emile

listen to the pronunciation of emile
İngilizce - İngilizce
A male given name of Latin origin, an anglicized spelling of French Émile
{i} male first name
of Latin origin, an anglicized spelling of French Émile
the boy whose upbringing was described by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Emile Alphonse Griffith
born Feb. 3, 1938, U.S. Virgin Islands U.S. boxer. Griffith began his professional career in 1958. He won three world championships as a welterweight (1961, 1962, 1963) and two as a middleweight (1966, 1967), an achievement surpassed only by Sugar Ray Robinson's total of six. He retired in 1977 with a record of 85-24-2
Emile Bernard
(1868-1941) French Post-Impressionist painter, member of the Pont-Aven school of painting, developer of the painting style known as "cloisonism
Emile Griffith
born Feb. 3, 1938, U.S. Virgin Islands U.S. boxer. Griffith began his professional career in 1958. He won three world championships as a welterweight (1961, 1962, 1963) and two as a middleweight (1966, 1967), an achievement surpassed only by Sugar Ray Robinson's total of six. He retired in 1977 with a record of 85-24-2
Emile Lahoud
(born 1936) President of Lebanon since 1998, former commander of the Lebanese army (1989-98)
Emile Zola
{i} (1840-1902) French writer and critic, defender of Dreyfus
Emile Zola
a French writer of novels who developed the style of literature called naturalism (=showing people and the world exactly as they really are) in novels such as Nana and Germinal, which describe life and society in a very detailed way, and are often about crime, murder, and people who are poor. He also supported Alfred Dreyfus, and criticized the people who had sent Dreyfus to prison, by writing the public letter J'accuse (1840-1902)
Henri Emile Benoit Matisse
{i} Henri Matisse (1869-1954), French painter and sculptor, leader of the Fauvist movement; family name
emile