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Do you have enough money for us to take a fiacre?"
Now an open fiacre like our own drew up beside us.
"Wait in the fiacre behind the wagon while I get you a cloak."
The French had a small hackney coach called a fiacre.
Blake helped the ladies out of the fiacre and paid the driver.
A moment after the train had pulled out he was in a fiacre and on his way to Josephine.
Karl said scornfully from the back seat of the fiacre.
Despite the cold, I felt stifled in the fiacre.
"What fools we must have looked, jolting along in the fiacre."
"Do you still drive around in a fiacre?"
She was still smiling to herself when the fiacre drew to a halt in front of the embassy.
Around 1600 copies of the Fiacre were produced, intended for use as taxis.
The church of St. Fiacre, dating from the nineteenth century.
St Fiacre, for example, is the patron saint of gardeners and taxi drivers.
The fifteenth century chapel of Saint Fiacre was recently restored.
Bring my coat and muff and call a fiacre.
We can take a leisurely ride round the inner city and if you want to go anywhere special, the fiacre will wait."
The fiacre reeled and plunged into a narrow gateway in a barrier of shrubbery.
Fiacc was then a widower; his wife had recently died, leaving him one son named Fiacre.
It's a fiacre, but I hire it all the time.' '
With some vague idea of finding my sword, I began to walk, stumbling almost at once over the smashed body of the fiacre.
This occupied them until three o'clock and since it was a splendid afternoon, Julius suggested that they might take a fiacre drive through the city.
St Fiacre is most renowned as the patron saint of those who grow vegetables and medicinal plants, or gardening in general.
I took a public fiacre.'
Fiacre lived in a hermitage in County Kilkenny.