crawford

listen to the pronunciation of crawford
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von crawford im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

family name
soyadı

Çin'de önce soyadımızı sonra adımızı koyarız. - In China, we put our family name first, then our name.

Herhangi biri Tom'un soyadını biliyor mu? - Does anyone know Tom's family name?

family name
aile adı

Tom mahkum edilmişse aile adımız mahvolacak. - Our family name will be ruined if Tom is convicted.

Aile adın nasıl yazılır? - How is your family name written?

Englisch - Englisch
An English and Scottish habitational surname derived from several different placenames
American sculptor and noted exponent of neoclassicism. His works include Armed Freedom atop the U.S. Capitol. Crawford Seeger Ruth Ruth Porter Crawford Crawford Cheryl Crawford Isabella Valancy Crawford Joan Crawford William Harris Gorgas William Crawford Kelly Walter Crawford
{i} family name
United States film actress (1908-1977) United States neoclassical sculptor (1814-1857)
United States neoclassical sculptor (1814-1857)
United States film actress (1908-1977)
William Crawford, of New Jersey
A Crawford peach; a well-known freestone peach, with yellow flesh, first raised by Mr
Broderick Crawford
Two pair tens and fours
Broderick Crawford
A ten and a four as a starting hand in Texas hold 'em
Cheryl Crawford
born Sept. 24, 1902, Akron, Ohio, U.S. died Oct. 7, 1986, New York, N.Y. U.S. actress and theatre producer. She acted with the Theatre Guild from 1923 and became its casting manager (1928-30). She helped found the Group Theatre in 1931. A cofounder of the Actors Studio in 1947, she went on to serve as its executive producer. Her notable Broadway productions included Brigadoon (1947) and Tennessee Williams's The Rose Tattoo (1951) and Sweet Bird of Youth (1959)
Isabella Valancy Crawford
v. born Dec. 25, 1850, Dublin, Ire. died Feb. 12, 1887, Toronto, Ont., Can. Irish-born Canadian poet. She immigrated to Canada with her family in 1858. From 1875 until her death, she lived with her mother in Toronto, meagrely sustained by sales of stories and poems to periodicals. The only book published during her lifetime (at her own expense) was Old Spookses' Pass, Malcom's Katie, and Other Poems (1884). Her work, notable for its vivid descriptions of the Canadian landscape, was rediscovered in the 1970s, and many collections have since been published
Joan Crawford
one of America's most famous film actresses, who usually appeared as characters who were very brave and determined, but often also very unhappy. Her films include Mildred Pierce (1945) and Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) (1904-77). orig. Lucille Fay LeSueur born March 23, 1908, San Antonio, Texas, U.S. died May 10, 1977, New York, N.Y. U.S. film actress. She was a dancer in a Broadway chorus line when she won her first Hollywood contract in the mid 1920s. After portraying flappers in such films as Our Dancing Daughters (1928), she played opportunistic girls in such Depression-era dramas as Grand Hotel (1932) and The Women (1939). With her dark eyebrows, padded shoulders, and hysterical intensity, she reinvented herself as a suffering heroine in Mildred Pierce (1945, Academy Award) and in psychological melodramas including Possessed (1947) and Sudden Fear (1952). Her later films included Queen Bee (1955) and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford (1908-1977, Lucille Fay Le Sueur) American actress and businesswoman, Academy Award winner
Ruth Crawford Seeger
orig. Ruth Porter Crawford born July 3, 1901, East Liverpool, Ohio, U.S. died Nov. 18, 1953, Chevy Chase, Md. U.S. composer. She studied piano as a child and was self-taught as a composer until she entered the American Conservatory. After early works influenced by Alexander Scriabin, she wrote several astonishing serial pieces, including her String Quartet (1931). She married the musicologist Charles Seeger (1886-1979) in 1931, becoming folk singer Pete Seeger's stepmother. She composed little after that but became an influential curator of American folk music
Walter Crawford Kelly
born Aug. 25, 1913, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S. died Oct. 18, 1973, Los Angeles, Calif. U.S. cartoonist. From 1935 he produced animation drawings for Walt Disney Productions, and in the 1940s he worked as a commercial artist in New York. His best-known character, the opossum Pogo, first appeared in a comic book 1943. In 1948 Pogo began to be published as a daily comic strip in the New York Star, and it was soon appearing in many other newspapers. Skillfully drawn, with witty and literate text, it featured Pogo and his winning animal friends in Okefenokee Swamp, characters Kelly often used to satirize prominent political figures
William Crawford Gorgas
born Oct. 3, 1854, Mobile, Ala., U.S. died July 3, 1920, London, Eng. U.S. Army surgeon. Son of the Confederate general Josiah Gorgas (1818-83), he served in the U.S. Army for many years. In charge of sanitation measures in Havana with the army's medical corps in 1898, he conducted experiments on mosquito transmission of yellow fever and effectively eliminated it from the area. Sent to Panama in 1904, he eradicated yellow fever from the Canal Zone and brought malaria under control, removing the chief obstacles to building the Panama Canal. He was surgeon general of the U.S. Army from 1914 to 1918
William H Crawford
born Feb. 24, 1772, Amherst county, Va. died Sept. 15, 1834, Elberton, Ga., U.S. U.S. political leader and presidential aspirant. He taught school and practiced law before being elected to the Georgia legislature in 1803. He served in the U.S. Senate (1807-13), where he backed the declaration of war against Britain in 1812 (see War of 1812). He later served as minister to France (1813-15), secretary of war (1815-16), and secretary of the treasury (1816-25). Nominated for president by the congressional caucus of the Democratic-Republican Party, he was one of four presidential candidates in the 1824 election, which was won by John Quincy Adams
William Harris Crawford
born Feb. 24, 1772, Amherst county, Va. died Sept. 15, 1834, Elberton, Ga., U.S. U.S. political leader and presidential aspirant. He taught school and practiced law before being elected to the Georgia legislature in 1803. He served in the U.S. Senate (1807-13), where he backed the declaration of war against Britain in 1812 (see War of 1812). He later served as minister to France (1813-15), secretary of war (1815-16), and secretary of the treasury (1816-25). Nominated for president by the congressional caucus of the Democratic-Republican Party, he was one of four presidential candidates in the 1824 election, which was won by John Quincy Adams
crawford

    Silbentrennung

    Craw·ford

    Türkische aussprache

    krôfırd

    Aussprache

    /ˈkrôfərd/ /ˈkrɔːfɜrd/

    Videos

    ... I'M KIM CRAWFORD AND I HAVE A FEELING ...
Favoriten