simeon

listen to the pronunciation of simeon
ألمانية - التركية
n.pr. (Bibel) $emun
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
One of the Israelite tribes, descended from Simeon
A male given name
Second son of Jacob, by his wife Leah
In the New Testament, the devout Jew who proclaimed the Nunc Dimittis while holding the infant Jesus in his arms
{i} Hebrew name; name of the second son of Jacob (from the Bible)
given name, male
known as Simeon the Great born 864/865 died May 27, 927 Tsar of the first Bulgarian empire (925-927). The son of Boris I, he succeeded his father in 893 after the short intervening reign (889-893) of his dissolute elder brother, Vladimir. Hoping to gain the imperial throne, he fought five wars with the Byzantine Empire between 894 and 923. He adopted the title "Tsar of All the Bulgarians" in 925. He extended his power over southern Macedonia, southern Albania, and Serbia but probably lost Bulgaria's dominion north of the Danube. Simeon bar Kosba North Simeon San Simeon Simeon I Simeon the Great Simeon Stylites Saint Simeon the Elder
(Old Testament) the 2nd son of Jacob and one of the 12 patriarchs of Israel
Simeon Denis Poisson
{i} (1781-1840) French mathematician and physicist and geometer
Simeon North
born July 13, 1765, Berlin, Conn., U.S. died Aug. 25, 1852, Middletown, Conn. U.S. firearms manufacturer. He supplied pistols and rifles to the U.S. government from 1799. He developed the use of interchangeable parts in manufacturing (see armoury practice; mass production) and the first-known milling machine. In 1825 he built a breech-loading rifle with fully interchangeable parts
Saint Simeon Stylites
or Simeon the Elder born 390, Sisan, Cilicia died 459, Telanissus, Syria Syrian ascetic. A shepherd, he entered a monastic community but was expelled for excessive austerity and became a hermit. His reputed miracle working drew such crowds that he took to living atop a 6-ft (2-m) pillar (Greek stylos) 420, becoming the first of the stylites (pillar hermits). He remained atop a second, 50-ft (15-m) pillar until his death; a railing prevented his falling, and food was brought by disciples. He inspired other ascetics and is called Simeon the Elder to distinguish him from a 6th-century stylite of the same name. Stylites were documented as late as the 19th century in Russia
San Simeon
Former estate of William Randolph Hearst in southern California. It was built on a vast private estate of 245,000 acres (99,000 hectares), developed in the 1860s by Hearst's father. In 1919-20, with the architect Julia Morgan, Hearst began construction of a complex of luxurious buildings and gardens to serve as a country house. The main residence, later called Hearst Castle, is a Spanish Renaissance building with 150 rooms, a cathedral-like facade, and two bell towers. Lavish interior decorations were obtained from European churches and palaces. The site's embellishment continued (1919-48) with numerous subsidiary buildings, Mediterranean gardens, statuary, pools, fountains, a pergola, and priceless art treasures collected from all over the world. The complex is now a state historical monument
canticle of simeon
the prayer of Simeon (Luke 2: 29-32)
simeon

    الواصلة

    Sim·e·on

    التركية النطق

    sîmiın

    النطق

    /ˈsəmēən/ /ˈsɪmiːən/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () Old Testament Hebrew שִׁמְעוֹן "hearkening, listening"; Simeon, a son of Jacob.
المفضلات