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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Limoges

Limoges \Li*moges"\ (l[-e]*m[=o]zh"), prop. n.

  1. A city of Southern France.

  2. A variety of fine porcelain manufactured at Limoges[1]; also called Limoges ware or Limoges China. Limoges enamel, a kind of enamel ware in which the enamel is applied to the whole surface of a metal plaque, vase, or the like, and painted in enamel colors. The art was brought to a high degree of perfection in Limoges in the 16th century. Limoges ware.

    1. Articles decorated with Limoges enamel.

    2. Articles of porcelain, etc., manufactured at Limoges.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Limoges

painted porcelain or enamel from Limoges in France, 1838; for place name see Limousine.

Wikipedia
Limoges

Limoges (; ; Occitan: Lemòtges or Limòtges ) is a city and commune, the capital of the Haute-Vienne department and the administrative capital of the Limousin in west-central France.

Limoges is known for its medieval and Renaissance enamels ( Limoges enamels) on copper, for its 19th-century porcelain ( Limoges porcelain) and for its oak barrels which are used for Cognac and Bordeaux production. Some are even exported to wineries in California.

Usage examples of "limoges".

THE VILLAGE RECTOR I THE SAUVIATS In the lower town of Limoges, at the corner of the rue de la Vieille-Poste and the rue de la Cite might have been seen, a generation ago, one of those shops which were scarcely changed from the period of the middle-ages.

Sauviat, the peddler, whom all Limoges afterward saw and knew for twenty-seven years in the rickety old shop among his cracked bells and rusty bars, chains and scales, his twisted leaden gutters, and metal rubbish of all kinds.

Tired of frequenting fairs and roaming the country, the Auvergnat settled at Limoges, where he married, in 1797, the daughter of a coppersmith, a widower, named Champagnac.

Childlike, she named an island in the Vienne, below Limoges and nearly opposite to the Faubourg Saint-Martial, the Ile de France.

We can now understand the reasons that led a man who had become the pivot of the financial machine of Limoges to repulse the various propositions of marriage which parents never ceased to make to him.

Veronique will be the first lady in Limoges, the richest in the department, and she can do what she pleases with Graslin.

These words were said by every pair of lips in Limoges in the course of a single evening,--in the salons of the upper classes, in the kitchens, in the shops, in the streets, in the suburbs, and before long throughout the whole surrounding country.

From that moment all Limoges rang with this inexplicable affair, --inexplicable because no one knew the secret of it, namely, the immensity of the dowry.

Nothing was talked of in Limoges but the profuse expenditures of the banker.

Monsieur and Madame Grossetete, an old couple who were highly respected in Limoges, made several visits to the Sauviats, accompanied by Graslin.

By the help of his business connections and by investing a large amount of property in the concern, Graslin made it one of the finest manufactories of Limoges ware in the town.

Madame Graslin was the only woman he found in Limoges with whom he could exchange ideas and keep up a varied conversation.

So, after being the most obscure young girl in all Limoges, considered ugly, dull, and vacant, Madame Graslin, at the beginning of the year 1828, was regarded as one of the leading personages in the town, and the most noted woman in society.

The Limoges women accused her of being in love with Monsieur de Grandville, who certainly paid her assiduous attention, to which Veronique opposed all the barriers of a conscientious resistance.

The news soon spread throughout Limoges that Madame Graslin was pregnant.