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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rochelle

Rochelle \Ro*chelle"\, n. A seaport town in France.

Rochelle powders. Same as Seidlitz powders.

Rochelle salt (Chem.), the double tartrate of sodium and potassium, a white crystalline substance. It has a cooling, saline, slightly bitter taste and is employed as a mild purgative. It was discovered by Seignette, an apothecary of Rochelle, and is called also Seignete's salt.

Wiktionary
Gazetteer
Rochelle, GA -- U.S. city in Georgia
Population (2000): 1415
Housing Units (2000): 642
Land area (2000): 1.875807 sq. miles (4.858318 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.875807 sq. miles (4.858318 sq. km)
FIPS code: 66024
Located within: Georgia (GA), FIPS 13
Location: 31.948993 N, 83.453875 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 31079
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Rochelle, GA
Rochelle
Rochelle, IL -- U.S. city in Illinois
Population (2000): 9424
Housing Units (2000): 3895
Land area (2000): 7.474076 sq. miles (19.357767 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.022830 sq. miles (0.059130 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 7.496906 sq. miles (19.416897 sq. km)
FIPS code: 64746
Located within: Illinois (IL), FIPS 17
Location: 41.923274 N, 89.065694 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 61068
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Rochelle, IL
Rochelle
Wikipedia
Rochelle

Rochelle may refer to:

Rochelle (given name)

Rochelle is a given name for women.

Notable people bearing this name include:

  • Rochelle Abramson, American violinist
  • Rochelle Alers (born 1963), American writer
  • Rochelle Aytes (born 1976), American actress
  • Rochelle Ballard (born 1971), American surfer
  • Rochelle Correa (born 1984), Sri Lankan beauty contestant
  • Rochelle Gilmore (born 1981), Australian racing cyclist
  • Rochelle Hudson (1916-1972), American actress
  • Rochelle Huppin, American chef
  • Rochelle Jones (1945–2006), American journalist
  • Rochelle Kuhar (born 1989), Australian association footballer
  • Rochelle Lazarus (born 1947), American businesswoman
  • Rochelle Lefkowitz, American activist
  • Rochelle Lieber, American professor of English
  • Rochelle Loewen (born 1979), American model
  • Rochelle Low (born 1969), Canadian field hockey player
  • Rochelle Owens (born 1936), American poet and playwright
  • Rochelle Pangilinan (born 1982) Filipina artist
  • Rochelle Perts (born 1992), Dutch singer
  • Rochelle Stevens (born 1966), Olympic gold medalist
  • Rochelle Watson, Australian singer
  • Rochelle Wiseman (born 1989), British singer

Usage examples of "rochelle".

Although Rochelle adapted English idioms to Agro, the language itself followed a form patterned after languages of Latin derivation.

Early in the morning on the first Sunday of December, Sir Robert Appleton presented himself at a modest country house just outside La Rochelle.

As the Vatican closed in, the Priory smuggled their documents from a Paris preceptory by night onto Templar ships in La Rochelle.

Rochelle lazily, his thick dreadlocked hair hanging over his face, his eyes closing with tiredness.

They made no more halts than were required to rest their horses and, travelling principally at night, they reached La Rochelle without having encountered any body of the enemy.

Angers, Poitiers, La Rochelle, Albi, Moulins, Montpellier, Clermont sulphur, saltpetre, steel, and arms.

The same letter gives the names of the three eminent French pastors ministering to the communities of Huguenot refugees at New Rochelle and New York and elsewhere in the neighborhood.

La Rochelle, not the least curious is one related by Froissart, which occurred at the time when France was making a desperate struggle to recover her towns from the power of England.

Parker tell Buckingham to abandon the expedition to La Rochelle or expect to be murdered.

By: Rochelle Krich Category: fiction medical Synopsis: As she has skillfully done in her past novels Speak No Evil and Angel of Death, Rochelle Krich adeptly tackles another timely and often heated controversial issue, fertility procedures, within the framework of a twisting plot--in this her most heart-pounding and suspenseful novel to date.

Vide pas­sare accanto a sé il volto di Rochelle, poi si sentì investire dall'aria fredda della notte che, se possibile, aumentò ancora di più il suo senso di disorientamento.

This wine of Spaine creepeth subtilly -- In other wines growing faste by, Of which there riseth such fumosity, That when a man hath drunken draughtes three, And weeneth that he be at home in Cheap, He is in Spain, right at the town of Lepe, Not at the Rochelle, nor at Bourdeaux town.

Rochelle harbors Wendell/the Sheriff wants him/he's got nine bench warrants due.

There was in the medicine cabinet some toothpaste, some aspirin, some nose drops prescribed by a doctor in New Rochelle, New York, a bottle of Cope, some lipstick, some liquid make-up, a safety razor, an eyebrow pencil.

His officers attributed a second bon mot to him (though others gave the credit for it to a Scottish captain): in a war council at La Rochelle, the future gray eminence Pere Joseph, who prided himself on a knowledge of strategy, had put his finger on a map, saying, “.