eri̇c

listen to the pronunciation of eri̇c
Turkish - Turkish
(Osmanlı Dönemi) Güzel koku. Misk, anber ve ıtır gibi hoş ve lâtif olan şeylerin kokusu
English - English

Definition of eri̇c in English English dictionary

Eric
A male given name

Mark it. Professor Roberts does not like the name Eric. This happens to be one of his given names, and it is a very honorable one. Eric was the first Viking explorer of the North American continent, and this ERIC we hope will be an explorer in the fields of complex therapy.

eric
A fine paid as compensation for violent crimes

The court-poets of Wales could demand an eric of ‘nine cows, and nine-score pence of money besides’.

Eric
Ambler Eric Bentley Eric Russell Heiden Eric Arthur Kandel Eric Eric Arthur Blair Rohmer Eric Eric Alfred Leslie Satie Williams Eric Eustace
Eric
{i} man's name
Eric
given name, male
eric
Educational Resources Information Centerhttp: //www eric ed gov/
eric
Effective Rate of Interest plus Costs
eric
An index to educational journal articles and documents collected by national clearing houses for educational information It provides summaries of the articles and documents, and contains citations back to 1966
eric
Educational Resources Information Center, a great source of information for teachers At the U of A, you can access the ERIC database via the web at: U of A ERIC website
eric
The Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) is a federally funded, nationwide information network designed to provide you with ready access to education literature It is a program of the National Library of Education, U S Department of Education
eric
The border of a field designated for combat -- term used in some Kingdoms, and in the Marshal's Handbook The word is a petrified pun, developed in the West at a time when the whole population of the Known World tourneyed together They marked their fields with a long, long strip of red cloth, affectionately named Eric the Red, and the word lived after the cloth faded and died (They had a white marker and a yellow one too, known as The White Russian and the Yellow Peril ) (See Lists )
eric
Educational Resources Information Center Established in 1964 as a national information system, disseminating educational research results, research-related material and other resource information Maintains network of specialized centers of clearinghouses throughout the country, each responsible for a particular educational area
eric
A clearinghouse for educational materials sponsored by the U S Department of Education Resources from the ERIC database are often available on microfiche at academic libraries, and the Department of Education is beginning to make them available on the Web
eric
Educational Resource Information Center, a federally-funded information clearinghouse which publishes an index with abstracts of journal articles and unpublished research reports in education and related fields The ERIC database is available on CD-ROM, or online through EBSCO Each item indexed in the ERIC database is assigned at least one subject heading from the Thesaurus of ERIC Descriptors and a six-digit EJ number for journal articles, or a six-digit ED number in the case of unpublished research reports (documents) ERIC documents are available on microfiche in the filing cabinets
eric
(Effective Rate of Interest plus Costs)
eric
Acronym for Educational Resources Information Center
eric
Educational Resources Information Center
eric
the largest education collection in the world, containing more than 1 million records of journal articles, research reports, curriculum and teaching guides, conference papers, and books
eric
A recompense formerly given by a murderer to the relatives of the murdered person
eric
 Educational Research System
eric
Educational ResourcesI nformation Center
eric
an information system sponsored by the U S Department of Education that generates the U S national bibliographic database covering the literature of education The ERIC database consists of two files: the Resources in Education (RIE) file of document citations and the Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE) file of journal article citations from over 750 professional journals
Eric Abidal
(born 1979) French soccer player from Lyon
Eric Ambler
born June 28, 1909, London, Eng. died Oct. 22, 1998, London British author of espionage and crime novels. Among his works are The Dark Frontier (1936), Epitaph for a Spy (1938), A Coffin for Dimitrios (1939), Journey into Fear (1940; film, 1942), and The Light of Day (1962). In contrast to earlier British spy stories, in which xenophobic, romantic heroes defeated vast conspiracies to dominate the world, Ambler's tales were of ordinary, educated Englishmen thrust by chance or curiosity into danger. Notable for its gritty realism, Ambler's fiction was a major influence on writers such as Graham Greene and John Le Carré
Eric Arthur Blair
George Orwell (1903-1950), English author born in India who is best known for his works "Animal Farm" and "1984
Eric Arthur Heiden
born June 14, 1958, Madison, Wis., U.S. U.S. speed skater. He became the first American to win the world speed-skating championship, and he retained the title for three years (1977-79). In the 1980 Winter Olympics he became the first person to win gold medals in all five speed-skating events. He later turned to competitive cycling
Eric Bentley
born Sept. 14, 1916, Bolton, Lancashire, Eng. British-born U.S. drama critic and translator. He was a stage director in several European cities (1948-51); in Munich, after working with Bertolt Brecht on a production of the playwright's Mother Courage, he translated Brecht's plays into English. His reporting on European theatre for several magazines helped introduce many European playwrights to the U.S. He wrote numerous critical works, including Life of the Drama (1964), and taught at Columbia University (1953-69) and elsewhere
Eric Clapton
{i} (born 1945) award-winning popular British singer and guitarist
Eric Eustace Williams
born Sept. 25, 1911, Port of Spain, Trin. died March 29, 1981, St. Anne, near Port of Spain First prime minister of independent Trinidad and Tobago (1962-81). He received a doctorate from the University of Oxford and served on the faculty of Howard University in the U.S. before founding the People's National Movement (PNM) in 1956 and taking his nation into the Federation of the West Indies in 1958 only to withdraw in favour of independence in 1962. Oil reserves helped boost the nation's income, and Williams remained popular until 1970, when an economic downturn led to unsuccessful revolts. He served as prime minister until his death. Capitalism and Slavery (1944) and From Columbus to Castro: The History of the Caribbean, 1492-1969 (1970) were among his many books
Eric Heiden
born June 14, 1958, Madison, Wis., U.S. U.S. speed skater. He became the first American to win the world speed-skating championship, and he retained the title for three years (1977-79). In the 1980 Winter Olympics he became the first person to win gold medals in all five speed-skating events. He later turned to competitive cycling
Eric Kandel
born Nov. 7, 1929, Vienna, Austria Austrian-born U.S. neurobiologist. He received his M.D. from New York University. Kandel's research revealed the role of synaptic transmission in learning and memory. He showed that weak stimuli give rise to certain chemical changes in synapses, forming the basis for short-term memory, and that stronger stimuli cause different synaptic changes, which result in a form of long-term memory. Along with Paul Greengard and Arvid Carlsson, Kandel was awarded a Nobel Prize in 2000. The findings of the three men resulted in the development of new drugs for parkinsonism and other disorders
Eric Rohmer
orig. Jean-Marie-Maurice Scherer born April 4, 1920, Nancy, France French film director. After working as a schoolteacher, he became a founding editor of La Gazette du Cinéma in 1950 and later editor of the influential New Wave periodical Cahiers du Cinéma (1957-63). After directing several short films, he made a series of contes moraux ("moral tales") that included the successful films My Night at Maud's (1968), Claire's Knee (1970), and Chloe in the Afternoon (1972), sensitively observed studies of romantic love. His later films include The Marquise of O (1976), Full Moon in Paris (1984), and Autumn Tale (1999)
Eric Russell Bentley
born Sept. 14, 1916, Bolton, Lancashire, Eng. British-born U.S. drama critic and translator. He was a stage director in several European cities (1948-51); in Munich, after working with Bertolt Brecht on a production of the playwright's Mother Courage, he translated Brecht's plays into English. His reporting on European theatre for several magazines helped introduce many European playwrights to the U.S. He wrote numerous critical works, including Life of the Drama (1964), and taught at Columbia University (1953-69) and elsewhere
Eric Shmidt
Chairman and General Manager of the American computer networking company "Novell
Eric Williams
born Sept. 25, 1911, Port of Spain, Trin. died March 29, 1981, St. Anne, near Port of Spain First prime minister of independent Trinidad and Tobago (1962-81). He received a doctorate from the University of Oxford and served on the faculty of Howard University in the U.S. before founding the People's National Movement (PNM) in 1956 and taking his nation into the Federation of the West Indies in 1958 only to withdraw in favour of independence in 1962. Oil reserves helped boost the nation's income, and Williams remained popular until 1970, when an economic downturn led to unsuccessful revolts. He served as prime minister until his death. Capitalism and Slavery (1944) and From Columbus to Castro: The History of the Caribbean, 1492-1969 (1970) were among his many books
Eric the Red
a Norwegian sailor who discovered Greenland in about 981 (950?-1001?)
eri̇c

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