antonin

listen to the pronunciation of antonin
Турецкий язык - Турецкий язык

Определение antonin в Турецкий язык Турецкий язык словарь

antonin dvorak
'Slav Dansları, Yeni Dünya Senfonisi adlı yapıtları ile tanınmış dünya çapında üne kavuşan ilk Bohemyalı besteci
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
Artaud Antonin Raymond Antonin Scalia Antonin
Antonin Artaud
born Sept. 4, 1896, Marseille, France died March 4, 1948, Ivry-sur-Seine French poet, actor, and drama theorist. He wrote Surrealist poetry from 1925 and made his acting debut in Surrealist productions in Paris. He described his theory of drama in the Manifesto of the Theatre of Cruelty (1932; see Theatre of Cruelty) and The Theatre and Its Double (1938). His own plays (including Les Cenci, 1935) were failures, but his theories exerted great influence on playwrights of the Theatre of the Absurd. Lifelong mental illness confined him periodically to asylums from 1936
Antonin Dvorak
{i} (1841-1904) Czech composer
Antonin Raymond
born May 10, 1888, Kladno, Bohemia died Nov. 21, 1976, Langhorne, Pa., U.S. Czech-born U.S. architect. He immigrated to the U.S. in 1910. He assisted Frank Lloyd Wright in building the Imperial Hotel, Tokyo (1916). Remaining in Japan, he and his partner, Ladislav Rado, built numerous structures, mostly for Americans. One of the few Modernist architects working in Japan at the time, he influenced such Japanese architects as Yoshimura Junzo and Maekawa Kunio. Among his works were the Reader's Digest Building, Tokyo (1951; since destroyed), and the Nagoya International School (opened 1967), a circular structure serving a flexible, progressive educational program
Antonin Scalia
born March 11, 1936, Trenton, N.J., U.S. U.S. jurist. He studied at Georgetown University and Harvard Law School, where he edited its law review. Successively, he worked for a Cleveland law firm (1961-67), taught at the University of Virginia (1967-74), served as an assistant U.S. attorney general (1974-77), and taught at the University of Chicago (1977-82). He was appointed by Pres. Ronald Reagan to the U.S. Court of Appeals (1982) and then to the Supreme Court of the United States (1986). Among the court's most outspoken justices, he quickly earned a reputation for aggressive oral argument and scathingly critical written opinions, especially when expressing dissenting views. An opponent of "judicial activism," he favoured a restrained judiciary, deference to the original intent of the framers in constitutional interpretation, and a limited role for the federal government
antonin

    Турецкое произношение

    äntınîn

    Произношение

    /ˈantənən/ /ˈæntənɪn/
Избранное