owen

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Определение owen в Английский Язык Турецкий язык словарь

owen contour lines
(Diş Hekimliği) Yatay bir kesitte interglobüler boşlukları belirten içiçe halkalar
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
An Irish and Scottish patronymic surname from the Gaelic Mac Eoghain
A male given name of Welsh origin, possibly derived from Eugene, cognate to Gaelic Eòghan
A Welsh patronymic surname derived from the given name
British poet whose work reflects his experiences in World War I. He was killed in battle. Gehry Frank Owen Glendower Owen Owen Robert Owen Robert Dale Owen Wilfred Wister Owen
{i} male first name; family name
of Welsh origin, possibly derived from Eugene, cognate to Gaelic Eòghan
Own
English comparative anatomist and paleontologist who was an opponent of Darwinism (1804-1892) Welsh industrialist and social reformer who founded cooperative communities (1771-1858)
Welsh industrialist and social reformer who founded cooperative communities (1771-1858)
English comparative anatomist and paleontologist who was an opponent of Darwinism (1804-1892)
Owen Glendower
Welsh Owain Glyndwr born 1354 died 1416 Self-proclaimed prince of Wales who led an unsuccessful rebellion against England. Educated in England, he returned to Wales and touched off an uprising against Henry IV (under whom he had previously fought) in northern Wales in 1400. He was soon in control of most of Wales and had set up a Welsh Parliament. In 1403 his alliance with English nobles was crushed at Shrewsbury, and a later French alliance also failed; his strongholds at Aberystwyth and Harlech fell to the future Henry V in 1408-09. Glendower nonetheless remained active as a guerrilla warrior as late as 1412. His rebellions were the last major Welsh attempts to throw off English rule
Owen L. Snyder
car mechanic for the Team Cheever (car racing)
Owen Sound
A city of southeast Ontario, Canada, on Owen Sound, an inlet of Georgian Bay. It is a port and railroad terminal with varied industries. Population: 19,883
Owen Stanley Range
A mountain range extending about 483 km (300 mi) southeast to northwest on New Guinea Island in Papua New Guinea. It rises to 4,075.7 m (13,363 ft)
Owen Wister
born July 14, 1860, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S. died July 21, 1938, North Kingstown, R.I. U.S. novelist. A well-to-do Easterner who graduated from Harvard, he spent his summers in the West from 1885. After practicing law for two years, he devoted himself to a literary career. His novel The Virginian (1902), the story of a cattle-ranch foreman who depends for his life on a harsh code of ethics, was a great popular success and helped establish the cowboy as an American folk hero and stock fictional character; the novel became the basis of a play, numerous films, and even a television series. His other major work was Roosevelt: The Story of a Friendship, 1880-1919 (1930), detailing his long acquaintance with his Harvard classmate Theodore Roosevelt
Frank Owen Gehry
born Feb. 28, 1929, Toronto, Ont., Can. Canadian-born U.S architect. He studied at the University of Southern California and Harvard University. In his early buildings, his use of inexpensive materials (chain-link fencing, plywood, corrugated steel) gave many of his projects an unfinished, whimsical air. His structures are often characterized by unconventional or distorted shapes that have a sculptural, fragmented, or collagelike quality. In designing public buildings, he tends to cluster small units within a larger space rather than creating monolithic structures, thus emphasizing human scale. Of particular note is his Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (1991-97) in Spain, a shimmering pile of sharply twisting, curving shapes surfaced in titanium. Gehry won the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 1989
Robert Dale Owen
born Nov. 9, 1801, Glasgow, Scot. died June 24, 1877, Lake George, N.Y., U.S. U.S. social reformer. In 1825 he emigrated with his father, Robert Owen, to establish a community at New Harmony, Ind. He edited the local newspaper, the New Harmony Gazette, until 1827, when he became associated with Fanny Wright. The two eventually settled in New York City, where Owen edited the Free Enquirer, and both were active in the Workingmen's Party. Owen returned to New Harmony in 1832. After serving in the Indiana legislature, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives (1843-47), where he introduced a bill establishing the Smithsonian Institution. He later served as U.S. minister to Italy (1855-58). A strong advocate of emancipation, he urged an end to slavery in an 1861 letter to Abraham Lincoln that was said to have influenced the president greatly
Robert Owen
born May 14, 1771, Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales died Nov. 17, 1858, Newtown Welsh manufacturer and philanthropist. At his New Lanark cotton mills (Lanarkshire, Scot.), in partnership with Jeremy Bentham, he set up innovative social and industrial welfare programs, including improved housing and schools for young children. In A New View of Society (1813) he contended that character is wholly formed by one's environment. By 1817 his work had evolved into ideas presaging socialism and the cooperative movement, ideas he would spend much of his life preaching. He sponsored several experimental utopian communities of "Owenites" in Britain and the U.S., including one at New Harmony, Ind. (1825-28) where Owen lost some 80% of his fortune all of which proved short-lived. He strongly supported early labour unions, but opposition and repression swiftly dissolved them, and it was two generations before socialism again influenced unionism. He was the father of Robert Dale Owen
Sir Richard Owen
(1804-1892) British biologist and anatomist, developer of the theories of homology and analogy among living species, researcher who named the biological group "Dinosauria" (dinosaurs)
Wilfred Owen
His single volume of poems, published posthumously, is noted for its experiments in assonance. Benjamin Britten's celebrated War Requiem (1962) is a setting of Owen's poems
Wilfred Owen
a British poet who was a soldier in World War I and whose poems are mainly about the terrible events and experiences of the war. Some of his best-known poems, such as 'Anthem for Doomed Youth', are a protest against the idea that it is honourable to die for your country. He was killed just before the end of the war, and his poems were published after his death (1893-1918). born March 18, 1893, Oswetry, Shropshire, Eng. died Nov. 4, 1918, France British poet. Owen was already writing verse before he enlisted in the army in 1915, but the experience of trench warfare brought him to rapid maturity; the poignant poems he wrote after January 1917 are full of anger at the cruelty and waste of war and pity for its victims. A week before the armistice, he died in action at age
owen

    Расстановка переносов

    Ow·en

    Турецкое произношение

    ōın

    Произношение

    /ˈōən/ /ˈoʊən/
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