penn

listen to the pronunciation of penn
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
{i} state in the eastern USA
English Quaker colonizer in America. He founded the colony of Pennsylvania in 1681. English admiral who led the English fleet during the Dutch War (1665-1667). Pennsylvania. Penn Irving Penn William Rogers William Penn Adair Warren Robert Penn
Englishman and Quaker who founded the colony of Pennsylvania (1644-1718)
a university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
penn'orths
plural form of penn'orth
Penn Hills
A community of southwest Pennsylvania, a residential suburb of Philadelphia. Population: 51,430
Penn State
large public university located in the city of State College (Pennsylvania, USA)
penn'orth
{i} pennyworth, amount that has a value of one cent; small amount
penn'orth
During a discussion about something, if you have your two penn'orth or put in your two penn'orth, you add your own opinion. Please do be patient -- I'm sure you want to have your two penn'orth. a pennyworth (pennyworth)
two penn’orth
Two pennies' worth
two penn’orth
One's opinion or thoughts

That's just my two penn’orth; you can believe what you like.

Sean Penn
(born 1960) American film actor, winner of the 1997 Cannes Film Festival Award for best actor for his role in "She's So Lovely
Alexander Penn
{i} (1906-1972) Russian born Hebrew poet who immigrated to Israel in 1927
Irving Penn
born June 16, 1917, Plainfield, N.J., U.S. U.S. photographer. He aspired to be a painter but at 26 took a job designing photographic covers for Vogue and soon was established as a fashion photographer. His austere fashion images communicated elegance and luxury through compositional refinement and clarity of line rather than through the use of elaborate props and backdrops. He branched out into portraiture after World War II and became much admired as a portraitist of celebrities. In his portraits the subject is usually posed before a bare backdrop and photographed in natural northern light. The resulting images combine simplicity and directness with great formal sophistication
Robert Penn Warren
born April 24, 1905, Guthrie, Ky., U.S. died Sept. 15, 1989, Stratton, Vt. U.S. novelist, poet, and critic. Warren attended Vanderbilt University, where he joined the Fugitives, a group of poets who advocated the agrarian way of life in the South. Later he taught at several colleges and universities and helped found and edit The Southern Review (1935-42), possibly the most influential American literary magazine of the time. His writings often treat moral dilemmas in a South beset by the erosion of its traditional rural values. His best-known novel is All the King's Men (1946, Pulitzer Prize; film, 1949). The short-story volume The Circus in the Attic (1948) contains the notable "Blackberry Winter." He won Pulitzer prizes for poetry in 1958 and 1979 and became the first U.S. poet laureate in 1986
William Penn
an English leader of the Quakers (=a Christian religious group) , who was put in prison for having unacceptable religious beliefs. After he was let out of prison, he was given some land in North America, and he established a colony there as a place of religious freedom for Quakers and others to go and live in. He called the colony Pennsylvania, and planned and built the city of Philadelphia in 1682 (1644-1718). born Oct. 14, 1644, London, Eng. died July 30, 1718, Buckinghamshire English Quaker leader and founder of Pennsylvania. Expelled from Oxford for his Puritan beliefs, he was sent to manage the family estates in Ireland, where he joined the Society of Friends in 1667. He was imprisoned four times for stating his Quaker beliefs in print and in speech; one of his trials resulted in the precedent-setting Bushell's Case, which established the independence of juries. In The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience (1670), Penn advocated religious toleration and envisioned a colony based on religious and political freedom. On his father's death, he inherited his estates and his influence with Charles II, who granted him a vast province on the Delaware River in payment for debts owed his father. In 1682 he drafted a Frame of Government that established freedom of worship in the settlement. Upon his arrival later that year, he negotiated a series of treaties with the local Indians. In 1684 he traveled to England to defend his interests against claims by neighbouring Maryland. With the accession of his friend the duke of York as James II, he secured the release of imprisoned Quakers. He returned to Pennsylvania in 1699, where he wrote the Charter of Privileges, which allowed the assembly greater autonomy. The years after his return to England in 1701 were clouded by debt and illness
William Penn
(1644-1718) founder of the state of Pennsylvania (famous for his peaceful dealings with the Indians and planning the city of Philadelphia)
William Penn Adair Rogers
born Nov. 4, 1879, Indian Territory, U.S. [near present-day Claremore, Okla.] died Aug. 15, 1935, near Point Barrow, Alaska U.S. humorist and actor. Raised in Indian Territory, he demonstrated his rope-twirling skills in Wild West shows and vaudeville and gradually wove bits of homespun wit into his act. He was popular in New York City from 1905 and starred in Florenz Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic (1915). Noted for his good-natured but sharp criticism of current affairs, he wrote a newspaper column in the New York Times (from 1922) as well as several books. He performed on radio and in movies such as State Fair (1933) and Steamboat Round the Bend (1935). His death in a plane crash in Alaska with the aviator Wiley Post (1899-1935) was widely mourned
penn
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