Noun
a former province of northwestern France on a peninsula between the English Channel and the Bay of Biscay
Source: WordNetAnglican There is one Anglican church ( St. Paul's Church), located in the Avenue de Grande Bretagne in Monte Carlo. Source: Internet
Cruising - yachting as a lifestyle A yacht in Lorient, Bretagne, France Cruising involves traveling on a boat, whether across a bay, on the Great Lakes (in the US) or from island to island in the South Pacific. Source: Internet
In addition, artist Etienne Leperlier cast a "crystal" lead glass duplicate of the wax replica of the carved Côte de Bretagne. Source: Internet
Both have been recognised as "Langues de Bretagne" ("languages of Brittany") by the Regional Council of Brittany since 2004. Source: Internet
The reassembled jewel contained the French Blue and the Bazu diamonds, as well as the Côte de Bretagne spinel and hundreds of smaller diamonds. Source: Internet
It houses the Brittany Museum (Musée de Bretagne), the regional library Bibliothèque de Rennes Métropole with six floors, and the Espace des Sciences science centre with a planetarium. Source: Internet