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anatole

n. (context rare English) (given name male from=Ancient Greek).

Wikipedia
Anatole (mouse)

Anatole is the title character in a series of children's picture books written by Eve Titus and illustrated by Paul Galdone. "Anatole" is also the name of the series. The ten books were originally published from 1956 to 1979. Two books in the series, Anatole in 1957, and Anatole and the Cat in 1958, were nominated for the Caldecott Medal, and were subsequently named Caldecott Honor books.

Anatole (dancer)

Auguste-Anatole Petit, known as Monsieur Anatole (5 March 1789 – 22 May 1857), was a French ballet dancer, master and composer.

Anatole (TV series)

Anatole is an animated children's television series based on the Anatole book series by Eve Titus. The series tells the story of Anatole, a mouse who lives in Paris. He works as a night watchman in a cheese factory. He has a wife, Doucette and a family of six little mice. The series was craeted by Scottish Television and Nelvana as one of their numerous programmes. It originally aired in 1998, on The CBS Kids Show on CBS and in late-1999 on Premiere 12 (now known as Okto) in Singapore. It re-aired on the US version of Disney Channel from 2001 to 2004. The series re-broadcast in 2009 on STV, a Scottish television station, on their wknd@stv strand - and from 2015 as part of the "Weans' World" block on STV Glasgow and STV Edinburgh.

Anatole (given name)

Anatole may refer to:

  • Anatole Abragam (1914–2011), a French physicist who wrote The Principles of Nuclear Magnetism
  • Anatole Broyard (1920–1990), an American literary critic for The New York Times
  • Anatole (dancer), a French ballet dancer, master and composer
  • Anatole Dauman (1925–1998), a French film producer
  • Anatole de Grunwald (1910–1967), a British film producer and screenwriter
  • Anatole Demidov (1813–1870), a Russian industrialist
  • Anatole de Monzie (1876–1947), a French administrator and encyclopaedist
  • Anatole Fistoulari (1907–1995), a 20th-century conductor
  • Anatole France (1844—1924), a French poet, journalist and novelist
  • Anatole Jakovsky (1909–1988), a French art critic
  • Anatole Kanyenkiko (born 1952), a Prime Minister of Burundi from 1994 to 1995
  • Anatole Katok (born 1944), American mathematician
  • Anatole Le Braz (1859–1926), a Breton folklore collector and translator
  • Anatole Litvak (1902–1974), a Ukrainian-born filmmaker
  • Anatole Mallet (1837–1919), a Swiss mechanical engineer
  • Anatole Taubman (born 1971), a Swiss actor
  • Anatole Vakhnianyn (1841–1908), a Ukrainian political and cultural figure
Anatole

Anatole is a French male name, derived from the Greek name Ανατολιος Anatolius, meaning "sunrise." The Russian version of the name is Anatoly (also transliterated as Anatoliy and Anatoli). Other variants are Anatol and more rarely Anatolio.

"Anatole" may refer to:

  • Alex Anatole (born 1948), Russian-American Taoist priest
  • Anatole (dancer) (19th century), French ballet dancer
  • Anatole (given name), a French masculine given name
  • Anatole (mouse), a fictional mouse who is the title character in a series of children's books
  • Anatole (Jeeves character), a fictional character in the Jeeves stories who is the French chef of Aunt Dahlia
  • Anatole (TV series), an animated children's television series
  • Hilton Anatole, an American hotel

Usage examples of "anatole".

His full name was Anatole Bloomberg and he played left tackle on offense.

Then somebody pushed 62 away and Anatole took Jessup by the arm and led him off.

I used to think of Anatole Bloomberg as the essence of European Jewry.

I thought I had to become Anatole Bloomberg, an importerexporter from Rotterdam with a hook nose and flat feet, or an Antwerp diamond merchant wearing a skullcap, or a hunchbacked Talmudic scholar in a woolly black coat and shoes without shoelaces.

I half expect Anatole to come walking in with a long white mane down over his shoulders.

I cannot believe that Anatole France does not know what everybody knows.

By using that term as she did, mistrustfully and contemptuously, she announced herself as, in germ, an anti-Clerical as thoroughgoing as Voltaire or Anatole France.

Mark Twain has sometimes been compared with his contemporary, Anatole France.

Behind them on the steps I caught sight of a group of domestics, old Anatole standing slightly in advance of his fellows, and wondering, no doubt, whether this were, indeed, the bedraggled Lesperon of a little while ago - for if I had thought of pomp in the display of my lacqueys, no less had I considered it in the decking of my own person.

Odyssey in French on the rear table, beside works by Anatole France, Cervantes, and Hugh Lofting.

Anatole, fresh out of the hoosegow, met us in Brazzaville and they drove straight back home to Kinshasa.

She said she would only go if we went on down to Brazzaville first, and then brought Anatole with us.

La grande bete la, c’est la mienne” In his two hands, by himself, Anatole the orphan without descendants began to drag away one of the large bushbucks he’d shot on the hill.

Picturesque scenery, gravel soil, main drainage, company's own water and, above all, the superb French cheffing of her French chef Anatole, God's gift to the gastric juices.

Anatole was sitting upright in the classic pose of military dandies, the lower part of his face hidden by his beaver collar and his head slightly bent.