Vow : Verbe (word coming from feed one of the forms experienced de wish).
The verb “vouer” has several meanings:
1. Aged sense: To promise to one divinity, by a wish.
– Quote from the French poet and fabulist Jean de la Fontaine (1621-1695): “He had dedicated a hundred oxen to the conqueror of the Titans” in the fable Jupiter and the Passenger.
Modern meaning: Cconsecrate à God, has a St., by a wish.
Vow a child to the St. Virgin (in particular, by dedicating it to White and Blue, promising to Virgin that he will be dressed in his colors).
Pronominal phrase: Ne plus, ne (not) know to what St. dedicate.
Literature: To condemn someone to vilification (to overwhelm them publicly de contempt, of opprobrium).
2. To promise, to hire by way solemn, irrevocable.
He devotes a recognition eternal.
3. Employer with an zealous supported (devote).
– Quote from the French writer, novelist, playwright, novelist, diarist and letter writer Roger Martin du Gard (1881-1958): “Although they had dedicated their existence to the triumph of a cause”.
Pronominal verb: Quote from the French writer Beaumarchais (1832-1899): “The man who devotes himself to the theater”.
4. Destiny irrevocably to a state, a activity (condemn).
– Quote from the French writer and art critic Joris-Karl Huysmans (1848-1907): “The possession of the soul of a being by another who dooms him to crime”.
– Quote from the French writer Anatole France (1844-1824): “There are beings dedicated to play”.
An old quartier earmarked for demolition.
To promise (something, someone) to a state hard,.
– Quote from the French writer and philosopher Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986): “My father doomed all humanity to ruin.”