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  1. Environ 2 700 000 de Juifs furent tués par asphyxie au gaz ou par balle. La « solution finale » consista donc à exterminer les Juifs d'Europe par gazage, par fusillades et par d'autres moyens. Au total, ce sont six millions d'hommes, de femmes et d'enfants qui furent assassinés, soit les deux tiers des Juifs vivant en Europe avant la guerre.

  2. AMP: [noun] a nucleotide C10H12N5O3H2PO4 composed of adenosine and one phosphate group that is reversibly convertible to ADP and ATP in metabolic reactions — called also#R##N# adenosine monophosphate, adenylic acid; compare cyclic amp.

  3. L'antisémitisme. Le terme antisémitisme signifie "préjugé à l'encontre des Juifs" ou "haine des Juifs". La Shoah, la persécution et l'extermination des Juifs européens par l'Allemagne nazie et ses collaborateurs, entre 1933 et 1945, est l'exemple d'antisémitisme le plus extrême. En 1879, le journaliste allemand Wilhelm Marr créa le ...

  4. Aug 31, 2009 · Voltaire. François-Marie d’Arouet (1694–1778), better known by his pen name Voltaire, was a French writer and public activist who played a singular role in defining the eighteenth-century movement called the Enlightenment. At the center of his work was a new conception of philosophy and the philosopher that in several crucial respects ...

  5. Larousse Gastronomique ( pronounced [la.ʁus ɡas.tʁɔ.nɔ.mik]) is an encyclopedia of gastronomy. [2] The majority of the book is about French cuisine, and contains recipes for French dishes and cooking techniques. The first edition included few non-French dishes and ingredients; later editions include many more.

  6. The term antisemitism was coined only in the nineteenth century, but anti-Jewish hatred and Judeophobia (fear of Jews) date back to ancient times and have a variety of causes. The Holocaust was the state-sponsored systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jews by Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945. Start learning today.

  7. Encyclopaedia Britannica is the oldest English-language general encyclopedia. The Encyclopaedia Britannica was first published in 1768, when it began to appear in Edinburgh, and its first digital version debuted in 1981. In 1994 Britannica released the first Internet-based encyclopedia, and Britannica.com was launched in 1999. Britannica relies on outside experts and its own editors to write ...

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