born May 27, 1867, Hanley, Staffordshire, Eng. died March 27, 1931, London English novelist, playwright, critic, and essayist. His major works, inspired by Gustave Flaubert and Honoré de Balzac, form an important link between the English novel and the mainstream of European realism. He is best known for his highly detailed novels of the "Five Towns" the Potteries in his native Staffordshire which are the setting of Anna of the Five Towns (1902), The Old Wives' Tale (1908), and the three novels that make up The Clayhanger Family (1925). He was also a well-known critic
a British politician in the Conservative Party, who was a government minister in the early 1960s, and later left the Conservative Party and became an MP in Northern Ireland. He made a speech in 1968 in which he said that if the UK allowed too many black people to come and live there, there would be fighting and "rivers of blood" in the streets. Many people criticized him for this speech, because they believed that it encouraged racist attitudes (1912-98)
enoch
Heceleme
E·noch
Türkçe nasıl söylenir
inık
Telaffuz
/ˈēnək/ /ˈiːnək/
Etimoloji
[ 'E-n&k, -nik ] (noun.) From Late Latin Enoch Ancient Greek Ενωχ (Enōch) Hebrew חֲנוֹךְ (Ḥănôḵ).