Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Elizabeth Carter - Cosplayer, Costumer, Makeup & Prop Enthusiast. 1,159 likes. BA (Hons) Film-Making Degree Graduate, Freelance Actress/Voice Actor, Published Photographer.

  2. Elizabeth Carter (16 December 1717 - 19 February 1806) was an English poet, miscellaneous writer, and translator. Carter was born at Deal, daughter of a clergyman. Originally backward, she applied herself to study with such perseverance that she became perhaps the most learned Englishwoman of her time, mastering Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic, besides several modern European languages. She ...

  3. He published a massive body of work (Carter being the most prolific of the first generation of Bluestockings), much of it from manuscript: two quarto volumes of correspondence between Carter and Catherine Talbot and Elizabeth Vesey; three octavo volumes of letters from Carter to Montagu; and a two-volume memoir, the second volume comprising her ...

  4. 27 de out. de 2023 · Elizabeth Carter (pen name Eliza; 16 December 1717 – 19 February 1806) was an English poet, classicist, writer, translator, linguist, and polymath. As one of the Bluestocking Circle that surrounded Elizabeth Montagu , she earned respect for the first English translation of the 2nd-century Discourses of Epictetus .

  5. Elizabeth Carter (extremo izquierdo), en compañía de otras socias de las «Medias Azules» por Richard Samuel en Las Nueve Musas Vivientes de Gran Bretaña. Galería de Retrato nacional, Londres. Elizabeth Carter ( Deal, Kent, 16 de diciembre de 1717-19 de febrero de 1806) fue una poetisa inglesa, clasicista, escritora, traductora, y un ...

  6. Elizabeth Fitzgerald Carter is a self-taught painter before gaining a degree in Fine Art. Elizabeth regularly exhibits both in Norfolk and Argyll

  7. Elizabeth Carter (1717–1806) was one of the most acclaimed female writers of her day. Given the equivalent of a university education by her father, the perpetual curate of Deal Chapel, Carter’s early literary precocity and learning prompted Samuel Johnson to claim that ‘she ought to be celebrated in as many different languages as Lewis Le