Crossword clues for donne
donne
- Poet John
- Elizabethan poet
- "It tolls for thee" poet
- 'Death Be Not Proud' poet
- John who wrote "No Man Is an Island"
- John who wrote "Death Be Not Proud"
- "No man is an island, entire of itself" writer
- "Holy Sonnets" writer
- "For whom the bell tolls" writer
- "Batter My Heart" poet
- 'No man is an island' writer John
- Sonneteer John
- Preacher-poet of the 17th c
- Poet who wrote "To His Mistress Going to Bed"
- Poet who wrote "For God's sake hold your tongue, and let me love"
- Noted elegist
- Metaphysical poet of the 1600s
- He wrote, "Go and Catch a Falling Star."
- He wrote "Devotions"
- He said, "No man is an island . . . "
- English poet John ____
- Elizabethan sonneteer John
- "Woman's Constancy" poet John
- "Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies" penner
- "For Whom the Bell Tolls" poet John
- "For Whom the Bell Tolls" poet
- "Elegies" poet John
- "Divine Poems" author
- "Death, be not proud ..." poet John
- "Be thine own palace, or the world's thy jail" writer
- "Air and Angels" poet
- "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" poet
- ". . . for whom the bell tolls" poet
- ". . . for whom the bell tolls" penner
- 'The Flea' poet John
- 'No man is an island' poet
- 'Divine Poems' poet
- ''Divine Poems'' author
- ''Death be not proud'' poet John
- "Go and Catch a Falling Star" poet
- "Twicknam Garden" poet
- "Death Be Not Proud" poet John
- "No man is an island" writer
- "No man is an island" poet John
- "Holy Sonnets" poet John
- Clergyman/poet John
- "Death be not proud" writer
- "For God's sake hold your tongue, and let me love" poet
- "The Bait" poet
- John who wrote "Love built on beauty, soon as beauty, dies"
- "Nature's lay idiot, I taught thee to love" penner
- "Stay, O Sweet" writer
- "Meditation XVII" writer
- English clergyman and metaphysical poet celebrated as a preacher (1572-1631)
- Metaphysical poet: 1573–1631
- "What if this present were the world's last night?" poet
- Izaak Walton was his biographer
- English metaphysical poet, d. 1631
- Greatest of the metaphysical poets
- "The Flea" poet
- Cleric-poet
- First metaphysical poet
- Poet biographized by Izaak Walton
- English poet and clergyman: 1573–1631
- English poet 1573–1631
- Great "metaphysical poet"
- English poet-clergyman
- He wrote " . . . for whom the bell tolls"
- Famed metaphysical poet
- He said, "No man is an island"
- English preacher and metaphysical poet, d. 1631
- Old linesman is finished, so the radio said
- Teacher introduces Geordie poet
- Shakespeare contemporary
- "No man is an island" poet
- 'Satires' poet
- Preacher-poet of the 17th century
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wikipedia
Donne is a crater on Mercury. It has a diameter of 88 kilometers. Its name was adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1976. Donne is named for the English poet John Donne, who lived from 1572 to 1631.
Usage examples of "donne".
Le altre donne seguirebbero la marcia e per ultimi i nostri amici con quanti restavano ancora dei difensori del lanificio.
Non tardai ad accorgermi dello scopo cui mirava la santa matrona ed eccitato come ero per la mia frequenza fra tante donne non fu difficile il farmi peccare.
Quantunque le tre donne non prendessero parte alla difesa del portone pur stavano a poca distanza da coloro il cui palpito batteva nel lor proprio cuore.
The Donne Furlane was the piece, a comedy of art as they call it here-- or, as we say, a comedy of masks--wherein the stock characters of Harlequin, Columbine, Brighella and Pantalone are given a rag of a plot, and are expected to embroider that with follies, drolleries and obscenities according as their humour of the moment may dictate.
I doubt whether Donne the man gave more than playful and dramatic harbourage to the mood expressed in The Apparition.
Donne describes an athletic laborer of twenty-five who received a wound from a rifle-ball penetrating the cranial parietes immediately in the posterior superior angle of the parietal bone, and a few lines from the lambdoid suture.
Ma potevo anche sbagliarmi, con le donne non si capisce mai quali sono i loro sentimenti soprattutto nei riguardi delle altre donne.
CAPITOLO LXXI LE TRE EROINE Tre donne di rara bellezza sopraintendevano alla cura dei feriti ed al nobile e gentile loro aspetto, noi riconosciamo le nostre eroine: Clelia, Giulia ed Irene.
Nei primi di Novembre 1867 scendevano alla stazione di Livorno tre donne, un vecchio ed un garzone sul fiore degli anni.
Gli stranieri forti, armati ed agguerriti alla scuola di Roma, cominciarono a disprezzare i dissoluti ed effeminati padroni, poi, ad ammazzarli, per impadronirsi delle loro donne e delle loro ricchezze.
Roma di vari giovani, che la notizia della recente vittoria aveva esaltati, si componeva di circa sessanta individui, senza contare le donne.
Il est temps que je donne a ta vertueuse mere et a moi le repos que nous avons merite tous les deux.
On lui eut donne plus que son age, a voir les rides de ses joues, mais ses deux yeux bleus gardaient une jeunesse invincible.
Il giorno stesso nel quale le donne di Manlio avevano stabilito di recarsi al palazzo Corsini, Giulia ascendeva il Gianicolo per fare una visita allo studio di lui.
Le altre donne seguirebbero la marcia e per ultimi i nostri amici con quanti restavano ancora dei difensori del lanificio.