jennings

listen to the pronunciation of jennings
English - Turkish

Definition of jennings in English Turkish dictionary

family name
soyadı

Onların soyadı posta kutusunda yazılıdır. - Their family name is written on their mailbox.

Herhangi biri Tom'un soyadını biliyor mu? - Does anyone know Tom's family name?

family name
aile adı

Aile adınızın yazılımı nasıl? - What's the spelling of your family name?

Watanabe benim aile adımdır. - Watanabe is my family name.

Turkish - Turkish

Definition of jennings in Turkish Turkish dictionary

jen
Gen
English - English
An English patronymic surname, ultimately derived from John
Bryan William Jennings Ernest Jennings Marlborough Sarah Jennings duchess of Randolph Edmund Jennings
{i} family name
Jen
A diminutive of the female given name Jennifer
Edmund Jennings Randolph
born Aug. 10, 1753, Willliamsburg, Va. died Sept. 12, 1813, Clark county, Va., U.S. U.S. politician. He helped draft Virginia's constitution (1776) and served in the Continental Congress (1779-82). He was a delegate to the Annapolis Convention and the Constitutional Convention, where he presented the Virginia (or large-state) Plan, which influenced the final draft of the Constitution of the United States. As governor of Virginia (1786-88), he effected the state's ratification of the Constitution. He served as U.S. attorney general (1789-94) and secretary of state (1794-95) but resigned after he was falsely accused of accepting a bribe from the French to influence the U.S. government against Britain. He returned to his law practice and served as chief counsel for Aaron Burr in his 1807 trial
Jen
{i} female first name (short form of Jennifer or Jennie)
Jen
diminutive of Jennifer
Sarah Jennings duchess of Marlborough
born May 29, 1660, Sandridge, Hertfordshire, Eng. died Oct. 18, 1744, London Wife of John Churchill, duke of Marlborough. A childhood friend of Princess (later Queen) Anne, she entered the household of Anne's father, the duke of York. She married Churchill in 1678 and served as a lady of the bedchamber after Anne's marriage (1683). When Anne acceded to the throne (1694), the Marlboroughs enjoyed great favour at court. Sarah's influence grew until her strong Whig sympathies alienated Anne, who dismissed her in 1711. The Marlboroughs retired to Blenheim Palace, which Sarah completed building after her husband's death in 1722
William Jennings Bryan
born March 19, 1860, Salem, Ill., U.S. died July 26, 1925, Dayton, Tenn. U.S. politician and orator. He practiced law at Jacksonville, Ill. (1883-87), before moving to Lincoln, Neb., where he was elected to the U.S. Congress in 1890. In the U.S. House of Representatives (1891-95), he became the national leader of the Free Silver Movement; he advocated its aims in his "Cross of Gold" speech, which won him the Democratic Party nomination for president in 1896. He was the party's nominee again in 1900 and 1908. In 1901 he founded a newspaper, The Commoner, and thereafter lectured widely to admiring audiences; he was called "the Great Commoner." He helped secure the presidential nomination for Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and served as his secretary of state (1913-15), contributing to world law by espousing arbitration to prevent war. A believer in a literal interpretation of the Bible, he was a prosecuting attorney in the Scopes trial (1925), in which he debated Clarence Darrow on the issue of evolution; the trial took a heavy toll on his health, and he died soon after it ended
William Jennings Bryan
{i} (1860-1925) American politician and Congressman, U.S. Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson (famous for his opposition to teaching evolutionism in schools)
jen
june
jennings
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