the substitute was so good, for more fearful signs never impended over the Leman than those which darkened the hour.

The deep darkness which shut in the vault, giving to the embedded Leman the appearance of a gloomy, liquid glen, contributed to the awful sublimity of the night.