susan

listen to the pronunciation of susan
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lazy Susan
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susan sarandon
Thelma ve Louis, Gönüllü Rehine gibi filmleriyle tanınmış ABD'li sinema oyuncusu
İngilizce - İngilizce
A female given name

Even on issues pertaining to their daughter, the Yazdans took a very different approach. Imagine changing that charming name, Sooki, part of her native heritage, to plain old Susan!.

{i} female first name (form of Susannah)
the English form of Susanna and Susannah, used since the Middle Ages, with the latest popularity peak in the mid-twentieth century
Anthony Susan Brownell Bell Burnell Susan Jocelyn Susan Jocelyn Bell black eyed Susan Byatt Antonia Susan Antonia Susan Drabble Sarandon Susan Susan Abigail Tomalin Sontag Susan Susan Rosenblatt Marie Susan Etherington
Susan B Anthony
born Feb. 15, 1820, Adams, Mass., U.S. died March 13, 1906, Rochester, N.Y. U.S. pioneer in the women's suffrage movement. A precocious child, she learned to read and write at the age of three. After attending a boarding school in Philadelphia, she took a teaching position in a Quaker seminary in upstate New York. She taught at a female academy (1846-49) and then settled in her family home near Rochester, N.Y. There she met many leading abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison. The rebuff of her attempt to speak at a temperance meeting in Albany in 1852 prompted her to join Elizabeth Cady Stanton in organizing the Woman's State Temperance Society of New York. From this time she was a tireless campaigner for abolition and women's rights. During the early phase of the Civil War she helped organize the Women's National Loyal League, which urged the case for emancipation. After the war, she campaigned unsuccessfully to have the language of the Fourteenth Amendment altered to allow for woman as well as "Negro" suffrage. In 1868 she represented the Working Women's Association of New York, which she had recently organized, at the National Labor Union convention. In January 1869 she organized a woman suffrage convention in Washington, D.C., and in May she and Stanton formed the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). As a test of the legality of the suffrage provision of the Fourteenth Amendment, she cast a vote in the 1872 presidential election in Rochester. She was arrested, convicted (the judge's directed verdict of guilty had been written before the trial began), and fined; though she refused to pay the fine, the case was carried no further. She served as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (1892-1900) and lectured throughout the country for a federal women's-suffrage amendment
Susan B. Anthony
a US woman who tried to help women get the right to vote (1820-1906)
Susan B. Anthony
(1820-1906) USA political activist and leader of the women's suffrage movement
Susan Brownell Anthony
born Feb. 15, 1820, Adams, Mass., U.S. died March 13, 1906, Rochester, N.Y. U.S. pioneer in the women's suffrage movement. A precocious child, she learned to read and write at the age of three. After attending a boarding school in Philadelphia, she took a teaching position in a Quaker seminary in upstate New York. She taught at a female academy (1846-49) and then settled in her family home near Rochester, N.Y. There she met many leading abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison. The rebuff of her attempt to speak at a temperance meeting in Albany in 1852 prompted her to join Elizabeth Cady Stanton in organizing the Woman's State Temperance Society of New York. From this time she was a tireless campaigner for abolition and women's rights. During the early phase of the Civil War she helped organize the Women's National Loyal League, which urged the case for emancipation. After the war, she campaigned unsuccessfully to have the language of the Fourteenth Amendment altered to allow for woman as well as "Negro" suffrage. In 1868 she represented the Working Women's Association of New York, which she had recently organized, at the National Labor Union convention. In January 1869 she organized a woman suffrage convention in Washington, D.C., and in May she and Stanton formed the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). As a test of the legality of the suffrage provision of the Fourteenth Amendment, she cast a vote in the 1872 presidential election in Rochester. She was arrested, convicted (the judge's directed verdict of guilty had been written before the trial began), and fined; though she refused to pay the fine, the case was carried no further. She served as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (1892-1900) and lectured throughout the country for a federal women's-suffrage amendment
Susan Jocelyn Bell Burnell
orig. Susan Jocelyn Bell born July 15, 1943, Belfast, N.Ire. British astronomer. As a research assistant at the University of Cambridge, she assisted in constructing a large radio telescope and discovered pulsars, cosmic sources of peculiar radio pulses, providing the first direct evidence for the existence of rapidly spinning neutron stars. The 1974 Nobel Prize for Physics was awarded for the discovery of pulsars to Antony Hewish (her adviser) and Martin Ryle, sparking a controversy over the omission of Bell Burnell. She subsequently became a professor at Open University and vice president of the Royal Astronomical Society
Susan Sarandon
orig. Susan Abigail Tomalin born Oct. 4, 1946, New York, N.Y., U.S. U.S. film actress. After reading with her husband, Chris Sarandon (divorced 1979), at one of his auditions, she was cast as the female lead in Joe (1970). After winning fans in the campy Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), she proved her talent in films such as Pretty Baby (1978), Atlantic City (1981), and The Witches of Eastwick (1987). Her later films include Bull Durham (1988), Thelma and Louise (1991), Lorenzo's Oil (1992), Dead Man Walking (1995, Academy Award), Cradle Will Rock (1999), and Igby Goes Down (2002)
Susan Sontag
a US writer and critic whose books about modern society and culture include Against Interpretation and Illness as Metaphor. She has also written novels and stories (1933- ). orig. Susan Rosenblatt born Jan. 16, 1933, New York, N.Y., U.S. died Dec. 28, 2004, New York U.S. writer. She studied at the University of Chicago and Harvard University and taught philosophy at several institutions. In the early 1960s she began contributing to such periodicals as the New York Review of Books, Commentary, and Partisan Review, her French-influenced essays being characterized by a serious philosophical approach to aspects of modern culture rarely taken seriously at the time, including films, popular music, and "camp" sensibility. Collections of her essays include the influential Against Interpretation, and Other Essays (1966) and Styles of Radical Will (1969). Her later critical works include On Photography (1977), Illness as Metaphor (1978), and AIDS and Its Metaphors (1989). She also wrote screenplays and novels, including The Volcano Lover (1992) and In America (2000)
susan b anthony dollar
a United States coin worth one dollar
black-eyed Susan
A flowering annual plant Rudbeckia hirta; the state flower of Maryland
lazy Susan
A carousel for condiments, or for serving other foods, used to keep them within easy reach. Also, rotating shelves often installed in a corner kitchen cabinet to help utilize unused or inaccessible space
black-eyed susan
a slender tropical climbing plant having flowers with yellowish petals and a dark centre. (Thunbergia alata.)
black-eyed susan
a type of cultivated rudbeckia. (Rudbeckia hirta.)
Antonia Susan Byatt
orig. Antonia Susan Drabble born Aug. 24, 1936, Sheffield, Eng. British novelist and scholar. Sister of Margaret Drabble, she was educated at Cambridge and taught at University College, London. Her third novel, The Virgin in the Garden (1978), won high acclaim; the sequel Still Life (1985) followed. Possession (1990), a virtuoso double narrative, won the 1990 Booker Prize, and both it and Angels and Insects (1991) were adapted for film. Her story collections include The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye (1995) and Elementals (1998). Degrees of Freedom (1965) was the first major study of Iris Murdoch. In 2002 Byatt published the novel A Whistling Woman, the last of a series of four novels beginning with The Virgin in the Garden featuring the character Frederica Potter
black-eyed Susan
Either of two North American coneflowers (Rudbeckia hirta and R. serotina) having flower heads with deep yellow to orange petals and dark conical centers. The stems are rough and hairy; the leaves are large and ovate at the base of the plant and narrow at the top
black-eyed susan
the state flower of Maryland; of central and southeastern United States; having daisylike flowers with dark centers and yellow to orange rays tropical African climbing plant having yellow flowers with a dark purple center
black-eyed susan
annual weedy herb with ephemeral yellow purple-eyed flowers; Old World tropics; naturalized as a weed in North America
black-eyed susan
the state flower of Maryland; of central and southeastern United States; having daisylike flowers with dark centers and yellow to orange rays
black-eyed susan
tropical African climbing plant having yellow flowers with a dark purple center
blackeyed susan
The bladder ketmie
blackeyed susan
The coneflower, or yellow daisy (Rudbeckia hirta)
lazy Susan
A revolving tray for condiments or food
susan

    Heceleme

    Su·san

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    suzın

    Telaffuz

    /ˈso͞ozən/ /ˈsuːzən/

    Etimoloji

    [ -'sü-z&n ] (noun.) 1892. English form of the biblical Susanna, from Hebrew שׁוֹשַׁנָּה (Šōšannā, “rose, or lily”); from persian soussan "lily (flower)"

    Videolar

    ... CROWLEY: I want to move us along here to Susan Katz, who has a question. ...