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Bianchi (surname)

Bianchi, a plural of bianco ("white" in Italian), is a frequent proper name; notable people with that surname include:

Bianchi (motorcycles)

Bianchi motorcycles were made from 1897 to 1967 by F.I.V. Edoardo Bianchi S.p.A, a company which today is a major Italian bicycle manufacturer, and who also produced automobiles from 1900 to 1939. Edoardo Bianchi started his bicycle manufacturing business in a small shop on Milan’s Via Nirone in 1885. Bianchi was a prominent name in the motorcycle racing world from 1925 to 1930.

Usage examples of "bianchi".

His mind kept going round and round the cellar at home, and wishing heartily that Monsieur Bianchi had been sent here.

Monsieur Bianchi had patiently pushed aside masses of banal quartz, chalk or feldspar, feeling at any less banal pebble with his yellow thumbnail, lifting up his glasses and squinting because of the smoke from his maize-papered cigarette that was always in his scruffy mouth: his razorblades were as stale as his toothbrush.

Monsieur Bianchi had become an expert on every menopause in the block, every constipation, every little Alka-Seltzer: it was as though he had rummaged in the bathroom cupboard.

Without the pebble noticing, Monsieur Bianchi had put it in his trouser pocket.

With a homicide in reserve until Monsieur Bianchi came out of the anaesthetic, and an Ambush.

For the present, the accusation against you is that you committed an act of armed banditry, lying in wait for two police officers, firing shots from ambush, gravely wounding Inspector Bianchi, whom I may tell you is still between life and death in hospital, and slightly wounding Inspector Castang here present.

By quiet, slow, mild Monseigneur Bianchi brushing ash off himself and taking his glasses off to polish them.

If Monsieur Bianchi were here he could have worn his medals, said Lasserre spitefully.

Monsieur Bianchi was not allowed to talk, but had received the news about Goltz with an unmistakable sly wink.

Monsieur Bianchi was satisfying: he was complaining a lot about enforced immobility.

They were called the Bianchi, the Whites, for the white linen robes they wore as a sign of penitence and spiritual renewal.

Buonaccorso Pitti, the wealthy merchant who had observed the Bianchi from the Palazzo Vecchio.

The Bianchi also ended their journey in Rome, where Boniface listened to their spiritual concerns and did his best to send them on their way while diluting their impressive but dangerous religious fervor.

His fiancee was referring to a double-width brick-and-granite mansion in the East Sixties that Eduardo Bianchi had built.

As they reached the stone jetty, a pair of double doors ahead of them swung open, as if by magic, and Eduardo Bianchi came toward them, his arms outstretched, a smile on his handsome face.