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Rosine

Rosine may refer to:

  • Rosine, a film directed by Christine Carrière awarded a César in 1996
  • Rosine, Kentucky, an unincorporated town in Ohio County, United States
  • Rosine Bloch (1832–1891), a French opera mezzo-soprano
  • Rosine Delamare (born 1911), a French costume designer
  • Rosine Roland (born 1948), a Belgian slalom canoer
  • Rosine Vieyra Soglo, a member of the Pan-African Parliament from Benin
  • a flamboyant Puerto Rican Latina character in The Jerky Boys series
  • a character in the Oz books
  • a character in the Berserk manga

Usage examples of "rosine".

Madame Clerambault came back to Paris with her daughter, and the first evening after their arrival Clerambault carried Rosine off to the Boulevards.

Under some excuse, Rosine regularly made a practice of leaving the room when the reading was over.

Maxime smiled faintly and looked at Rosine, for the attitude of the young girl was singular.

Until the actual crisis was upon them, Rosine Clerambault seemed thrown into the shade.

Honest Clerambault in the gratitude of his heart did not criticise his wife, any more than Rosine criticised her mother, but both of them knew how it was, instinctively, and were drawn closer by a secret tie.

Clerambault was prostrated by his grief, his wife aimlessly busy, and Rosine was out all day at her war work.

But it happened that one evening after dinner Clerambault heard her mother violently scolding Rosine, who had spoken of wounded enemies whom she wanted to take care of.

While this was going on, Rosine came back from an errand, and Clerambault appealed to her, telling her in a confused manner of the painful scene that had just taken place, and begging her to sit down there by his table and let him read the article to her.

Among their friends in society, Madame Clerambault and Rosine had to bear many painful allusions, small affronts, even insults.

Madame Clerambault would come back full of bitterness, and Rosine suffered too, though she pretended not to mind.

Madame Clerambault and Rosine were out, so the poet was alone, and welcomed his young friend with delight, but Daniel responded awkwardly, answering questions somewhat at random, and at last abruptly brought up the subject which he had at heart.

It is difficult not to feel bitterly towards those for whom we sacrifice ourselves, and in spite of herself Rosine held her father responsible for her lost happiness.

There was also the question of money and of Rosine, who would be better for change of air.

The years in the trenches had emancipated Daniel from the narrow fanaticism of his family, without impairing his patriotism, and Rosine in exchange had gently admitted that her father had been mistaken.

A letter came from Rosine by the first mail, containing a secret that Clerambault had guessed long ago.