Select Keyboard:
Türkçe ▾
  1. Türkçe
  2. English
  3. العربية
  4. Dansk
  5. Deutsch
  6. Ελληνικά
  7. Español
  8. فارسی
  9. Français
  10. Italiano
  11. Kurdî
  12. Nederlands
  13. Polski
  14. Português Brasileiro
  15. Português
  16. Русский
  17. Suomi
  18. Svenska
  19. 中文注音符号
  20. 中文仓颉输入法
X
"1234567890*-Bksp
Tabqwertyuıopğü,
CapsasdfghjklşiEnter
Shift<zxcvbnmöç.Shift
AltGr

emmet

listen to the pronunciation of emmet
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
An ant

We are scurrying emmets or pismires with our sad little comedies.

A tourist
{n} a kind of insect, ant, pismire
{i} ant; social insect living in organized colonies
Robert Emmet Sherwood
born April 4, 1896, New Rochelle, N.Y., U.S. died Nov. 14, 1955, New York, N.Y. U.S. playwright. Sherwood was a magazine editor in New York City and a member of the Algonquin Round Table, the centre of a New York literary coterie. He examined the pointlessness of war in his first play, The Road to Rome (1927). Idiot's Delight (1936), Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1938), and There Shall Be No Night (1940) won Pulitzer prizes. In 1938 he cofounded the Playwrights' Company, which became a major producing company. During World War II he wrote speeches for Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt and headed the overseas branch of the Office of War Information (1941-44). His book Roosevelt and Hopkins (1948) won a Pulitzer Prize. Many of his plays were adapted for film; his original screenplays include The Best Years of Our Lives (1946, Academy Award)
emmet

    الواصلة

    Em·met

    التركية النطق

    emît

    النطق

    /ˈemət/ /ˈɛmɪt/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () Middle English emete, from Old English æmete, (bef. 12c) Cognate to ant.
المفضلات