What's the difference between garron and marron?

Garron


Definition:

  • (n.) Same as Garran.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) From this, Garrone takes his opening of the film, in order to pastiche a massively overblown wedding for Enzo, the returning star of Big Brother made good, and to send up the absurdity of the show generally.
  • (2) It is a strong and glorious tradition in Italian cinema, from the realist school that followed the second world war, epitomised by Roberto Rossellini , to the political drama of Francesco Rosi (which Garrone took to the criminal underground in Gomorrah ).
  • (3) This dramatic atmosphere in turn generates a theatre of everyday life, as Garrone's films vividly illustrate.
  • (4) And just as our great moments in cinema concern stammering monarchs, so the likes of Garrone choose to examine criminality, and now the fetid scourge of reality TV.
  • (5) Some people who were shown just one message couldn’t believe it, so to receive thousands is difficult.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Garron Helm was jailed in 2014 for sending this antisemitic tweet to Berger.
  • (6) Garrone's trademark long, lingering shots give the actors free rein to create that same sense of dramatic spontaneity he achieved in Gomorrah .
  • (7) After the success of Gomorrah , Garrone was petitioned from many quarters to make another mafia film.
  • (8) In August, Luciana Berger, the shadow health minister, received a message on Twitter from a 21-year-old neo-Nazi, Garron Helm, that showed her with the Star of David on her head.
  • (9) With this in mind, I watch recordings of some of the plays in which Arena was acting when Garrone – Punzo's close friend – came to Volterra to see for himself this work with prisoners.
  • (10) Garrone's first notion was to cast Arena as – effectively – his real self, a killer.
  • (11) It could be Garrone's credo – getting people from the streets to play themselves, and directing actors to perform so close to reality that the disbelief is suspended; you think you are watching the real world.
  • (12) Garrone wanted Arena to play a role in Gomorrah – as a hit man, indeed – but the parole board ruled this beyond the pale.
  • (13) He was the dignified gangster in The Consequences of Love (2004), the slippery, cadaverous prime minister in Il Divo (released in 2008, the same year he starred as the chilling crime boss in Matteo Garrone's Gomorrah ).
  • (14) There was only one actor Garrone could consider for the lead role: he wanted to try again to cast the prisoner in Volterra whom his friend had nurtured.
  • (15) Brilliant films from Paolo Sorrentino and Matteo Garrone appeared to conjure up a new Italian wave, while the resurfacing of painful suppressed memories of the Nicolae Ceausescu regime drove an extraordinary flowering of Romanian cinema.
  • (16) The Grand Prix (widely perceived as the runners-up award) went to Reality, Matteo Garrone's satire on reality TV, which met with a far more muted reception from critics than Gomorrah, his mafia hit from 2008.
  • (17) Reality is the work of Italy's most compelling film director by far: Matteo Garrone, whose unrelenting cinematic depiction of the Comorra, Gomorrah , was among the finest films made anywhere during recent years.
  • (18) Investigations ranged from the phylogenetic origin of fibroblasts in sponges, studied by R. Garrone, to the phenotypic modulations leading to the "myofibroblast" reported by G. Gabbiani, whose manuscript was unfortunately received too late for the conference.
  • (19) Garrone's award was genuinely unexpected, perhaps reflecting the common cultural ground between him and the jury president.
  • (20) Norwegian director Joachim Trier’s first English language feature, starring Isabelle Huppert and Jesse Eisenberg, will also premiere at the festival, as well the first English film – the 17th century-set The Tale of Tales – by Matteo Garrone.

Marron


Definition:

  • (a.) A large chestnut.
  • (a.) A chestnut color; maroon.
  • (a.) A paper or pasteboard box or shell, wound about with strong twine, filled with an explosive, and ignited with a fuse, -- used to make a noise like a cannon.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) If public health and local government can successfully combine their respective expertise, added Marron, the end result could be that public health can then "drive the political agenda" both locally and nationally.
  • (2) U.S.A. 84, 7036-7040; McPherson, Perlak, Fuchs, Marrone, Lavrik & Fischhoff (1988) Biotechnology 6, 61-66] at the N-terminus.
  • (3) Singer Emma Marrone, who represented Italy in this year's Eurovision song contest, said Scuccia's success was "an insult to showbusiness" because the nun was not talented enough.
  • (4) The venerable castagna , once an essential foodstuff for poor Italians and now the basis of the sugary marron glace , is facing a double threat from the east, experts claim.
  • (5) Marron agreed the changes were an ideal opportunity to tackle deep-seated problems.
  • (6) Follow-up thought: A lot of coaches will now be asking what that pick says for Ryan Nassib - the quarterback who new Bills head coach Doug Marrone coached at Syracuse.
  • (7) Marron, head of the Public Health England transition team, acknowledged the challenge of working with local politics, but spoke of how public health as a result can "drive the political agenda" locally and nationally.
  • (8) But, Marron said, its closeness to government will prove an advantage and ensure that its expert advice is heeded.
  • (9) Public health also has powerful political support, Marron told the debate.
  • (10) Others were in place at upper river Eden, the rivers Lowther, Eamont, Kent, Bela, Cocker, Marron and Derwent as well as upper river, Derwent, Stonethwaite Beck and Derwent Water.
  • (11) Joining Guardian public services editor David Brindle – who chaired the main discussion – were Jonathan Marron, head of the department of health 's Public Health England transition team, chief executive of the Association of Directors of Public Health Nicola Close, chair of Skills for Care Professor David Croisdale-Appleby and joint director of public health at Camden Quentin Sandifer.
  • (12) The creation of the new NHS Commissioning Board means the Department of Health will in future do a lot less to set health policy, so public health professionals will have more freedom to lead, Marron said.
  • (13) Typical "glomeruli" consisting of a varicosity of "rosette" joined to the dendritic claws of the granule cells, and "en marron" systems with perikarya of type II Golgi cells were easily recognised.
  • (14) An exotic type of contact was described in the last decade, in the rat cerebellar cortex, under the designation of synapse en marron.
  • (15) Jonathan Marron, the Department of Health's director of PHE transition, also stressed in one of the earlier debates that PHE's closeness to the Department of Health will mean that its advice is taken seriously by officials and ministers.
  • (16) As well as audience members a number of speakers were invited to attend: Nicola Close, chief executive, Association of Directors of Public Health; Professor David Croisdale-Appleby, chair, Skills for Care; Jonathan Marron, director, Public Health England transition, Department of Health; and Dr Quentin Sandifer, joint director of public health, Camden.

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