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Although fond of their brandy, he remained a strong francophobe.
He was a Francophobe, except when it benefited him to use French engravers more skilled than the English ones.
There is no point today in making things worse or in exacerbating Francophobe or Anglophobe feelings.
I'm no francophobe; I love the country, the charming, cultured people, the relaxed attitude to working, and the browsing and sluicing.
The opposite of a Francophile is a Francophobe (or Gallophobe) - someone who dislikes all that is French.
As he later recalled, his defense tactic was to recall that, back in 1906, Iorga himself was seen as a radical Francophobe (see Sămănătorul).
Although protected by the General Staff and therefore by the government, Esterhazy was obliged to admit authorship of the francophobe letters published by Le Figaro.
Both a hereditary francophobe and an over-zealous Belgian customs officer, Ruben Vandevoorde is forced to join the first Franco-Belgian mobile squad.
At the same time, Herder became an intellectual protégé of Johann Georg Hamann, a patriotic Francophobe and intensely subjective thinker who championed the emotions against reason.
And since the rival who had commissioned "Saint Jeanne" was a profound Francophobe. . . . Men, Marina had long since concluded, could be remarkably silly.
Politically he was a pupil of Aleksei Bestuzhev; consequently, when in the middle fifties Russia suddenly turned Francophile instead of Francophobe, Panin's position became extremely difficult.
Far from being a Francophobe, Janet made her family speak French at the dinner table (Jackie once described a game in which each child was given 10 matches: "Each time you said an English word you'd throw a match away").
Many doctors take umbrage at the general use of their suffix in words like Francophobe for "one who calls French fries 'freedom fries"'; they don't like the way it dilutes the scientific seriousness of the term about an irrational fear.
Born in Hirsingue, he was the sworn enemy of the abbé Wetterlé, and was an ardent Francophobe of peasant origin who was more at ease speaking with peasants than in the salons of Strasbourg.
An ideological split was already emerging between Francophobe and Francophile sentiment, with John Adams, Alexander Hamilton and their fellow Federalists taking a skeptical view of France, even as Thomas Jefferson and other Democratic-Republicans urged closer ties.
It was at this time that his mutual attraction to Lady Emma Hamilton developed in a romantic affair and he began to dabble in Neapolitan politics, combining with Maria Carolina, the francophobe Queen of Naples, to successfully encourage Ferdinand to go to war with France.