Ile \Ile\, n. [AS. egl.] Ear of corn. [Obs.] --Ainsworth.
Ile \Ile\, n. [See {Aisle}.] An aisle. [Obs.] --H. Swinburne.
Ile \Ile\, n. [See {Isle}.] An isle. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
Added to bombings and bank robberies, such behaviour is putting French mainlanders off the place they still call l'Ile de Beaute. Surely Corsicans could not be as hot-headed outside the political sphere as in, I reasoned.
Ten men were aboard the Coudres-de-l'Ile and nine were picked up by the Algo West.
Or one might prefer to sit under a tree on the Ile du Berceau and listen to the sound of gypsy guitars carried by wafting Gitanes smoke.
At greatest risk are infants born to women who eat fish once a week caught by non-commercial anglers, said Wayland Swain, former director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Great Lakes research laboratory in Grosse Ile, Mich.