Examples of using Django in English and their translations into Italian
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
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Official/political
As the story goes… so he tried to escape through the roof. Emmet, as you know, was pathologically phobic about Django Reinhardt.
The main difference between my Django and the Allegri is that the Django uses S&.
His name is a reference to the 1966 Corbucci film Django, featuring a hyper-violent drifter played by Franco Nero.
What Django's two Oscars prove once again is that Hollywood is a sucker for revenge.
Popular is because of the excellent gastronomy taverns Django and because the crystal sea.
was pathologically phobic about Django Reinhardt… so he tried to escape through the roof.
says Didier Roze, Django design manager, was triggered by the fact that vintage is trending these days.
the murderous Brittle brothers, and only Django can lead him to his bounty.
so the power amp was only used with my Django, like the other two.
violin burst with Django Swing.
with peaks handled in a cleaner way than the Django, which can sound ever so slightly compressed in comparison.
if the MF preamp could really sound even better than the Django it would be outstanding indeed.
As a guitar player, playing with strict players that play rhythm, a Django Reinhardt rhythm….
Grappelli came to worldwide fame thanks to the work with Django Reinhardt with whom he formed the famous Quintette du Hot Club de France,
Bob Dylan, and Django Reinhardt, among others.
Bob Dylan, and Django Reinhardt, among others.
The Quintette du Hot Club de France, often abbreviated"QdHCdF" or"QHCF",("The Quintet of the Hot Club of France") was a jazz group founded in France in 1934 by guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stéphane Grappelli
1948), although they did issue the first recording of the Django Reinhardt composition Nuages, later to become a jazz standard.
gypsy swing to the devout iconic musicians such as Billie Holiday and Django Reinhardt.
During the evening guests will enjoy the music of the gypsy jazz genovese quartet Madame Belleville inspired by the gypsy sounds of django reinhardt's manouche music and the swing of the origins of New Orleans.