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Moise

Moïse (redirects here) is the French spelling of Moses:

  • Moïse (opera) by Rossini
    • Saint-Moïse, Quebec parish municipality in Quebec
  • Moïse Amyraut (1596-1664) French theologian
  • Moïse Brou Apanga (b. 1982) Côte d'Ivoire born Gabonese footballer
  • Joël Moïse Babanda (b. 1992) Cameroonian footballer
  • Moïse Bambara (b. 1984) German-Burkinabé footballer
  • Moïse de Camondo (1860-1935) French banker
  • Moïse Fortier (1815-1877) Quebec businessman
  • Moïse Houde (1811-1885) Quebec politician
  • Moise Joseph (b. 1981) Haitian middle-distance runner
  • Moïse Kandé (b. 1978) Mauritanian footballer
  • Moïse Katumbi Chapwe (b. 1964), governor of the Katanga province in the DRC.
  • Moïse Kisling (1891-1953), Polish-Jewish French painter
  • Moïse Lévy de Benzion (1873-1943), Egyptian Jewish department store owner and art collector
  • Moïse Plante (1830-1892) Quebec merchant and politician
  • Moïse Rahmani (b. 1944), Egyptian-born Belgian-Congo then Belgian Jewish author
  • Jean-Moïse Raymond (1787-1843)
  • Moïse Schwab (1839–1918) French librarian
  • Moïse Thériault (1947-2011) leader of small religious group in Ontario
  • Moïse Tshombe (1919-1969), president of Katanga in August 1960,
  • Moïse Vauquelin ( fl. 1650-1670) French buccaneer

Moise is the Romanian spelling of Moses

  • Moise Movilă (1596–1661) Prince of Moldavia
  • Moise of Wallachia (d.1530) Romanian prince
  • Moise Crăciun (1927-), Romanian skier
  • Cilibi Moise (1812-1870) Romanian Jewish humorist

Moisè also Mosè are Italian spellings of Moses

  • Chiesa di San Moisè
  • Teatro San Moisè
    • Mosè in Egitto

Moise other first names

  • Moise Poida (1978), Vanuatuan footballer
  • Moise Pomaney (1945) Ghanaian long-jumper
  • Moise Safra (1935–2014), a Brazilian businessman and founder of Banco Safra

Moise French-American surname

  • Edwin E. Moise (1918-1988), American mathematician
    • Moise's theorem
    • distinguish from Edwin E. Moïse, Professor of History at Clemson University.
  • Patty Moise (1960), American former NASCAR driver
  • Penina Moise (1797-1880) American poet of French-Jewish descent

Moïse Haitian surname

  • Edwin Warren Moïse, Jewish-American physician and Judge in the Confederate States of America of French-Haitian descent
  • Lenelle Moïse (1980), actress
  • Rudy Moise, retired colonel in the United States Air Force, doctor, lawyer, politician, entrepreneur and actor
  • Teri Moïse (1970), Haitian-American female singer

Usage examples of "moise".

First he was to use the telephone and call to see if either Moise or Avram would answer the phone.

Impeccable manners to the contrary, I still had a feeling Moise and Avram were playing us for fools.

Our visit with Moise Rosenthal and Avram Steinman was making him late.

I made one abortive attempt to pick up the tab, but Moise waved that aside, telling me it was handled on a direct-billing basis.

After that fiasco with Moise and Avram walking away with the soldiers, I was worried someone else might try to pull a fast one.

The continent of Africa has indeed produced a few, including the great Prester John, as also the late Moise Tshombe, whom you have met personally.

I shall send for Monsieur Moise from Troyes until I know what master I ought to get from Paris.

Marc Moise turned slowly in his seat to better visualize the man in the console chair.

Marc Moise sat down in the chair before the main viewer, trying to reconcile the crusty voice that had spoken to him with the childhood memory of Uncle Sam Beasley.

Sam Beasley wore a white uniform with gold trim and shaking gold-braid epaulets that made Marc Moise think of an Italian admiral of the fleet.

Rio di San Moise, off the Grand Canal, and Sullivan made his way past narrow shops and museums to sprawling St.

During the Revolution Moise Piedefer bought up the nationalized land, pulled down abbeys and churches with all the zeal of his ancestors, oddly enough, and married a Catholic, the only daughter of a member of the Convention who had perished on the scaffold.

ENACO office I ran into a local farmer named Moises, who was declaring his coca.

It showed very little trust and bad faith that I did not believe Moises when he had said that his village was safe.

By the time Moises addressed the village again we were surrounded by a hundred inquisitive villagers, waiting patiently in the rain to see what this gringo was all about.