corot
(ɔˈroʊ, kə-)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean baptiste Camille, 1796–1875, French painter.
|
fourier
(ˈfʊər iˌeɪ, -i ər)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean baptiste Joseph, 1768–1830, French mathematician and physicist.
|
bernadotte
(ˈbɜr nəˌdɒt)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean baptiste Jules, 1764–1844, French marshal under Napoleon; as Charles XIV, king of Sweden and Norway 1818–44.
|
fletcher
(Fletcher, John Fletcher)
Princeton's WordNet
prolific English dramatist who collaborated with Francis Beaumont and many other dramatists (1579-1625)
|
john fletcher
(Fletcher, John Fletcher)
Princeton's WordNet
prolific English dramatist who collaborated with Francis Beaumont and many other dramatists (1579-1625)
|
horoscope
Webster Dictionary
the planisphere invented by jean Paduanus
|
jane
Webster Dictionary
a kind of twilled cotton cloth. See jean
|
emile
(Emile)
Princeton's WordNet
the boy whose upbringing was described by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
|
piagetian
(Piagetian)
Princeton's WordNet
of or relating to or like or in the manner of jean Piaget
|
assimilation
(assimilation)
Princeton's WordNet
in the theories of jean Piaget: the application of a general schema to a particular instance
|
rousseauan
(Rousseauan)
Princeton's WordNet
of or pertaining to or characteristic of French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
|
accommodation
(accommodation)
Princeton's WordNet
in the theories of jean Piaget: the modification of internal representations in order to accommodate a changing knowledge of reality
|
labadist
Webster Dictionary
a follower of jean de Labadie, a religious teacher of the 17th century, who left the Roman Catholic Church and taught a kind of mysticism, and the obligation of community of property among Christians
|
pestalozzian
Webster Dictionary
belonging to, or characteristic of, a system of elementary education which combined manual training with other instruction, advocated and practiced by jean Henri Pestalozzi (1746-1827), a Swiss teacher
|
lamarckian
(əˈmɑr ki ən)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
of or pertaining to jean de Lamarck or Lamarckism.
|
arthur honegger
(Honegger, Arthur Honegger)
Princeton's WordNet
Swiss composer (born in France) who was the founding member of a group in Paris that included Erik Satie and Darius Milhaud and Francis Poulenc and jean Cocteau (1892-1955)
|
honegger
(Honegger, Arthur Honegger)
Princeton's WordNet
Swiss composer (born in France) who was the founding member of a group in Paris that included Erik Satie and Darius Milhaud and Francis Poulenc and jean Cocteau (1892-1955)
|
watteau
(ɒˈtoʊ, vɑ-)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean Antoine, 1684–1721, French painter.
|
nathan
(ˈneɪ θən)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
George jean, 1882–1958, U.S. drama critic.
|
rimbaud
(æmˈboʊ, rɛ̃-)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(Jean Nicolas) Arthur, 1854–91, French poet.
|
fragonard
(ɔˈnar)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean Honoré, 1732–1806, French painter.
|
vuillard
(ˈyɑr)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(Jean) Édouard, 1868–1940, French painter.
|
monroe
(ənˈroʊ)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Marilyn (Norma jean Baker or Mortenson), 1926–62, U.S. film actress.
|
kerouac
(ˈkɛr uˌæk)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jack (Jean-Louis Lefris de Kérouac), 1922–69, U.S. novelist.
|
delavigne
(ə lɑˈvin yə)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
(Jean François) Casimir, 1793–1843, French poet and playwright.
|
sismondi
(ɪsˈmɒn di;)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean Charles Léonard Simonde de, 1773–1842, Swiss historian and economist.
|
calvin
(ˈkæl vɪn)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
John (Jean Chauvin or Caulvin), 1509–64, French theologian and reformer in Switzerland: leader in the Protestant Reformation.
|
joinville
(ʒwɛ̃ˈvil for)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean de (zhän ), 1224?–1317, French chronicler.
|
froissart
(ˈfrɔɪ sɑrt;)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean (zhän ), 1333?–c1400, French chronicler.
|
picard
(ˈkɑr, -ˈkɑrd)
Random House Webster's College Dictionary
Jean (zhän ), 1620–82, French astronomer.
|
| New: We also know Zip Codes FYI! |