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Astronomer — ogle Ali (anag)
Answer for the clue "Astronomer — ogle Ali (anag) ", 7 letters:
galileo
Alternative clues for the word galileo
- Famous Italian astronomer
- Renaissance immortal known as the "Father of the Scientific Method"
- Perfected the refracting telescope that enabled him to make many discoveries (1564-1642)
- "Two New Sciences" author
- Pisa-born astronomer
- Astronomer who clashed with Pope Urban VIII
- Famed advocate of Copernicanism
- Spacecraft to Jupiter
- Italian astronomer and mathematician who was the first to use a telescope to study the stars
Word definitions for galileo in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) was a scientist and philosopher. Galileo may also refer to:
Usage examples of galileo.
In a world that did not yet know its place, Galileo would engage this same cosmic conflict with the Church, treading a dangerous path between the Heaven he revered as a good Catholic and the heavens he revealed through his telescope.
Even after she professed a life of prayer and penance, she remained devoted to Galileo as though to a patron saint.
Suor Maria Celeste consoled Galileo for being left alone in his world, with daughters cloistered in the separate world of nuns, his son not yet a man, his former mistress dead, his family of origin all deceased or dispersed.
Suor Maria Celeste was still a child in Padua, Galileo had set a telescope in the garden behind his house and turned it skyward.
For instead of opening a distant land dominated by heathens, Galileo trespassed on holy ground.
In 1616, a pope and a cardinal inquisitor reprimanded Galileo, warning him to curtail his forays into the supernal realms.
May of 1623, however, Galileo found reason to return to the Sun-centered universe like a moth to a flame.
Convent of San Matteo, on a hillside just south of Florence, to Galileo in the city or at his suburban home.
The historical importance of any paper signed by Galileo, not to mention the prices such articles have commanded for the past two centuries, leaves few conceivable places where whole packets of his letters could hide.
For although science has soared beyond his quaint instruments, it is still caught in his struggle, still burdened by an impression of Galileo as a renegade who scoffed at the Bible and drew fire from a Church blind to reason.
Accordingly, Vincenzio Galilei and his new wife, Giulia Ammannati Galilei, attracted no special attention when they gave the name Galileo to their first child, born at Pisa on the fifteenth day of February in the year of our Lord 1564.
This was the renowned doctor Galileo Buonaiuti, who taught and practiced medicine during the early 1400s in Florence, where he also served the government loyally.
The meaning of the name Galileo, or Galilei, harks back to the land of Galilee, although, as Galileo explained on this score, he was not at all a Jew.
Vincenzio taught Galileo to sing, and to play the organ and other instruments, including the recently remodeled lute, which became their favorite.
Vincenzio moved to Florence with his wife in 1572, temporarily leaving Galileo behind in the care of relatives, he joined other virtuoso performers, scholars, and poets bent on reviving classic Greek tragedy with music.