Crossword clues for miro
miro
- Calder contemporary
- "The Tilled Field" painter
- "Harlequin's Carnival" painter
- Male artist named Joan
- Joan who painted "Dog Barking at the Moon"
- Focus of a Barcelona museum
- Braque contemporary
- "Still Life with Old Shoe" artist
- "Magnetic Fields" artist Joan
- "Head of a Catalan Peasant" painter
- "Dog Barking at the Moon" artist Joan
- "Carnival of Harlequin" surrealist
- ''Dog Barking at the Moon'' painter
- The other Spanish surrealist
- Surrealist from Barcelona
- Surrealist André Breton called him "the most Surrealist of us all"
- Subject of a Barcelona museum
- Spanish painter who influenced Pollock
- Spanish ceramist
- Painter/sculptor from Barcelona
- Painter from Spain
- Painter from Barcelona
- Painter born in Barcelona
- MoMA holding
- Grattage pioneer Joan
- Fundació Joan __: Barcelona museum
- Friend and influencer of Calder
- Focus of a Barcelona art museum
- Dalí countryman/contemporary
- Cubist Joan
- Catalan Landscape (The Hunter) painter
- Catalan artist Joan
- Catalan artist
- Barcelona-born painter of "Dog Barking at the Moon"
- Barcelona-born painter
- Artist who advocated the "assassination of painting"
- Artist Joan from Barcelona
- Artist Joan ___
- Artist given the 1958 Guggenheim International Award
- 20th-century Spanish painter
- "Triptych Bleu I, II, III," e.g
- "The World Trade Center Tapestry" artist
- "The Farm" painter Joan
- "The Birth of the World" painter Joan
- "The Birth of the World" painter
- "Still Life with Coffee Mill" painter Joan
- "Personages With Stars" painter
- "People at Night, Guided by the Phosphorescent Tracks of Snails" painter Joan
- "Horse, Pipe, and Red Flower" painter Joan
- "Dutch Interior" painter
- "Dutch Interior" artist
- "Catalan Landscape" painter
- "Catalan Landscape (The Hunter)" artist
- 'Catalan Landscape' painter
- Muralist Joan
- Painter Joan ___
- Joan of art
- Dali contemporary
- Harvard muralist
- Fantastical artist
- Spanish surrealist Joan
- "Dutch Interior" painter Joan
- "Dog Barking at the Moon" painter, 1926
- Catalan painter Joan
- Catalan-born Surrealist
- Ceramic muralist for the Unesco building in Paris
- Surrealist Joan
- "The Farm" or "Still Life With Old Shoe"
- "Harlequin's Carnival" painter Joan
- Spanish artist Joan ___
- "Blue II" painter, 1961
- "Harlequin's Carnival," for one
- "The Tilled Field" painter Joan
- A Barcelona museum is dedicated to his work
- Abstract artist Joan
- Artist Joan, from Spain
- "The Farm" painter, 1921
- Barcelona's Joan ___ Foundation
- "The Hunter (Catalan Landscape)" painter
- New Zealand conifer
- Spanish surrealist painter (1893-1983)
- "In Reverse" painter
- Spanish Superrealist
- He painted "Dog Barking at the Moon"
- Spanish novelist Gabriel ___
- Spanish surrealist painter Joan
- Spanish painter Joan ___
- Leading surrealist
- Barcelona-born artist
- Picasso contemporary Joan
- Spanish author: 1879–1930
- Ultramodern Spanish artist
- Compatriot of Dali
- Cubist pioneer
- Surrealist painter Joan
- Contemporary of Chagall
- Painter of "Dog Barking at the Moon"
- Placed upside down in error, impressionist artist
- Joan —, Spanish painter
- Spanish muralist Joan
- Catalan surrealist Joan
- "Dog Barking at the Moon" painter Joan
- Catalan painter and sculptor
- Barcelona-born surrealist
- Barcelona-born muralist
- "Blue II" painter Joan
- Inspiration for Calder
Wiktionary
n. 1 The dark, durable, attractive wood of the portia tree (taxlink Thespesia populnea species noshow=1). 2 ''Prumnopitys ferruginea'', a conifer of New Zealand.
WordNet
n. New Zealand conifer [syn: black pine, Prumnopitys ferruginea, Podocarpus ferruginea]
Spanish surrealist painter (1893-1983) [syn: Joan Miro]
Wikipedia
Miro may refer to:
- Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization, a reformist Iranian political organization
- Prumnopitys ferruginea, an evergreen coniferous tree endemic to New Zealand.
Miro (Mir, Mirio, ) was the Suebian King of Galicia from 570 until his death in 583. His reign was marked by attempts to forge alliances with other Chalcedonian Christian nations with the goal of checking the power of the Arian Visigoths under Leovigild. During his reign relations were established with both Francia and the Byzantine Empire and the kingdom reached its zenith, but it collapsed within three years of his death.
Miro enjoyed good relations with the Church during his reign. In 572 he called the Second Council of Braga, a supplementary council to the First Council of Braga of 561. It has even been suggested, based on the lack of a signatory for the diocese of Dumio in the concilar acts, that Miro himself may have represented that see.
Miro also maintained "intimate and friendly" relations with Martin of Dumio, the Archbishop of Braga and Metropolitan of Gallaecia. Martin's principal work, Formula Vitae Honestae, is dedicated to him, and the Exhortatio Humilitatis, printed among Martin's works, is also probably addressed to him. Indeed, Martin advised Miro's counsellors to read his Formula so as to be able better to counsel the king.
In the same year as the council of Braga, Miro conducted an expedition against the Ruccones (Runcones) of Cantabria, possibly a Basque tribe, with the intention of expanding his kingdom. This attack on a people within the Gothic kingdom was perhaps an excuse for Gothic reprisals against the Sueves. In 573 Leovigild subdued the region of "Sabaria" (probably between Zamora and Salamanca) with the likely intention of preempting Miro. In 574 he "restored the province [of Cantabria] to his dominion." In response, Miro sent envoys to Guntram, the Frankish King of Burgundy and a consistent thorn in Leovigild's side, but they were intercepted and detained on the way by Leovigild's ally, Chilperic I, the Frankish king of Neustria.
In 575 Leovigild invaded the "Aregensian Mountains" near Ourense and captured "the lord of the region, along with his wife, children, and riches, bringing the region under his power." Aspidius, the "lord of the region", may have been a Hispano-Roman landowner who had sided with the Suevi. In 576 Leovigild again marched to the southern frontier of Galicia (the Douro) and menaced the small kingdom, even founding the city of Villa Gothorum (modern Toro). Miro sued for peace, and obtained it for a short time. In 580 Miro endeavoured to support Leovigild's Catholic son Hermenegild in rebellion.
For the events surrounding Miro's death, the contemporary and near-contemporary accounts conflict. According to Gregory of Tours, in 583 Miro led an army to raise the siege of Seville by Leovigild, but the two kings held a conference before Miro had reached Seville and he returned to Galicia, where he died shortly after, supposedly from the effects of the bad air and water of Baetica. On the other hand, two Iberian chroniclers, John of Biclar and Isidore of Seville, concur that he died before Seville while assisting Leovigild with the siege of the town. Modern scholarship favours Gregory's interpretation, taking into account Miro's alliances with Francia and Byzantium, Suevic animosity to the Goths, and the shared Catholic faith of Sueves and rebels.
He was succeeded in provincia Gallacciæ by his son adolescent Eboric. He also left a widow, Sisegu(n)tia, who married Andeca, who deposed Eboric and took to ruling in Gallaccia Suevorum regnum.
Miro (formerly named Democracy Player or DTV) is an audio, video player and Internet television application developed by the Participatory Culture Foundation. It runs on Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, FreeBSD and Linux and supports most known video file formats. It offers both audio and video, some in HD quality.
Miro would appear to have been abandoned, the last version (6.0) was released in 2013 and is no longer functioning correctly because of changes to the YouTube API.
Miro is free software, released under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
Usage examples of "miro".
His mind raced on and on, as fast as ever, thinking so many thoughts that at times Miro wanted his brain to shut down, to be silent and give him peace.
From then on, Miro had found that Jane was the only person he could talk to easily.
Miro to speak openly in front of Jakt, if Jakt had not taken care to make sure Miro heard nothing but respect and interest from him.
Sure enough, after he subvocalized, the computer image of Miro spoke again.
So Miro leaned forward, found his balance, and precariously lifted himself from his seat.
He had thought that Miro would see humans and pequeninos living side by side, two species living in harmony.
Getting Quara and Grego, Miro and Quim and Olhado to trust him enough to speak to him, that had been hard when Ender first came to Lusitania.
It was easy to forget that, and recall instead the Miro they had known for so many years before.
This whole thing was making them so uncomfortable they had to escape, take time to assimilate this version of Miro who had just returned to them, or perhaps plot how to avoid him as much as possible in the future.
Of course he understood that this was why it was so hard for them to deal with the broken Miro that stood before them.
Jane had told Miro that his next-younger brother was a great missionary.
Valentine were keeping up the bantering tone they had established from the first, so that no matter which way Miro decided, they would laughingly turn it into a choice between the two Wiggins.
It was so gracefully done that Miro wondered if Valentine and Andrew had discussed it in advance.
She studied him as he took her and Miro and Plikt out by car, skimming over the endless prairies of capim.
Making conversation with her and Miro and silent Plikt, but still holding something back.