alfred | (n) king of Wessex; defeated the Vikings and encouraged writing in English (849-899), Syn. Alfred the Great |
fettuccine alfredo | (n) fettuccine in cream sauce with cheese |
binet | (n) French psychologist remembered for his studies of the intellectual development of children (1857-1911), Syn. Alfred Binet |
cooke | (n) United States journalist (born in England in 1908), Syn. Alfred Alistair Cooke, Alistair Cooke |
dreyfus | (n) French army officer of Jewish descent whose false imprisonment for treason in 1894 raised issues of anti-Semitism that dominated French politics until his release in 1906 (1859-1935), Syn. Alfred Dreyfus |
eisenstaedt | (n) United States photographer (born in Germany) whose unposed documentary photographs created photojournalism (born in 1898), Syn. Alfred Eisenstaedt |
goncourt | (n) French writer who collaborated with his brother Edmond de Goncourt on many books (1830-1870), Syn. Jules de Goncourt, Jules Alfred Huot de Goncourt |
harmsworth | (n) British newspaper publisher (1865-1922), Syn. Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, Viscount Northcliffe |
hill | (n) risque English comedian (1925-1992), Syn. Alfred Hawthorne, Benny Hill |
hitchcock | (n) English film director noted for his skill in creating suspense (1899-1980), Syn. Alfred Joseph Hitchcock, Sir Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock |
housman | (n) English poet (1859-1936), Syn. A. E. Housman, Alfred Edward Housman |
kastler | (n) French physicist (1902-1984), Syn. Alfred Kastler |
kinsey | (n) United States zoologist best known for his interview studies of sexual behavior (1894-1956), Syn. Alfred Charles Kinsey |
kissinger | (n) United States diplomat who served under President Nixon and President Ford (born in 1923), Syn. Henry Kissinger, Henry Alfred Kissinger |
korzybski | (n) United States semanticist (born in Poland) (1879-1950), Syn. Alfred Habdank Skarbek Korzybski, Alfred Korzybski |
kroeber | (n) United States anthropologist noted for his studies of culture (1876-1960), Syn. Alfred Louis Kroeber, Alfred Kroeber |
krupp | (n) German arms manufacturer and son of Friedrich Krupp; his firm provided ordnance for German armies from the 1840s through World War II (1812-1887), Syn. Alfred Krupp |
lovell | (n) English astronomer who pioneered radio astronomy (born in 1913), Syn. Sir Bernard Lovell, Sir Alfred Charles Bernard Lovell |
lunt | (n) United States actor who performed with his wife Lynn Fontanne in many stage productions (1893-1977), Syn. Alfred Lunt |
mahan | (n) United States naval officer and historian (1840-1914), Syn. Alfred Thayer Mahan |
mason | (n) English writer (1865-1948), Syn. A. E. W. Mason, Alfred Edward Woodley Mason |
musset | (n) French poet and writer (1810-1857), Syn. Alfred de Musset, Louis Charles Alfred de Musset |
nobel | (n) Swedish chemist remembered for his invention of dynamite and for the bequest that created the Nobel prizes (1833-1896), Syn. Alfred Bernhard Nobel, Alfred Nobel |
noyes | (n) English poet (1880-1958), Syn. Alfred Noyes |
runyon | (n) United States writer of humorous stylized stories about Broadway and the New York underground (1884-1946), Syn. Alfred Damon Runyon, Damon Runyon |
russell | (n) English film director (born in 1927), Syn. Henry Kenneth Alfred Russell, Ken Russell |
satie | (n) French composer noted for his experimentalism and rejection of Romanticism (1866-1925), Syn. Erik Satie, Erik Alfred Leslie Satie |
stieglitz | (n) United States photographer (1864-1946), Syn. Alfred Stieglitz |
tennyson | (n) Englishman and Victorian poet (1809-1892), Syn. Alfred Tennyson, Alfred Lord Tennyson, First Baron Tennyson |
van allen | (n) United States physicist who discovered two belts of charged particles from the solar wind trapped by the Earth's magnetic field (born in 1914), Syn. James Alfred Van Allen |
wallace | (n) English naturalist who formulated a concept of evolution that resembled Charles Darwin's (1823-1913), Syn. Alfred Russel Wallace |
wegener | (n) German geophysicist who proposed the theory of continental drift (1880-1930), Syn. Alfred Lothar Wegener |
whitehead | (n) English philosopher and mathematician who collaborated with Bertrand Russell (1861-1947), Syn. Alfred North Whitehead |