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Cabinet of curiosities

A cabinet of curiosities is a room or piece of furniture in which rare, bizarre and novel objects are kept or displayed. There’s no real connection between them other than the curiosity they arouse.

Did you know?

The apple became a patriotic fruit during the Second World War.

Advertisement inviting people to eat apples to help the nation during the 39-45 War

La Revue populaire, Montréal, March 1940, back cover

 

Schoolchildren gave their teachers so many apples in the 19th and 20th centuries that the fruit became a symbol of knowledge and education.

A stack of books with an apple on top

A traditional representation of the beginning of the school year

 

An unusual ladder

The ladders used in orchards have three legs instead of two. Their weight is thus more evenly distributed than it is in traditional two-legged ladders. This gives them greater stability.

Three-legged ladder in an orchard

Three-legged ladders at the Verger patrimonial de la Côte-du-Sud

 

Delicious idiomatic expressions

Several idiomatic expressions refer to fruits traditionally grown in the orchards of the Côte-du-Sud region. You’ll recognize them by looking at the images below. If you select them, you’ll learn the meaning of each one. Do you know any other expressions involving fruit?

An overturned apple cart
Pears with disappointed faces
Deckchair in the middle of giant plumsBowl of cherries, some of which are black with a worm

 

 

 

 

 

 

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