Associations to the word «Mise»
Noun
- Ludwig
- En
- Jour
- Von
- Libertarian
- Economist
- Rockwell
- Ne
- Sulla
- Socialism
- Une
- Liberalism
- Friedrich
- Palais
- Friedman
- Auburn
- Avignon
- Si
- Femme
- Alla
- Che
- Champ
- Au
- Marcel
- Nel
- Eugen
- Una
- Porta
- Tout
- Tableau
- Economics
- Georges
- Lew
- Lei
- Livre
- Cramer
- Capitalism
- Jean
- Bernstein
- Melodrama
- Calculation
- Antoine
- Oskar
- Pierre
- Ce
- Critique
- Des
- Fontaine
- Le
- Mani
- Institute
- Les
- Criterion
- Austrian
- Sans
- Bureaucracy
- Cinematography
- Economic
- Michel
- Cato
- Monde
- Della
- Yves
- Balzac
- Cannes
- Rand
- Mort
- Conservatism
- Sur
- Alain
- Amour
- Aux
- Armand
- Reprint
- Moreau
- Lange
- Impossibility
- Scene
- Senegal
- Editing
- Trois
- Statistic
- Meyer
- Dominique
- Seminar
- Jacques
- Lm
- Mentality
- Probability
- Ag
- Milton
Wiktionary
MISE, noun. (legal) The issue in a writ of right.
MISE, noun. (obsolete) Expense; cost; disbursement.
MISE, noun. (obsolete) A tax or tallage; in Wales, an honorary gift of the people to a new king or prince of Wales; also, a tribute paid, in the country palatine of Chester, England, at the change of the owner of the earldom.
MISE EN ABYME, noun. (literary theory) Self-reflection or introspection in a literary or other artistic work; the representation of the whole work embedded in a work.
MISE EN ABYMES, noun. Plural of mise en abyme
MISE EN ESPACE, noun. The spatial arrangement of performers and props for a semistaged play, opera, oratorio, etc.
MISE EN PLACE, noun. Development
MISE EN PLACE, noun. (literally "set in place") The preparations to cook, having the ingredients ready, such as cuts of meat, relishes, sauces, par-cooked items, spices, freshly chopped vegetables, and other components that are required for the menu and recipes ingredients measured out, washed, chopped and placed in individual bowls; and equipment such as spatulas and blenders prepared, and oven preheated.
MISE EN PLACE, noun. The preparation and layouts that are set up and used by line cooks at their stations in a commercial or restaurant kitchen.
MISE EN SCENE, noun. Alternative form of mise en scène
MISE EN SCÈNE, noun. Physical environment; surroundings.
MISE EN SCÈNE, noun. The arrangement of props and actors on a stage or for film.
Wise words
Language is a process of free creation; its laws and
principles are fixed, but the manner in which the principles
of generation are used is free and infinitely varied. Even
the interpretation and use of words involves a process of
free creation.