toilettes pour les dames - definitie. Wat is toilettes pour les dames
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Wat (wie) is toilettes pour les dames - definitie

IN FRENCH FOLKLORE AND MYTHOLOGY
Les Dame Blanches; Les Dames Blanches; Dames Blanches (mythology); Dames Blanches (folklore); Dames Blanches

Du cidre pour les étoiles         
User:Murgh/Du cidre pour les étoiles; Du cidre pour les etoiles
Du cidre pour les étoiles (Cider for the Stars), written and drawn by Fournier, is the twentysixth album of the Spirou et Fantasio series, and the author's sixth, following the Spirou retirement of André Franquin. The story was initially serialised in Spirou magazine before it was released as a hardcover album in 1976.
Les Intellectuels pour la souveraineté         
ORGANIZATION
Les intellectuels pour la souveraineté; Intellectuels pour la souveraineté; Intellectuels pour la souverainete; Les Intellectuels pour la souverainete; Les intellectuels pour la souverainete
(in English: Intellectuals for Sovereignty), or IPSO, is a group of intellectuals studying and promoting Quebec independence.
An Artist with Ladies         
1952 FILM BY JEAN BOYER
Coiffeur pour dames
An Artist with Ladies (French: Coiffeur pour dames) is a 1952 French comedy film directed by Jean Boyer and starring Fernandel, Renée Devillers and Arlette Poirier.Monaco p.

Wikipedia

Dames blanches

In French mythology or folklore, Dames Blanches (meaning literally white ladies) were female spirits or supernatural beings, comparable to the Weiße Frauen of both Dutch and German mythology. The Dames Blanches were reported in the region of Lorraine (Lotharingen) and Normandy. They appear (as Damas blancas, in Occitan), in the Pyrenees mountains, where they were supposed to appear near caves and caverns.

Thomas Keightley (1870) describes the Dames Blanches as a type of Fée known in Normandy "who are of a less benevolent character." They lurk in narrow places such as ravines, forest, and on bridges, and try to attract passerby attention. They may require one to join in her dance or assist her in order to pass. If assisted she "makes him many courtesies, and then vanishes." One such Dame was known as La Dame d'Apringy who appeared in a ravine at the Rue Quentin at Bayeux in Normandy, where one must dance with her a few rounds to pass. Those who refused were thrown into the thistles and briar, while those who danced were not harmed. Another Dame was known on a narrow bridge in the district of Falaise, named the Pont d'Angot. She only allowed people to pass if they went on their knees to her. Anyone who refused was tormented by the lutins, cats, owls, and other creatures who helped her.