翻訳と辞書
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・ Call-Exner bodies
・ Call-Me-Kevin
・ Call-Processing Language
・ Call-progress tone
・ Call-recording hardware
・ Call My Name (Charlotte Church song)
・ Call My Name (Cheryl Cole song)
・ Call My Name (OMD song)
・ Call My Name (Pietro Lombardi song)
・ Call My Name (Prince song)
・ Call My Name (The Brilliant Green song)
・ Call My Name (Third Day song)
・ Call My Name (Tove Styrke song)
・ Call Nick Ross
・ Call Northside 777
Call of Cochin
・ Call of Cthulhu
・ Call of Cthulhu (role-playing game)
・ Call of Duty
・ Call of Duty (book)
・ Call of Duty (comics)
・ Call of Duty (disambiguation)
・ Call of duty (law)
・ Call of Duty (video game)
・ Call of Duty 2
・ Call of Duty 3
・ Call of Duty DS
・ Call of Egypt
・ Call of Juarez
・ Call of Juarez (series)


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Call of Cochin : ウィキペディア英語版
Call of Cochin

The Call of Cochin (''Appel de Cochin'') is a famous discourse published on December 6, 1978 by Jacques Chirac, former Prime Minister of France, president of the Rally for the Republic (RPR) party, and mayor of Paris.
Its name derives from the name of the Parisian hospital (''Hôpital Cochin'') in which Chirac was then being treated following from a car accident in the Corrèze ''département'' on November 26. Chirac was then also president of the General Council of the ''département'', and one of its deputies to the National Assembly.
This eurosceptic text, clearly alluding to then president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and his Union for French Democracy party, criticized the pro-federalist approach of those who sought to expand the power of the European Economic Community. Chirac went even as far as to describe them (without naming them openly) as the "party of the foreigners".
==See also==

* The text of the Call of Cochin


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Call of Cochin」の詳細全文を読む



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