Find the word definition

Wiktionary
wise men

n. (plural of wise man English)

Wikipedia
Wise Men (Nadler novel)

Wise Men is the debut novel of Stuart Nadler. It was published by Reagan Arthur Books on February 5, 2013. The plot of the novel follows Hilly Wise, who falls in love with Savannah, the niece of a black caretaker. Wise Men has received varied reviews from literary critics.

Wise men

Wise men can refer to:

  • Biblical Magi, the "wise men" who follow the Star of Bethlehem in the New Testament
  • Homo sapiens (which in English means 'Wise man'), the name for a species of hominid of which modern humans are one of the subspecies.
  • Fu Lu Shou (Sanxing), personified deities of good fortune, prosperity, and longevity in Chinese Buddhism and Taoism
  • The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made, a 1986 book about the group of foreign policy elders during the Cold War by Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas
  • Wise Men, a 2013 novel by Stuart Nadler
  • Wise Men of Gotham
  • Three Wise Men (cocktail), a drink made from a mixture of three different types of whiskey
  • Wisemen (rap group)
  • " Wisemen", a pop rock song by James Blunt
  • Three Wise Men ( Professional wrestling), colloquial term for the three featured managers in the WWF during the 1970s and early 1980s, The Grand Wizard of Wrestling, Captain Lou Albano and "Classy" Freddie Blassie
  • Three Wise Men (Canadian politics), a nickname given to Quebec intellectuals Jean Marchand, GĂ©rard Pelletier and Pierre Trudeau, who were elected to Parliament in 1965

Usage examples of "wise men".

These eyes, blue as the sky, were shot through with vivid emerald flecks-Ghorvish whorls, as they were called, proof that he was among the chosen of the Ghor, the wise men of ancient times who had received the Mokakaddir, the ecstatic prayer cycle the Gazi Qhan chanted, from Jiharre himself.

These eyes, blue as the sky, were shot through with vivid emerald flecks-Ghorvish whorls, as they were called, proof that he was among the chosen of the Ghor, the wise men of ancient times who had received theMokakaddir, the ecstatic prayer cycle the Gazi Qhan chanted, from Jiharre himself.

Beyond the Topapasirut lay lands unknown even to the wise men of Turput.