denis

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Английский Язык - Турецкий язык

Определение denis в Английский Язык Турецкий язык словарь

denis browne splints
(Tıp) Kongenital talipes equinovarus'un düzeltilmesinde kullanılan ateller
; a derivative of denis or dennis
Bir denis veya dennis türevini
Турецкий язык - Турецкий язык

Определение denis в Турецкий язык Турецкий язык словарь

DENİS
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Kirli, paslı
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
A male given name, a mostly British spelling variant of Dennis

Shall not thou and I, between Saint Denis and Saint George, compound a boy, half French, half English, that shall go to Constantinople and take the Turk by the beard?.

Burkitt Denis Parsons Denis Saint Diderot Denis Fustel de Coulanges Numa Denis Saint Denis St. Denis Ruth
a mostly British spelling variant of Dennis
{i} male first name; family name; Saint Denis, first bishop of Paris and patron saint of France during the 3rd century
plural of deni
dionysius
Denis Diderot
born Oct. 5, 1713, Langres, France died July 31, 1784, Paris French man of letters and philosopher. Educated by Jesuits, Diderot later received degrees from the University of Paris. From 1745 to 1772 he served as chief editor of the 35-volume Encyclopédie, a principal work of the Enlightenment. He composed such influential works as Letter on the Deaf and Dumb (1751), which studies the function of language, and Thoughts on the Interpretation of Nature (1754), acclaimed as the method of philosophical inquiry of the 18th century. The first great art critic, he was especially admired posthumously for his Essay on Painting (written 1765). His novels include The Nun (written 1760) and Rameau's Nephew (finished 1774); he also wrote plays and theoretical works on drama. See also Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
Denis Diderot
{i} (1713-1784) French writer and philosopher (editor of the French "Encyclopedie")
Denis P Burkitt
born Feb. 28, 1911, Enniskillen, N.Ire. died March 23, 1993, England British surgeon and medical researcher. He discovered Burkitt lymphoma, a lethal cancer of the lymphatic system with a high incidence among children. He showed that it was common in equatorial African regions where malaria and yellow fever are endemic and linked it to Epstein-Barr virus in children with immune systems depressed by chronic malaria. He later helped develop an effective chemotherapy treatment. Burkitt was also known for his theory that a high-fibre diet protects against colon cancer, publicized in his book Don't Forget Fibre in Your Diet (1979)
Denis Parsons Burkitt
born Feb. 28, 1911, Enniskillen, N.Ire. died March 23, 1993, England British surgeon and medical researcher. He discovered Burkitt lymphoma, a lethal cancer of the lymphatic system with a high incidence among children. He showed that it was common in equatorial African regions where malaria and yellow fever are endemic and linked it to Epstein-Barr virus in children with immune systems depressed by chronic malaria. He later helped develop an effective chemotherapy treatment. Burkitt was also known for his theory that a high-fibre diet protects against colon cancer, publicized in his book Don't Forget Fibre in Your Diet (1979)
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges
born March 18, 1830, Paris, France died Sept. 12, 1889, Massy French historian. He had a brilliant teaching career at the University of Strasbourg (1860-70) and later received other academic appointments. He championed the importance of objectivity and the unreliability of secondary sources, which became important tenets of modern historiography, and his insistence on the use of contemporary documents led to the full use of the French national archives in the 19th century. Most of his work, including La Cité antique (1864) and La Gaule romaine (1891), dealt with Roman Gaul and the Germanic invasions of the Roman Empire
Ruth St. Denis
orig. Ruth Dennis born Jan. 20, 1877, Newark, N.J., U.S. died July 21, 1968, Los Angeles, Calif. U.S. modern-dance innovator and teacher. She was a vaudeville performer before developing her dramatic dance act based on Asian dance forms. From 1906 to 1909 she toured in Europe to wide acclaim. In 1915 she and her husband, Ted Shawn, established the Denishawn dance company and school to present a new choreographic style of abstract "music visualization." The company frequently toured until it disbanded in 1931 when St. Denis and Shawn separated. Her interest in the use of dance in religion led her to found the Society of Spiritual Arts. She continued to perform, teach, and lecture into the 1960s
Saint Denis
or Saint Denys died 258?, Paris; Western feast day October 9; Eastern feast day October 3 Patron saint of France and traditionally the first bishop of Paris. Probably born in Rome, he was, according to the 6th-century historian and bishop Gregory of Tours, one of seven bishops sent to convert the people of Gaul during the reign of Decius. Little is known of his life; he is believed to have been martyred during the persecutions of the emperor Valerian. A 9th-century legend says that he was beheaded on Montmartre and that his decapitated body carried his head to the area northeast of Paris where the Benedictine abbey of St. Denis was founded
Saint-Denis
City (pop., 1999: 85,832), northern France. Now a suburb of Paris, until the mid-19th century it was only a small township centred on its famous abbey church, which had been the burial place of French kings. King Dagobert I founded the abbey in the 7th century and built it over the tomb of St. Denis, patron saint of France. Abbot Suger built there a new basilica which later transformed Western architecture from the Romanesque to the Gothic; most late-12th-century French cathedrals, including Chartres, are based on that of Saint-Denis. Remarkable tombs found there include those of Louis XII, Anne of Brittany, Henry II, and Catherine de Médicis. The city is now an industrial centre. City (pop., 1999: 131,557), capital of the French overseas department of Réunion, in the western Indian Ocean. It lies in a basin at the mouth of the St.-Denis River on the northern coast of the island, wedged between the ocean and a mountain rising abruptly behind it. It was originally the main port of Réunion, but an artificial harbour at Le Port, on the northwestern coast, replaced it in the 1880s. It is primarily an administrative town
Simeon Denis Poisson
{i} (1781-1840) French mathematician and physicist and geometer
st. denis
United States dancer and choreographer who collaborated with Ted Shawn (1877-1968)
denis

    Расстановка переносов

    Den·is

    Турецкое произношение

    denîs

    Произношение

    /ˈdenəs/ /ˈdɛnɪs/
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