Cronette



  1. Cornette joins analysts Eric Mac Lain, EJ Manuel and Mark Richt to preview and breakdown the ACC’s slate of football games each week. “Having worked with Eric, EJ and Coach Richt last season, I was able to establish a good rhythm, chemistry and most importantly strong friendships with the guys both in and out of the studio,” said Cornette.
  2. A cornette is a piece of female headwear. It is essentially a type of wimple consisting of a large, starched piece of white cloth that is folded upwards in such a way as to create the resemblance of horns (French: cornes) on the wearer's head.
Cronette provides different type of launch tasks and any task can be specified to launch different type of execution.
How it works in details:
All the tasks inside Cronette are represented in a document table. The task is visualised in a master and details interface (the well know layout used in a multitude of Mac software, the user selects the task in the master table and he can see and edit details visualsed under the table)
User can insert in a document how many tasks he likes
User can assign to a task a name and a note to recognise it
The user can select for a task to run, different time plan type:
Daily: running at any day
Weekly: specifying which day of any week to run
Monthly: specifying which day of any month to run
Yearly: specifying month and day to run
And specifying:
Up to ten different time to run in the days of the daily/weekly/monthly/yearly plan
To run at the document opening, if the daily/weekly/monthly/yearly plan matches with the current day and if the max run per day specified was not reached.
The last feature is useful to perform recurring activities as backups, report creations, emails sending and any other tasks you want to perform not based on time but as example when you shutdown your Mac and only in the days you specify
A painting of cornette-wearing Sisters of Charity by Armand Gautier (19th-century)
Polish nun wearing a white cornette and habit in 1939
Cronette

Cornette went above and beyond to help my son with his clearance to return to school after a Covid diagnosis. She followed up to ensure that the correct paperwork was completed and received by the school. As difficult as a Covid diagnosis is- Dr. Cornette and her assistant, Mario, made the process of clearance so much easier. Jim Cornette on Cameo! Cameo lets you book personalized videos from your favorite people.

A cornette is a piece of female headwear. It is essentially a type of wimple consisting of a large, starched piece of white cloth that is folded upwards in such a way as to create the resemblance of horns (French: cornes) on the wearer's head. It remained fashionable for some Parisian ladies around 1800,[1] wearing ones made of muslin or gauze and richly ornamented with lace.

Use by the Daughters of Charity[edit]

The cornette was retained as a distinctive piece of clothing into modern times by the Daughters of Charity, a Roman Catholicsociety of apostolic life founded by St. Vincent de Paul in the mid-17th century.[2] The founder wanted to have the sisters of this new type of religious congregation of women, that tended to the sick and poor, and were not required to remain in their cloister, resemble ordinary middle-class women as much as possible in their clothing, including the wearing of the cornette.

After the cornette generally fell into disuse, it became a distinctive feature of the Daughters of Charity, making theirs one of the most widely recognized religious habits. Because of the cornette, they were known in Ireland as the 'butterfly nuns'. In the United States, the Daughters of Charity wore wide, white cornettes for 114 years, from 1850 to 1964. With the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican (Vatican II), the nun's habits were modernized to return to a clothing that better reflected their charitable role, working with the poor and infirm.[3]

In popular culture[edit]

The 1967 television series The Flying Nun features Sister Bertrille, who due to her light weight and the heavily starched cornette is able to fly.[4]

Cornette

See also[edit]

Cronettes

Cornet instrument

References[edit]

  1. ^'Parisian Fashions'. News. The Times (5002). London. 13 January 1801. p. 3. in fashion among the Ladies of Paris
  2. ^'Daughters of Charity: Province of the West » History'. daughtersofcharity.com. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  3. ^'Why the Daughters of Charity don't wear white cornettes any longer'. Archived from the original on 2019-06-20. Retrieved 2019-06-20.
  4. ^'Today in Catholic History – The Last Episode of The Flying Nun'. Catholic: Under the Hood. 18 September 2010. Retrieved 5 September 2020.

External links[edit]

Www.cornettemanagement.com

  • Media related to cornettes at Wikimedia Commons

Cornette Farm Supply

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cornette&oldid=999958684'