Crossword clues for emma
emma
- Watson of "The Perks of Being a Wallflower"
- Watson of "Little Women"
- Watson of "Harry Potter" films
- Watson of 'The Bling Ring'
- Watson of 'Noah'
- Watson of 'Colonia'
- Uma's role in "The Avengers"
- U.N. Women Goodwill Ambassador Watson
- Top-five baby girl name since 2002
- Top name in a Social Security Administration list every year from 2014 to 2017
- Top female baby name of 2014-18
- Top baby girl's name since 2014
- Top baby girl's name of 2014
- Top 20 name for newborn girls in the U.S. since 1999
- Title matchmaker of 19th-century literature
- Three-volume novel of 1815
- Thompson or Watson of movies
- Thompson or Stone
- Thompson of "Stranger Than Fiction"
- Thompson of "Primary Colors"
- Thompson of "Harry Potter" movies
- Thompson of "Angels in America"
- Thompson of 'Love Actually'
- Thompson in "Dead Again"
- Thompson in Howard's End
- Student activist González
- Stone with an Oscar for "La La Land"
- Stone who will star in "Cruella"
- Stone who plays Skeeter in "The Help"
- Stone who plays Billie Jean King in the upcoming "Battle of the Sexes" movie
- Stone who earned an Oscar nomination for "Birdman"
- Stone that's cast
- Stone that's a star
- Stone seen in pictures
- Stone or Watson
- Stone of the screen
- Stone of the cinema
- Stone of Hollywood
- Stone of "Easy A"
- Stone of 'The Help'
- Stone cast in movies
- Star Stone
- Spice Girl Bunton
- Snow White's daughter on "Once Upon a Time"
- Singer Eames
- She played Hermione in the Harry Potter film series
- Samms or Watson
- Ross and Rachel's daughter on "Friends"
- Ross and Rachel's baby
- Role for Gwyneth
- Roberts or Watson
- Queen Juliana’s third name
- Pip ___ (during the afternoon, to a Brit)
- Peel of The Avengers
- Paris-born Watson
- Paltrow film
- Painter Amos
- Oscar-winning actress Thompson
- Oscar winner Stone who's dating "SNL" director Dave McCary
- Oscar winner Stone
- One Jane Austen novel
- Novel that takes place in a Surrey village
- Novel that inspired the film "Clueless"
- Novel on which the film "Clueless" is based
- Noted 1815 comedy of manners
- Ms. Woodhouse
- Ms. Bovary
- Mrs. Charles Darwin
- Mr. Knightly's bride, in 1816 novel
- Movie based on a Jane Austen novel
- Most popular U.S. baby girl's name since 2014
- Most popular girl's name of 2017, per the SSA
- Miss Woodhouse, in literature
- Madame Bovary's given name
- Madame Bovary [SEE NOTE ABOVE]
- Literary title character surnamed Woodhouse
- Literary character who said, "There is no charm equal to tenderness of heart"
- Lazarus who wrote "Give me your tired . . ."
- Last Jane Austen novel published while she was alive
- John's first partner on American TV's "The Avengers"
- John's co-Avenger
- Jayma Mays's "Glee" role
- Jane's Ms. Woodhouse
- Jane Austen's aspiring matchmaker
- Jane Austen title woman
- Jane Austen novel the movie "Clueless" was based on
- Jane Austen novel that inspired the film "Clueless"
- Jane Austen novel adapted for a 2020 film
- It dethroned Sophia as the #1 baby girl's name in the U.S. in 2014
- Inspiration for the film "Clueless"
- Inspiration for "Clueless"
- Heroine of TV's "Once Upon a Time"
- Hermione's portrayer in the Harry Potter movies
- Hermione, to Daniel's Harry
- Hermione, in the ''Harry Potter'' films
- Hermione portrayer in the Harry Potter films
- Hermione portrayer in the "Harry Potter" series
- Hermione portrayer in the "Harry Potter" movies
- Hermione portrayer
- Hermione in the "Harry Potter" films
- Hermione in eight films
- Hermione Granger portrayer Watson
- Heiress of Hartfield, in an 1816 novel
- Gwyneth Paltrow title character, 1996
- Gwyneth Paltrow role of 1996
- Gwen in "The Amazing Spider-Man"
- Gun-control activist González
- Flawed title character of 1815
- Flaubert's Bovary
- Feminist activist Watson
- Eight-movie co-star of Daniel and Rupert
- Editor Carmichael of Deadspin, Gawker, and the Hairpin
- Daniel and Rupert's costar in the Harry Potter movies
- Clever heroine in an 1815 novel
- Caulfield of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"
- Bunton of the Spice Girls
- Bovary or Eames
- Book whose title character "had lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex her" at the start of the story
- Billie Jean in "Battle of the Sexes" (2017)
- Beatrice portrayer in "Much Ado About Nothing"
- Baby name list topper for 2016
- Avenger Peel
- Austens handsome, clever, and rich heroine
- Austen title matchmaker
- Austen role for Gwyneth
- Austen or Flaubert heroine
- Austen novel that inspired the film "Clueless"
- Austen novel adapted by the BBC in 2009
- Austen comic novel
- Ari Meyer's role on "Kate & Allie"
- Anthony's "Remains of the Day" and "Howards End" costar
- Anthony's "Howards End" co-star
- Anarchist/political activist Goldman
- Anarcha-feminist Goldman
- Admiral Nelson's mistress Hamilton
- Actress Watson who's a UN Women's Goodwill Ambassador
- Actress Watson who started a feminist book group on Goodreads
- Actress Watson who starred in "The Circle"
- Actress Watson who recently graduated from Brown
- Actress Watson who played Hermione in the Harry Potter films
- Actress Watson who played Hermione in the "Harry Potter" films
- Actress Watson or Thompson
- Actress Watson or Stone
- Actress Watson of the "Harry Potter" films
- Actress Watson of "This Is the End"
- Actress Watson of "The Perks of Being a Wallflower"
- Actress Watson of "Beauty and the Beast"
- Actress Thompson who wrote the 2014 book "The Spectacular Tale of Peter Rabbit"
- Actress Thompson who played Nanny McPhee in two kids' movies
- Actress Thompson who played Nanny McPhee
- Actress Thompson who appears in "Bridget Jones's Baby"
- Actress Stone, Watson, or Roberts
- Actress Stone who was nominated for an Oscar for "Birdman"
- Actress Stone of 2012's "The Amazing Spider-Man"
- Actress Stone of "Movie 43"
- Actress Stone of "La La Land"
- Actress Stone of "Gangster Squad"
- Actress Stone of "Crazy, Stupid, Love"
- Actress Stone of "Aloha"
- Actress Roberts whose aunt Julia is an Oscar winner
- Actress Roberts who starred on "Scream Queens"
- Actress Roberts who is Julia's niece
- Actress Roberts of "American Horror Story: Coven"
- Actress and gender equality advocate Watson
- Activist Gonzalez
- 2020 Anya Taylor-Joy film based on a Jane Austen novel
- 2016 Best Actress Stone of "La La Land"
- 2015 Emmy-nominated actress Thompson
- 1996 vehicle for Gwyneth
- 1996 title role for Gwyneth
- 1996 role for Gwyneth
- 1996 movie based on an 1816 novel
- 1996 Gwyneth Paltrow vehicle
- 1996 film with the tagline "Cupid is armed and dangerous!"
- 1975 Hot Chocolate hit
- 1932 Marie Dressler film
- 1816 novel set in the village of Highbury
- 1815 title character who "thought a little too well of herself"
- 1815 novel of romantic misunderstandings
- 1815 novel made into films in 1996 and 2020
- 1815 Austen novel
- #2 baby girl's name in 2013
- "Wit" actress Thompson
- "The Perks of Being a Wallflower" star Watson
- "The Nanny Diaries" coauthor McLaughlin
- "The Nanny Diaries" co-author McLaughlin
- "The Help" star Stone
- "The Help" actress Stone
- "The Amazing Spider-Man" actress Stone
- "The Amazing Spider-Man 2" actress Stone
- "Stranger Than Fiction" actress Thompson
- "Sense and Sensibility" star Thompson
- "Saving Mr. Banks" actress Thompson
- "Room" novelist Donoghue
- "Once Upon a Time" heroine
- "Late Night" star Thompson
- "La La Land" Best Actress Stone
- "Handsome, clever, and rich" Jane Austen character
- "Handsome, clever, and rich" Austen character
- "Handsome, clever and rich" title character of 1815
- "Handsome, clever and rich" title character
- "Glee" guidance counselor
- "Easy A" star Stone
- "Dallas" actress Bell
- "Clueless" was a retelling of it
- "Clueless" inspiration
- "Bone Dance" sci-fi author Bull
- "Beauty and the Beast" actress Watson
- "Battle of the Sexes" star Stone
- "Avenger" Peel
- "American Horror Story" actress Roberts
- "Aloha" actress Stone
- 'Baby Spice' Bunton
- ''The Avengers'' character
- ''Friends'' baby
- ___ Bunton (real name of Baby Spice)
- __ Lee Bunton, a.k.a. Baby Spice
- Thompson in "Junior"
- Thompson of "Howards End"
- Austen's Woodhouse
- Heroine of an Austen novel
- Anarchist Goldman or poet Lazarus
- Thompson of films
- Poet Lazarus
- Austen heroine
- Madame Bovary's first name
- Jane Austen novel that inspired "Clueless"
- Mystery author Lathen
- Thompson of "Sense and Sensibility"
- 19th-century educator Willard
- Comic Austen work
- Austen novel made into a 1996 movie
- 1816 novel made into a 1996 film
- Actress Thompson of "Saving Mr. Banks"
- Mrs. Peel of "The Avengers"
- Oscar-winning Thompson
- Oscar winner ___ Thompson
- Mme. Bovary
- 1998 role for Uma
- Jane Austen heroine Woodhouse
- Austen novel that inspired "Clueless"
- Flaubert heroine
- The avenging Mrs. Peel
- "Friends" baby
- Miss Woodhouse of fiction
- Novel on which "Clueless" is based
- Meddlesome heroine of an 1816 novel
- Jane Austen classic
- Gwyneth Paltrow title role
- Literary matchmaker
- Rachel's baby on "Friends"
- Lazarus or Goldman
- Thompson with an Oscar
- Title heroine of 1816
- Actress Thompson of "Howards End"
- Title heroine described in the first sentence of her novel as "handsome, clever and rich"
- Title heroine who says "One half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other"
- Actress Samms
- 1996 Gwyneth Paltrow title role
- Classic novel that ends with two weddings
- Austen classic adapted to film in 1996
- Jane Austen meddler
- Watson of the Harry Potter films
- Title matchmaker of early 19th-century literature
- Actress Watson of the Harry Potter movies
- Actress Stone of "The Help"
- Stone in Hollywood
- Jane Austen novel on which "Clueless" is based
- Austen title heroine
- Watson who played Hermione Granger
- Miss Woodhouse of Highbury
- Title heroine described in the first lines of her novel as "handsome, clever and rich"
- Miss Woodhouse of Hartfield
- George Knightley's love interest, in literature
- Title character from the village of Highbury, 1815
- Actress Stone of "Birdman"
- Novel character with "a comfortable home and happy disposition"
- Flog
- Title heroine who says "I would much rather have been merry than wise"
- Austen matchmaker
- Dressler movie
- Soprano Eames
- Educator Willard
- Soprano Trentini (4)
- Austen opus
- Lady Hamilton or Lady Thompson?
- Soprano Calvé
- Dressler film: 1932
- Bovary's first name
- Austen title character
- Mrs. Peel from "The Avengers"
- Stone of "The Help"
- Goldman or Bovary
- Opera star Eames
- Soprano Nevada
- Ari Meyer's role on "Kate & Allie"
- Hall of Fame educator ___ Willard
- Bancroft in "The Turning Point"
- Bancroft role in "The Turning Point"
- U.S. poet, ___ Lazarus
- Lazarus or Willard
- Lazarus or Bovary
- Admiral Nelson's beloved
- Another Austen novel
- Mrs. 55-Down on "The Avengers"
- Novel by Jane Austen
- Bovary or Lazarus
- Austen novel: 1816
- Lazarus or Eames
- Admiral Nelson's lady
- Miss Eames
- Code word for M
- Writer Lazarus
- Girl turning up in programmes
- Mutton graduate gives girl
- Classic horny predicament after princess lost out
- Some of them market a 19th-century novel
- Some item: man and woman
- She finishes programme with a somersault
- Send-up of article by Madame Bovary?
- Austen's heroine put back in slammer
- Novel piece of theorem mathematician produced
- Novel introduction to extreme combat sport
- Novel - one of many covered by English degree
- Austen novel made into a movie
- Requiem mass inspires literary work
- Book of Jerusalem, maybe
- In poem, "maid" is "girl"
- Half of them taking degree? That’s novel
- Two marks found in each novel
- Turned up a shortened Madame Bovary?
- Girl's name
- Stone of "La La Land"
- Jane Austen title character
- Oscar winner Thompson
- Austen's Miss Woodhouse
- Watson of "Noah"
- Statue of Liberty poet Lazarus
- Communications code word
- Austen character
- "Harry Potter" actress Watson who won the MTV Trailblazer Award in 2013
- Peel of "The Avengers"
- Jane Austen book
- Aurora Greenway's daughter
- Woodhouse of literature
- Stone of films
- Stone of "Birdman"
- Samms or Thompson
- Novel that inspired "Clueless"
- Gwyneth Paltrow film
- Actress Roberts of "We're the Millers"
- 1816 Austen novel
- 1815 Jane Austen novel
- Watson of Harry Potter movies
- Watson of Harry Potter films
- Thompson or Lazarus
- Thompson of "Nanny McPhee"
- Stone of film
- Stone of "The Favourite"
- John's partner in "The Avengers"
- Comic novel of 1815
- Austen book
- Actress Stone or Thompson
- 1993 Oscar winner Thompson
- Woodhouse of fiction
- Woodhouse created by Jane Austen
- Watson who played Hermione in Harry Potter films
- Watson of "Harry Potter" movies
- Watson of "Beauty and the Beast"
- Two-time Oscar winner Thompson
- Top-10 baby name since 2002
- Title matchmaker in an 1815 novel
- Thompson or Bovary
- Thompson of ''Nanny McPhee''
- Thompson of ''Howards End''
- Stone on the big screen
- Stone on screen
- Stone of "The Amazing Spider-Man"
- Stone of "Gangster Squad"
- Soprano Trentini
- She plays Hermione in "Harry Potter" films
- She plays Hermione
- She plays Harry's friend Hermione
- Saskatchewan's _____ Lake
- Samms of "Dynasty"
- Ryan's "La La Land" co-star
- Rachel's daughter on "Friends"
- Peel played by Rigg
- No. 1 baby girl name, 2014-2016
- Mrs. Peel on ''The Avengers''
- Mr. Knightley's wife, in the novel of the same name
- Miss Woodhouse of literature
- Lazarus of literature
- Jane Austen title heroine
- Jane Austen opus
- Hermione in the Potter films
- Gwyneth title role of 1996
- Goldman who wrote ''Anarchism and Other Essays''
- Diana in "The Avengers"
- Comic novel of 1816
- Classic Jane Austen novel
- Classic book of 1815
- Charles Bovary's wife
- British actress Thompson
- Baby Spice's real first name
- Austen's aspiring matchmaker
- Austen protagonist
- Actress, ... Thompson
- Actress Thompson or Watson
- Actress Thompson or Samms
- Actress Stone or Watson
- Actress Stone of "The Amazing Spider-Man"
- Actress Stone of "Easy A"
- 1815 novel set in Surrey
- #3 baby girl's name in 2010
- "The Favourite" actress Stone
- "The Bling Ring" star Watson
- "Scream Queens" actress Roberts
- "Noah" actress Watson
- "Nanny McPhee" star Thompson
- "Irrational Man" actress Stone
- "Birdman" actress Stone
- "Avengers" Peel
- '96 role for Gwyneth
- YouTube star Chamberlain, whom The Atlantic called "the most talked-about teen influencer in the world"
- YouTube star Chamberlain
- Younger sister of Isabella in a 19th-century novel
- Would-be matchmaker of literature
- Watson who plays Hermione in the Harry Potter films
- Watson who plays Belle in 2017's "Beauty and the Beast"
- Watson or Thompson of 2017's "Beauty and the Beast"
- Watson or Stone
- Watson of the Harry Potter movies
- Watson of the "Harry Potter" films
- Watson of films
- Watson of film
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
fem. proper name, from German Emma, from Erma, contraction of Ermentrude or some similar name. With lower-case -e-, as British telephone and radio enunciation of M to avoid confusion with N, attested by 1891.
Wiktionary
n. (context British dated WWI signalese English) M in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF%20phonetic%20alphabet
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 98
Land area (2000): 0.432189 sq. miles (1.119364 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.432189 sq. miles (1.119364 sq. km)
FIPS code: 22312
Located within: Missouri (MO), FIPS 29
Location: 38.977871 N, 93.493922 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Emma
Wikipedia
Emma, by Jane Austen, is a novel about youthful hubris and the perils of misconstrued romance. The novel was first published in December 1815. As in her other novels, Austen explores the concerns and difficulties of genteel women living in Georgian- Regency England; she also creates a lively comedy of manners among her characters.
Before she began the novel, Austen wrote, "I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like." In the first sentence she introduces the title character as "Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich." Emma is spoiled, headstrong, and self-satisfied; she greatly overestimates her own matchmaking abilities; she is blind to the dangers of meddling in other people's lives; and her imagination and perceptions often lead her astray.
This novel has been adapted for several films, many television programs, and a long list of stage plays.
Emma is a 1932 American pre-Code comedy-drama film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, starring Marie Dressler and directed by Clarence Brown.
Emma may refer to:
is a historical romance manga by Kaoru Mori. It was published by Enterbrain in the magazine Comic Beam and collected in 10 tankōbon volumes. The series has been adapted as an anime television series, entitled . The manga is licensed in English in North America by CMX and the anime is licensed in English by Nozomi Entertainment.
Set in Victorian London at the end of the 19th century, Emma is the story of a maid who falls in love with a member of the gentry. However, the young man's family disapproves of him associating with people of the lower classes.
Emma is a 1996 period film based on the novel of the same name by Jane Austen. Directed by Douglas McGrath, the film stars Gwyneth Paltrow, Alan Cumming, Toni Collette, Ewan McGregor, and Jeremy Northam.
Jane Austen's Emma is an adaptation of the 1815 novel of the same name. It was adapted for the British television network ITV in 1996, directed by Diarmuid Lawrence and dramatised by Andrew Davies, the same year as Miramax's film adaptation of Emma starring Gwyneth Paltrow. This production of Emma stars Kate Beckinsale as the title character, and also features Samantha Morton as Harriet Smith and Mark Strong as Mr. Knightley.
Davies had recently adapted another Austen novel as the successful 1995 television serial Pride and Prejudice for BBC when he proposed to adapt the novel Emma for the network. BBC had already made such an agreement with another screenwriter however, leading Davies to approach ITV.
Emma received generally positive reviews from critics, who believed it to be superior to the 1996 Miramax film. Most focused on Beckinsale's performance as a positive highlight. It aired on ITV on the 24 November 1996 and garnered an estimated 12 million viewers. It also was broadcast on the American channel A&E in 16 February 1997.
"Emma", also known as "Emma, Emmaline" or "Emmeline", is a song by Errol Brown and Tony Wilson released as a single by British soul band Hot Chocolate in 1974. It reached number 3 in the UK Singles Chart and number 8 in the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. After being asked by producer Mickie Most to add "depth and darkness" to his compositions, Brown wrote the song about the death of his mother.
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The Emma was a River Flat launched on 29 February 1828 along the Mersey and Irwell Navigation, in Manchester. Built by the New Quay Company, it was one of the largest cargo vessels to be built alongside the Irwell. The vessel capsized shortly after its launch, causing the deaths of as many as 47 of its estimated 200 passengers. Many others were rescued by bystanders, and treated by surgeons along the river banks. The Emma was eventually righted, and spent the rest of its life working along the River Weaver.
The Emma books are a series for children by Sally Warner. The main character and narrator is Emma McGraw, a new kid who moved in to California from Magdelana school. She has curly brown hair and wants to be a zoologist when she grows up. She is currently in third grade. She wishes that she would have normal, straight hair and not be divorced.
Jane Austen's novel Emma (1815) was transmitted as a six-part TV serial by BBC Television in 1972. It was directed by John Glenister.
This dramatization brings to life the wit and humour of Jane Austen's arguably finest novel Emma, recreating her most irritatingly endearing female character, of whom she wrote "no one but myself could like."
Emma presides over the small provincial world of Highbury with enthusiasm, but she will find that it is all too easy to confuse good intentions with self-gratification. The often insensitive, well-meaning, incorrigible Emma Woodhouse having engineered the marriage of governess, companion and friend Miss Taylor, now turns her attention towards making a match for Mr Elton, the local vicar, and her new protégée Harriet Smith. Her one voice of reason and restraint is Mr Knightley, who has known her since she was a child and who watches her behaviour with wry amusement and sometimes with real anger.
Emma (or Emma: A Play in Two Acts about Emma Goldman, American Anarchist, its full title) is a play by historian and playwright Howard Zinn (1922–2010). It was first performed in 1976.
The play dramatizes events from the life of Emma Goldman. Zinn wrote the play using Goldman's autobiography, correspondence between Goldman and fellow anarchist Alexander Berkman (Emma's lover, who also became a character in the play), and other research.
As Zinn describes her in his introduction, "She seemed to be tireless as she traveled the country, lecturing to large audiences everywhere, on birth control ('A woman should decide for herself'), on the problems of marriage as an institution ('Marriage has nothing to do with love'), on patriotism ('the last refuge of a scoundrel'), on free love ('What is love if not free?'), and also on the drama — Shaw, Ibsen, Strindberg."
According to author Tom H. Hastings, the play shows the period of Goldman's " nonviolence and resistance to militarism", rather than her earlier "attachment to violent revolution". After someone accuses her of plotting to "blow up the fleet" in San Francisco harbor, she declares "Bombs are not my way", but she "would be happy to see the fleet sink to the bottom of the sea ... so that we, and our brothers and sisters in other countries, can live in peace."
Emma (born Emma Louise Booth, 2 August 1974) is a Welsh singer, who sang the UK entry, " Give a Little Love Back to the World", in the Eurovision Song Contest 1990.
This was the third of four entries representing the UK composed by Paul Curtis. The song finished sixth in the Contest, and climbed to No. 33 in the UK Singles Chart. Her backing vocalists at ESC90 included Sam Blue and Miriam Stockley
Emma was born in Bridgend, Wales. At fifteen, she was the youngest singer to have represented the UK in the contest and only narrowly made the newly implemented age rule in the competition, where all contestants must be 16 in the year they compete. The song had an environmental theme. Many of the 1990 entries chose the momentous events taking place across Europe in the previous twelve months and European Unity as their theme. She released one more single in the UK on Big Wave Records. It was 1991's "Dance All Night" which failed to chart.
The Electron Machine with Many Applications (EMMA) is a linear non-scaling FFAG (Fixed Field Alternating Gradient) particle accelerator at Daresbury Laboratory in the UK that can accelerate electrons from 10 to 20 MeV. A FFAG is a type of accelerator in which the magnetic field in the bending magnets is constant during acceleration. This means the particle beam will move radially outwards as its momentum increases. Acceleration was successfully demonstrated in EMMA, paving the way for future non-scaling FFAGs to meet important applications in energy, security and medicine.
A linear non-scaling FFAG is one in which a quantity known as the betatron tune is allowed to vary unchecked. In a conventional synchrotron such a variation would result in loss of the beam. However, in EMMA the beam will cross these resonances so rapidly that their effect should not be seen. EMMA will use the ALICE accelerator as a source of electrons and will be situated in the same laboratory at STFC's Daresbury site.
EMMA is a proof-of-principle machine; the experience gained in building this machine will be useful for future muon accelerators (which could be used in neutrino factories), and also for proton and carbon ion particle accelerators, which have applications for cancer therapy.
Non-scaling FFAGs are a good candidate for use in an Accelerator Driven Subcritical Reactor system in which a non critical fission core is driven to criticality by a small accelerator. Future electrical power generation could be influenced heavily by the use power stations consisting of a sub-critical core containing a material such as thorium, and a small accelerator capable of providing extra neutrons via a spallation target.
EMMA was funded by the BASROC consortium, under the CONFORM umbrella. Commissioning of EMMA began in June 2010 when the beam was injected and sent around part of the ring. Full ring commissioning commenced in August 2010. As of March 31 2011, full ring circumnavigation was completed to establish proof of principle.
Tenille Dashwood (born 1 March 1989) is an Australian professional wrestler currently signed to WWE under the ring name Emma. Dashwood previously wrestled on the independent circuit under the ring name Tenille Tayla.
Emma is a 1955 novel by F. W. Kenyon published by Thomas Y. Crowell Company.
This novel recounts the historical relationship of Emma, Lady Hamilton and Admiral Horatio Nelson ( Lord Nelson) in the late 18th century from Emma’s point of view. It covers the period of time from when she was 16 (~1777) to shortly after Admiral Nelson’s death (~44 years old in 1805). The novel starts out a little slowly but then picks up enough speed to be an enjoyable read. Unfortunately, with so little known about the real life people 200 years after the fact, one is left thinking the book is nothing but a complete fictional rendering surrounding a misty historical figure. While it is undoubted that the author took some normal literary liberties to flesh out the book, the characters and situation are true to recorded history.
Also published as: Emma: My Lord Admiral's Mistress by F. W. Kenyon (Avon T-128, First printing 1956)
Category:1955 novels Category:Historical novels
Emma is a four-part BBC television drama serial adaptation of Jane Austen's novel Emma, first published in 1815. The episodes were written by Sandy Welch, acclaimed writer of previous BBC costume-dramas Jane Eyre and North & South, and directed by Jim O'Hanlon. The serial stars Romola Garai as the titular heroine Emma Woodhouse, Jonny Lee Miller as her loyal lifelong friend Mr. Knightley and Michael Gambon as Emma's father, Mr. Woodhouse. The serial originally ran weekly on Sunday nights on BBC One from the 4 to 25 October 2009.
Emma is a given female name. It is derived from the Germanic word ermen meaning whole or universal, and was originally a short form of Germanic names that began with ermen. Emma can also be seen as deriving from the Hebrew word immah אִמָּ֑הּ, a cognate of em אֵם, meaning "mother". Emma is also used as a diminutive of Emmeline, Amelia or any other name beginning with "em". It was introduced to England by Emma of Normandy, who was the wife both of King Ethelred II (and by him the mother of Edward the Confessor) and later of King Canute. It was also borne by an 11th-century Austrian saint, who is sometimes called Hemma.
After the Norman conquest this name became common in England. It was revived in the 18th century, perhaps in part due to Matthew Prior's poem Henry and Emma (1709). It was also used by Jane Austen for the central character, the matchmaker Emma Woodhouse, in her novel Emma (1815).
It has been among the top names given to baby girls in the United States, England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Ireland, France, Sweden, Belgium, Russia, Canada, Australia, Norway, New Zealand, Hungary, Finland, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, and Spain in the past 10 years. It began gaining popularity in the United Kingdom during the 1960s. By 1974 it was the fourth most popular girl's name in England and Wales. It was still in the top 10 as late as 1995, but had fallen out of the top 20 by 2005 and in 2009 it ranked at 41st.
It became popular in the United States later in the 20th century, reaching the top 100 names for girls in the late 1990s and rising to third place on the popularity chart in 2007. It was the most popular name for girls in the United States in 2008, but fell back to second place in 2009.
Usage examples of "emma".
In a flash, Maximilian, Clementine, Telzey, and Emma had surrounded Ake and were licking his face and putting their massive paws on his shoulders.
In regard to Chatterford, I shall send Nola and Avis back with you -- and possibly Emma Burke with the duke no longer a threat -- as walking testimonials for the next batch.
So I shall rouse Avis, Pelly, Nola, Arleigh and Emma on Saturday morning if the orgy still continues.
They are Nola Aimee, Avis Prentice, Pelly Carpenter, Emma Burke, Beth Orville, Molly Thomm and Peavy Green.
Is it true, all these things that Avis and Nola -- and Emma -- had to say about Joy Hall?
The Emma had been called in by aviso from her station off Rodriguez, but he had not looked for her sooner than Thursday.
There was no one about--though a vague murmur of voices from the kitchen indicated that Tante Emma and Mevrouw Blom were doing something about supper--Maartje would be with Tante Marijna.
May skies waxed bluer and the marsh grass grew thick and green, and Emma Tremayne went back to the house on Thames Street.
For long seconds Elias stared at Emma, his bushy eyebrows arched questioningly high above his steel gray eyes.
His bushy graying eyebrows arched questioningly, disbelievingly above the sharp glitter of steel gray eyes, and then Emma saw him burst out laughing as he ran toward her.
So too thought Emma, for there had come a lightness on her life, and she sang whilst about her work, except when in the cow byre or the yard.
Rupert, with Choc behind him, came in from the larger room whose fresh decorations Emma had displayed so proudly earlier in the day.
Aunt Emma spotted a look in your eyes when you were observing Paula at the christening two and a half years ago.
I am especially grateful to my editors, Betsy Mitchell of Del Rey, and Jane Johnson and Emma Coode of HarperCollins UK, for their insights and excellent advice.
The solicitor paused to take a sip of water, and went on to explain that Emma wished the Faberg6 object of art to be auctioned, the money returned to her grandchildren who had purchased it for her as a gift for her eightieth birthday.