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  1. Definition of 'special' special. (speʃəl ) adjective A2. Someone or something that is special is better or more important than other people or things. [...] See full entry for 'special' Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. COBUILD Collocations. special section. comments section. separate section.

  2. Special Section (French: Section spéciale) is a 1975 French film directed by Costa-Gavras and based on the novel L'affaire de la Section Spéciale by Hervé Villeré. It stars Louis Seigner , Roland Bertin , Michael Lonsdale , Ivo Garrani , François Maistre , Jacques Spiesser , Henri Serre , Heinz Bennent and Claude Piéplu .

  3. If you are citing an article within a special section or issue (rather than the entire issue or section), use the format for a journal article. You do not need to include the title of the special section or issue.

    • Alexis Lamb
    • 2020
  4. Apr 23, 1975 · Special Section: Directed by Costa-Gavras. With Louis Seigner, Roland Bertin, Michael Lonsdale, Ivo Garrani. In occupied France during World War II a German officer is murdered. The collaborationist Vichy government decides to pin the murder on six petty criminals.

    • (1.6K)
    • Drama, History, Thriller
    • Costa-Gavras
    • 1975-04-23
  5. ieeeaccess.ieee.org › special-sections › open-special-sectionsOpen Special Sections - IEEE Access

    IEEE Access Special Sections are a collection of articles grouped together on IEEE Xplore that focus on unique topics; topics of research that belong within the IEEE but would be considered out of scope for most of the IEEE journals (e.g. multidisciplinary or boundary-pushing topics).

  6. In occupied France during the WWII, a German officer is murdered. The collaborationist Vichy government decides to pin the murder on six petty criminals. Loyal judges are called in to convict them as quickly as possible.

  7. Claude Pieplu as President of court. "If "Special Section" is to be believed - and there is, I'm afraid, no reason not to - the Vichy government early in the French occupation enforced a series of retroactive laws that sent prisoners to their deaths to appease the Germans.