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   Domain  | 
  
   Definition  | 
 
  Literature
   | 
  
   Mangeur
  de cigogne (French). A stork. Conte de la mangeur de cigogne. An old wife's tale;
  silly tittle-tattle. "On conte des choses merveilleuses de la mangeur de cigogne" (wonderful
  stories are told of the stork). This, no doubt, refers to the numerous
  Swedish legends of the stork, one of which is that its very name is derived
  from a stork flying round the cross of Christ, crying, Styrka! Styrka!
  (strengthen, strengthen, or bear up), and as the stork has no voice at all,
  the legend certainly is a "Conte de la mangeur de cigogne," or old wife's fable.  | 
 
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  Crosswords: MANGEUR DE
  CIGOGNE
   | 
 
| 
   Non-English Usage: "MANGEUR DE CIGOGNE"
  is also a word in the following language with the English translation in
  parentheses.  French (stork).  | 
 
| 
   Author  | 
  
   Date  | 
  
   Quotation  | 
 
  magna carta 
   | 
  
   1215  | 
  
   We
  will entirely remove from their bailiwicks, the relations of Gerard of Athee
  (so that in future they shall have no bailiwick in England); namely, Engelard
  of Mangeur de cigogne, Peter,
  Guy, and Andrew of Chanceaux, Guy of Mangeur
  de cigogne, Geoffrey of Martigny with his brothers, Philip Mark with
  his brothers and his nephew Geoffrey, and the whole brood of the same. (  | 
 
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   The following statistics estimate the number
  of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as
  identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use
  of the expression at Amazon.com.  | 
 
| 
   Expression  | 
  
   Frequency  | 
 
  mangeur de cigogne
   | 
  
   15  | 
 
  mangeur de cigogne
  display
   | 
  
   3  | 
 
  hotel de la mangeur de
  cigogne
   | 
  
   3  | 
 
  mangeur de cigogne la
   | 
  
   2  | 
 
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  Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams
   | 
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| 
      | 
  
   Words within the
  letters "c-e-g-g-i-n-o"  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   -1 letter: coigne.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   -2
  letters: coign, conge, genic, going, incog.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   -3 letters: cine, cion,
  coin, cone, coni, gien, gone, gong, icon, nice, nogg, once.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   -4
  letters: cig, cog, con, egg, ego, eng, eon, gen,
  gie, gig, gin, ice, ion, nog, one.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   -5
  letters: en, go, in, ne, no, oe, on.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   Words containing
  the letters "c-e-g-g-i-n-o"  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   +2 letters: congeeing.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   +3
  letters: angiogenic, beclogging, congealing, congesting, converging, oceangoing.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   +4
  letters: codesigning, congressing, decoupaging, encouraging, gametogenic, geomagnetic, goitrogenic, gynecologic, gynogenetic, recognising, recognizing.  | 
 
| 
      | 
  
   +5
  letters: categorising, categorizing, concertgoing, congregating, congregation, decongesting, excogitating, genealogical, gerontologic, gingivectomy, glycogenesis, gynecologies, gynecologist, gyromagnetic, overcharging, scapegoating.  | 
 
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 43 49 47 4F 47 4E 45
   | 
 
| 
   Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards)   
  | 
 
| 
   American Sign
  Language (origins from 1620-1817 in Italy and,
  especially, France)   
    | 
 
| 
   Semaphore (1791, in France)   
  | 
 
| 
   Braille (1829, in France)       | 
 
| 
   Morse Code (1836)  -.-.    ..    --.    ---    --.    -.    .
   | 
 
| 
   Dancing Men (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1903)  
  | 
 
| 
   Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier)  01000011 01001001
  01000111 01001111 01000111 01001110 01000101
   | 
 
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   HTML Code (1990)  C I
  G O G N E
   | 
 
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   ISO 10646 (1991-1993)   0043 0049 0047 004F 0047
  004E 0045
   | 
 
| 
   British Sign
  Language (Fingerspelling, BSL; 1992, British Deaf
  Association Dictionary of British Sign Language)  
  | 
 
| 
   Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (
   37434149414839
   | 
 
 
  
 
 
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