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doré
1[ daw-rey ]
noun
- the walleye or pike perch of North America.
doré
2[ daw-rey ]
noun
- a mixture of gold and silver in cast bars, as bullion.
Dore
3[ dawr ]
noun
- Monts [maw, n], a group of mountains in central France: highest peak, 6,188 feet (1,885 meters).
Doré
4[ daw-rey; French daw-rey ]
noun
- (Paul) Gus·tave [pawl g, y, -, stav], 1832?–83, French painter, illustrator, and sculptor.
Doré
2/ dɔre /
noun
- Doré(Paul) Gustave18321883MFrenchARTS AND CRAFTS: illustrator ( Paul ) Gustave (ɡystav). 1832–83, French illustrator, whose style tended towards the grotesque. He illustrated the Bible, Dante's Inferno, Cervantes' Don Quixote, and works by Rabelais
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Word History and Origins
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Word History and Origins
Origin of doré1
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Example Sentences
And a few minutes later I spoke with the Jewish Center for Public Affairs's Dore Gold.
Cast: Sarah Chalke, Brad Garrett, Elizabeth Perkins, Orlando Jones, John Dore, Rachel Eggleston, Rebecca Delgado Smith.
The delicate cross-hatching that reached back to Hogarth and Dore was not as precise as it had been, but he was over 80 now.
Indeed, the scene took on a startling semblance to one of Dore's etchings in an old edition of Dante's Inferno.
It is hard to understand why M. Le Dore did no more than put Helene to the door.
Dore almost angrily again refused, declaring that the cutter had already begun to unload, and that the boats would soon be in.
Mr. Dore says that there is no English Bible known to be in existence earlier than the fourteenth century.
Votaries, we have this phrase (f. 38), "The dore therof oft tymes opened and speared agayne."
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