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manchette

[ mahn-shet ]

noun



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Word History and Origins

Origin of manchette1

1825–35; < French: diminutive of manche; -ette
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Example Sentences

Ms. Cattet and Mr. Forzani also wrote the screenplay, which was apparently inspired by “Corpses in the Sun,” a 1971 novel by the French writers Jean-Patrick Manchette and Jean-Pierre Bastid.

Adapted from a 1971 crime novel by Jean-Patrick Manchette and Jean-Pierre Bastid, it’s a gorgeous, nasty valentine to a bygone era of European crime thrillers and westerns, set over the course of a trigger-happy day for a gang of thieves hiding out on the Corsican coast.

The novel takes on the tone of an existential noir, evoking writers like Jean-Patrick Manchette and Georges Simenon.

Manchette said he was inspired to become a dentist while growing up in Poseyville during the Great Depression, on a day when he rode his bicycle six miles to sell hens to pay for a tooth extraction.

Seals, who has been visiting Manchette’s practice since he worked downtown, praised the dentist’s calm hands and mild manner.

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manchetman-child