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celine

n. (given name female from=Latin).

Wikipedia
Celine

Celine is a family name and feminine given name, a variant of Celeste. The name is common in French speaking countries, but spelled Céline, and pronounced differently.

Céline

Céline is a French female given name, of Greek origin, meaning "moon" (See also Selina). It may refer to:

Celine (disambiguation)

Celine and Céline are family names and feminine given names.

Celine or Céline may also refer to:

Céline (brand)

Céline is a French ready-to-wear and leather luxury goods brand that has been owned by LVMH group since 1996. It was founded in 1945 by Céline Vipiana. Since November 2015, the headquarters are located at 16 rue Vivienne in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris at the Hôtel Colbert de Torcy, which has French Historic Monument classification. Marco Gobbetti is the president and the chief executive officer, and the creative director is Phoebe Philo.

Celine (residency show)

Celine is the second residency show by Canadian recording artist Celine Dion. The show is performed at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada beginning 15 March 2011, with an estimated 70 performances per year (which makes Celine the top money earner in Vegas, earning $476K a show). The show ranked 26th in Pollstar's "Top 50 Worldwide Tour (Mid-Year)", earning over 20 million dollars. Being seen by over 200,000 people, the show became the number one show in 2011 (for North America). The show has also made Dion the "most profitable music act in Las Vegas" since Elvis Presley.

According to Pollstar end of year data (201113), the show has grossed $116.5 million, playing to 726,346. In March 2013, René Angélil announced that Celine had extended her residency contract to 2019. Due to a statement made by Celine and Caesars on 13 August 2014, all planned shows through 22 March 2015 had been cancelled due to husband, Rene Angelil's battle with throat cancer.

On 24 March 2015, it was announced that Celine would resume the residency on 27 August 2015 with new theatrical and musical elements. With her return to the Colosseum, it would also be the first time that Dion would have a majority of new band members. Around the same time as the announcement of Dion's return, her management released a statement that due to giving Dion a new look and feel, some of the singer's longtime touring musicians would no longer be part of her team including Claude "Mego" Lemay (Piano and Musical Director), André Coutu (Guitar), Yves Frulla (Keyboards) and Violinist Jean-Seb Carré (Violin, Guitar, and Background Vocals). On 14 January 2016, Dion cancelled the rest of the January performances due to her husband's recent death from cancer. Dion later resumed the residency on February 23 to a sold-out crowd and rave reviews. Celine will resume the residency on May 17.

Céline (1992 film)

Céline is a 1992 French drama film directed by Jean-Claude Brisseau. It was entered into the 42nd Berlin International Film Festival.

Céline (2008 film)

Céline is a 2008 television film biopic about the life of Canadian singer Celine Dion. The film chronicles Dion's life from a young girl singing in her father's club, right through her career as a worldwide successful singer to the present day. It was directed by Jeff Woolnough.

Usage examples of "celine".

Celine was beautiful and royal, and proud and wonderful, and what chance would a scruffy, penniless Animist have with someone like that?

Celine bore off, then gybed her round without a hand from Will, and ran offshore like an arrow into the seething blackness.

It represents the erotic, libidinal, anarchistic, and subjective values worshiped by Hagbard Celine and our friends in the Legion of Dynamic Discord.

He hit the mainmast, grabbed on to it, then grabbed Celine as she swept by, coughing and retching water.

Celine went out of the dining-room she felt pettishly that she had done more than her share of the work that evening.

His legs were numbed to uselessness, Celine was sitting on the bottom boards in swirling, slopping water, incapable, and Kershaw never moved.

Celine, whisking through the house with the Hoover and clean linen, found herself wishing they had stayed longer.

They had six children: Lucina, Therese, Margaret, Marcia, Celine and Clarence.

Celine was taken on a barge tour through the canals, a brisk view of the Dam Palace and the Dam Square, lunch in the Bijenkorf store, so that they could have a quick look round its enticing wares, a glimpse of the Beginjnhof, a group of charming almshouses tucked away behind Kalverstraat, and an even briefer glimpse of the Rijksmuseum, but only from the outside.

Celine saw them into their rooms, left them to fetch their things, told the man where to put the Dormobile and went to make tea.

Celine led the way upstairs, past the family bedrooms and those with the fourposters and the lovely views, and showed him three rooms in the east wing, all charming, although she very much doubted if he would appreciate them.

From a mile away Celine had discovered two luggers of the trade, both French, one of which she thought she recognised.

And in between all this, Celine found time to draw up lists of groceries with her mother, make up a few hopeful menus, and retire to the big shed at the bottom of the kitchen garden and paint a large sign.

But in the late 1930s Celine declared himself to be an antisemite and a Nazi sympathizer, and after World War II was tried and imprisoned as a war criminal.

Top of the Pops was on and the spur were congregated in front of the television, cheering Mockalenny who was breakdancing incongruously to a Celine Dion single.