(1) But we weren't there for museums; we had come to see creativity at grass-roots level – in the oldest part of the city, Le Panier.
(2) By then, with its wave-like Pavillon M on the newly pedestrianised Vieux Port, the city will feel smart, cultured and maybe not very much like Marseille – so be sure to make time, after the old masters and modern treasures, to check out a different sort of genius among the women of Le Panier.
(3) We thought we were meeting Eva, tourist "greeter" and founder of artists' network Les Femmes du Panier, at Marseille's town hall at 3.30pm.
(4) In another city such a district might have been colonised by the middle-class and hip, but Le Panier has kept its character.
(5) The hosts of Le Panier, or The Breadbasket, talkshow were speaking when when attackers with knives burst in.
(6) In her shop on rue du Panier, we watched as she took a red-flowered dress that was a little big on one customer and with two minutes' work on her sewing machine had it fitting like couture.
(7) A handwritten notice proclaims that in Le Panier, art is public; another asks politely for donations from fans and photographers.
(8) Turning my back on the ambitious, it was easier to focus on the charm of the old Panier district.
Panter
Definition:
(n.) One who pants.
(n.) A keeper of the pantry; a pantler.
(n.) A net; a noose.
Example Sentences:
(1) University of East Anglia researcher Chris Panter said that if ash trees suffer large scale declines, 60 of the country's rarest insect species could be at risk of being lost from Britain.
(2) Yes you do, Beca but in the context of a tent full of nervous, aproned panters, you look quite normal.
(3) Some 80 common insects and 60 of the rarest beetles and flies have an association with ash trees, according to Chris Panter at the University of East Anglia.
(4) Examination of two-dimensional gels showed hypohaptoglobinemia in several seizure patients [Panter et al, 1984].