carlos

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A male given name of Spanish and Portuguese origin. English equivalent: Charles
A male given name of Spanish or Portuguese origin. English equivalent: Charles
Buell Don Carlos Casals Pablo Carlos Salvador Defilló Céspedes y Borja del Castillo Carlos Manuel de Chávez y Ramírez Carlos Antonio de Padua Finlay Carlos Juan Fuentes Carlos Hearn Patricio Lafcadio Tessima Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Carlos Jobim Antonio Carlos Juan Carlos I Mariátegui José Carlos Menem Carlos Saúl Pérez Rodríguez Carlos Andrés Prestes Luís Carlos Salinas de Gortari Carlos Saura Atarés Carlos Williams William Carlos
{i} male first name
Venezuelan master terrorist raised by a Marxist-Leninist father; trained and worked with many terrorist groups (born in 1949)
Carlos Chagas
{i} Carlos Justiniano Ribeiro Chagas (1879-1934), Brazilian doctor who was influential in finding a cure for malaria and discovering the Chagas' disease
Carlos Fuentes
born Nov. 11, 1928, Mexico City, Mex. Mexican writer and diplomat. The son of a career diplomat, he traveled widely before studying law and entering the diplomatic service. He is best known for his experimental novels. His first, Where the Air Is Clear (1958), a bitter indictment of Mexican society, won him national prestige. The Death of Artemio Cruz (1962), about the final hours of an unscrupulous former revolutionary, made his international reputation. Among his later novels are Terra Nostra (1975), The Hydra Head (1978), The Old Gringo (1985), and The Years with Laura Díaz (1999). "The Buried Mirror" (1992) is a long essay on Hispanic cultures
Carlos J Finlay
born Dec. 3, 1833, Puerto Príncipe, Cuba died Aug. 20, 1915, Havana Cuban epidemiologist. He is known for his discovery that yellow fever is transmitted by a mosquito. Though he published experimental evidence in 1886, his ideas were ignored for nearly 20 years. He urged the study of means of transmission and stated that the carrier was the mosquito Culex fasciatus (now called Aedes aegypti). In 1900 Walter Reed confirmed Finlay's theory, leading to the eradication of yellow fever in Cuba and Panama by William Gorgas. After his death, the Cuban government created the Finlay Institute for Investigations in Tropical Medicine
Carlos Juan Finlay
born Dec. 3, 1833, Puerto Príncipe, Cuba died Aug. 20, 1915, Havana Cuban epidemiologist. He is known for his discovery that yellow fever is transmitted by a mosquito. Though he published experimental evidence in 1886, his ideas were ignored for nearly 20 years. He urged the study of means of transmission and stated that the carrier was the mosquito Culex fasciatus (now called Aedes aegypti). In 1900 Walter Reed confirmed Finlay's theory, leading to the eradication of yellow fever in Cuba and Panama by William Gorgas. After his death, the Cuban government created the Finlay Institute for Investigations in Tropical Medicine
Carlos Justiniano Ribeiro Chagas
{i} Carlos Chagas (1879-1934), Brazilian doctor who was influential in finding a cure for malaria and discovering the Chagas' disease
Carlos Menem
born July 2, 1930, Anillaco, Arg. President of Argentina (1989-99). The son of Syrian immigrants, he converted to Roman Catholicism and joined the Peronist movement in 1956. He held typical Peronist views, favouring nationalism, expansion of the government, large raises for wage earners, and tax breaks for businesses. By the time he took office, however, inflation had risen to 28,000% and Argentina was in crisis; he consequently abandoned his party orthodoxy in favour of a fiscally conservative policy and succeeded in stabilizing the economy. A flamboyant figure, he enjoyed great popularity despite his controversial pardoning of convicted human-rights violators connected with the period of military rule. In 2001 Menem was placed under house arrest after he was indicted for illegal arms dealing, but he was released in 2002
Carlos Salinas
born April 3, 1948, Mexico City, Mex. President of Mexico (1988-94). Son of a Mexican senator, Salinas earned a Ph.D. in economics at Harvard University and held various governmental posts until he was elected president in 1988 by a slim margin; vote fraud was widely charged. He pursued a program of economic retrenchment and privatization, selling off hundreds of inefficient state-owned corporations and spending part of the proceeds on infrastructure and social services. In 1991-92 his government co-negotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement. The economic collapse immediately following his term made him the target of bitter criticism. The assassination of his party's nominee as his successor was linked to Salinas's associates, and Salinas fled to the U.S. and eventually Ireland. His brother Raúl, widely suspected of extensive corruption, was convicted in 1999 of complicity in another assassination
Carlos Salinas de Gortari
born April 3, 1948, Mexico City, Mex. President of Mexico (1988-94). Son of a Mexican senator, Salinas earned a Ph.D. in economics at Harvard University and held various governmental posts until he was elected president in 1988 by a slim margin; vote fraud was widely charged. He pursued a program of economic retrenchment and privatization, selling off hundreds of inefficient state-owned corporations and spending part of the proceeds on infrastructure and social services. In 1991-92 his government co-negotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement. The economic collapse immediately following his term made him the target of bitter criticism. The assassination of his party's nominee as his successor was linked to Salinas's associates, and Salinas fled to the U.S. and eventually Ireland. His brother Raúl, widely suspected of extensive corruption, was convicted in 1999 of complicity in another assassination
Carlos Santana
{i} (born 1947) Mexican-born American musician, leader of the rock group "Santana", winner of many Grammy Awards
Carlos Saura
born Jan. 4, 1932, Huesca, Spain Spanish film director. He won notice as a director with The Hunt (1965), the first of his allegorical films criticizing Spanish society under Francisco Franco. He wrote or cowrote the screenplays for and directed The Garden of Delights (1970), which was delayed then mutilated by Spanish censors; Anna and the Wolves (1972); and Cousin Angelica (1973), which was the first Spanish film to present the Spanish Civil War from the viewpoint of the losing Republican cause. He collaborated with the choreographer-dancer Antonio Gades on the flamenco dramas Blood Wedding (1981), Carmen (1983), and Love the Magician (1986). His later films include Flamenco (1997) and Tango (1998)
Carlos Saúl Menem
born July 2, 1930, Anillaco, Arg. President of Argentina (1989-99). The son of Syrian immigrants, he converted to Roman Catholicism and joined the Peronist movement in 1956. He held typical Peronist views, favouring nationalism, expansion of the government, large raises for wage earners, and tax breaks for businesses. By the time he took office, however, inflation had risen to 28,000% and Argentina was in crisis; he consequently abandoned his party orthodoxy in favour of a fiscally conservative policy and succeeded in stabilizing the economy. A flamboyant figure, he enjoyed great popularity despite his controversial pardoning of convicted human-rights violators connected with the period of military rule. In 2001 Menem was placed under house arrest after he was indicted for illegal arms dealing, but he was released in 2002
San Carlos
One name for the mission located in Monterey County, California
San Carlos
The native language spoken in the Monterey County region
San Carlos
A city located in San Mateo County, California, United States
San Carlos
A native people of the Monterey County region
San Carlos
Places named after Saint Charles (acquired from the Spanish)
Antonio Carlos Jobim
born Jan. 25, 1927, Rio de Janeiro, Braz. died Dec. 8, 1994, New York, N.Y., U.S. Brazilian songwriter and composer. He performed on guitar and piano in Rio de Janeiro clubs before becoming music director of Odeon Records. In 1959 he and Luís Bonfá composed the score for the film Black Orpheus, and his worldwide success soon followed. He transformed samba music into bossa nova ("new wrinkle" or "new wave"), a fusion of understated samba pulse (quiet percussion, unamplified guitars playing subtly complex rhythms), gentle singing, and the melodic and sophisticated harmonies of cool jazz; the style found a long-lasting niche in popular music. He collaborated with Frank Sinatra, Stan Getz, and Astrud Gilberto, and he also composed classical works and film scores. His more than 400 songs include "One-Note Samba," "Meditation," and "The Girl from Ipanema
Carlo
Carlo Broschi Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Blasis Carlo Carlo Alberto Cherubini Luigi Carlo Zanobi Salvadore Maria Crivelli Carlo Gesualdo Carlo prince of Venosa Giulini Carlo Maria Goldoni Carlo Menotti Gian Carlo Monte Carlo method Monte Carlo Sforza Carlo Count
Carlo
{i} male first name
Carlo
A male given name of Italian origin. English equivalents: Charles, Carl
Don Carlos Buell
born March 23, 1818, near Marietta, Ohio, U.S. died Nov. 19, 1898, Rockport, Ky. U.S. general. A graduate of West Point, he was appointed general of volunteers at the start of the American Civil War, and he helped organize the Union's Army of the Potomac. He was sent to Kentucky to succeed William T. Sherman and to organize the Army of the Ohio. In 1862 he was Union commander in the Kentucky campaign against Confederate forces under Braxton Bragg. Following the Battle of Perryville, he was removed from his command for alleged tardiness in his pursuit of Confederate forces
Juan Carlos
born Jan. 5, 1938, Rome, Italy King of Spain from 1975. The grandson of Alfonso XIII, he lived in exile until 1947. After Francisco Franco abolished the republic and declared Spain a representative monarchy, he prepared Juan Carlos for his future role, paying particular attention to his military education. In 1969 Juan Carlos was designated prince; he acceded to the Spanish throne two days after Franco's death. Although he had sworn loyalty to Franco's National Movement, he proved to be relatively liberal and helped restore parliamentary democracy. In 1981 he deflated a potential military coup and preserved the democracy. He became the first Spanish king to visit the Americas and was the first crowned monarch to make an official visit to China. Throughout his tenure as king, he traveled abroad on many goodwill missions and was very popular at home
Luís Carlos Prestes
born Jan. 3, 1898, Pôrto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Braz. died March 7, 1990, Rio de Janeiro Brazilian revolutionary. Beginning in 1924, he led a rebel force on a three-year trek through Brazil's interior in an effort to spark a rebellion in the countryside. Although the effort failed, he became a romantic hero. He went on to lead the Brazilian Communist Party, which advocated ending payments on the national debt, nationalization of foreign-owned companies, and land reform. Imprisoned after a violent uprising in 1935, he was released after World War II and later served briefly as a senator
Pablo Carlos Salvador Defilló Casals
orig. Pau Casals born Dec. 29, 1876, Vendrell, Spain died Oct. 22, 1973, Río Piedras, P.R. Spanish (Catalan)-born U.S. cellist and conductor. He received early instruction from his organist father and took up the cello and composition in his teens. A romantic who eschewed the drier, literal interpretations of modernism, Casals established an innovative technique employing more flexible fingering positions and freer bowing. He performed internationally as soloist, in a trio with Alfred Cortot (1877-1962) and Jacques Thibaud (1880-1953), and from the 1920s as a conductor. Refusing to return to Spain after Francisco Franco took power, he ultimately made his home in Puerto Rico
Patricio Lafcadio Tessima Carlos Hearn
Japanese Koizumi Yakumo born June 27, 1850, Levkás, Ionian Islands, Greece died Sept. 26, 1904, kubo, Japan Irish-U.S.-Japanese writer, translator, and teacher. He immigrated to the U.S. at age 19 and worked as a reporter and translator, writing on a wide range of subjects. In 1890 he traveled as a magazine writer to Japan, where he soon became a teacher, took a Japanese wife and name, and became a Japanese subject. Articles and books about Japan's customs, religion, and literature followed, including Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan (1894), Exotics and Retrospective (1898), In Ghostly Japan (1899), Shadowings (1900), and A Japanese Miscellany (1901); Kwaidan (1904) is a collection of supernatural stories and haiku translations. It was Hearn who, perhaps more than any other single person, introduced the broad culture of Japan to the West
William Carlos Williams
a US poet and medical doctor who wrote mainly about ordinary life. His best known poems include Paterson. He also wrote plays and essays, and won a Pulitzer Prize in 1963 for Pictures from Breughel (1883-1963). born Sept. 17, 1883, Rutherford, N.J., U.S. died March 4, 1963, Rutherford U.S. poet. Trained as a pediatrician, Williams wrote poetry and practiced medicine in his hometown. He is noted for making the ordinary appear extraordinary through clear and discrete imagery, as in the fresh and direct impressions of the sensuous world expressed in "The Red Wheelbarrow," from Spring and All (1923). Paterson (1946-58), a five-part long poem, evokes a complex vision of modern American life. In 1963 he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in poetry for Pictures from Brueghel (1962). His numerous prose works include essays, a trilogy of novels, short stories, drama, and autobiography
juan carlos
king of Spain since 1975 (born in 1938)
san carlos apache
an Apache language
carlos

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    Car·los

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    kärlōs

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    /ˈkärlōs/ /ˈkɑːrloʊs/

    Videolar

    ... Carlos, who's now actually one of my best friends. ...
    ... They had Zidane, Raul, Roberto, Carlos, Ronaldo. ...