steele

listen to the pronunciation of steele
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An English and Scottish surname from Middle English stele (“steel”); either a metal worker or a person considered to be as hard as steel
A mountain, 5,076.4 m (16,644 ft) high, in the St. Elias Mountains of southwest Yukon Territory, Canada. Irish-born English writer of plays and essays who founded and edited The Tatler (1709-1711) and, with Joseph Addison, The Spectator (1711-1712)
An English and Scottish surname from Middle English stele meaning steel; either a metal worker or a person considered to be as hard as steel
English writer (1672-1729)
Sir Richard Steele
an Irish writer who started the magazine The Tatler. His friend Joseph Addison also wrote articles for it (1672-1729). born 1672, Dublin, Ire. died Sept. 1, 1729, Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire, Wales English journalist, dramatist, essayist, and politician. He began his long friendship with Joseph Addison at school and attempted an army career before turning to writing. He launched and was the principal author (under the name Isaac Bickerstaff) of the essay periodical The Tatler (April 1709-January 1711), in which he created the mixture of entertainment and instruction in manners and morals that he and Addison would perfect in The Spectator. His attractive, often casual writing style was a perfect foil for Addison's more measured, erudite prose. He made many later ventures into journalism, some politically partisan, and held several government posts. In 1714 he became governor of Drury Lane Theatre, where he produced The Conscious Lovers (1723), one of the century's most popular plays and perhaps the best example of English sentimental comedy
steele

    Расстановка переносов

    Steele

    Турецкое произношение

    stil

    Произношение

    /ˈstēl/ /ˈstiːl/
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