Search references for ROMAN WITKIEWICZ. Phrases containing ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
See searches and references containing ROMAN WITKIEWICZ!ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
Public university in Lviv, Ukraine
Stanislaw Pilat, Włodzimierz Stożek, Kazimierz Vetulani, Kasper Weigel, Roman Witkiewicz, Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński and others. 26 July 1941: Professor Kazimierz
Lviv_Polytechnic
1941 mass murder of Polish academics by Nazi forces in present-day Lviv, Ukraine
of Measures, PL Mgr Józef Weigel, son of Prof Kasper Weigel Prof Dr Roman Witkiewicz, Chief of the Institute of Machinery, PL Prof Dr Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński
Massacre_of_Lwów_professors
Individual who is known and addressed by a single name
Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939) after 1925 often used the mononymous pseudonym Witkacy, a conflation of his surname (Witkiewicz) and middle name
Mononym
Polish painter or even as the "national painter" of Poland. Stanisław Witkiewicz was an ardent supporter of Realism in Polish art, its main representative
Polish_art
Themerson Jerzy Tomaszewski Jacek Tylicki Piotr Uklański Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz Casimir Zagourski Joanna Zastróżna Artur Żmijewski (filmmaker) Wikimedia
List_of_Polish_photographers
knowledge of Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, and Finnish. Jan Prosper Witkiewicz (1808–1839), Polish-Lithuanian explorer and diplomat. He spoke Polish
List_of_polyglots
German singer (born 1945)
Katja Ebstein (born Karin Witkiewicz; 9 March 1945) is a German singer. She was born in Girlachsdorf (now Gniewków, Poland). She achieved success with
Katja_Ebstein
Given name of Slavic origin
Slovenian-Croatian poet Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939), Polish writer, playwright, painter and philosopher Stanisław Witkiewicz (1851–1915), Polish artist
Stanislav_(given_name)
Siege between Qajar Iran and the Principality of Herat
Eldred Pottinger as well as the Russians, Count Simonich and Jan Prosper Witkiewicz. Sher Mohammad Khan Hazara, an ally of Kamran and chieftain of the Qala-e
First_Herat_War
Name list
prelate of the Roman Catholic Church Ignacy Witczak, GRU Illegal officer in the United States during World War II Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939)
Ignacy
1838–1842 British-Afghan war
Lord Auckland heard about the arrival of Russian envoy Count Jan Prosper Witkiewicz (better known by the Russian version of his name as Yan Vitkevich) in
First_Anglo-Afghan_War
Novel by Mikhail Bulgakov, written 1928–1940
The Master and Margarita (Russian: Мастер и Маргарита, romanized: Master i Margarita) is a novel by Mikhail Bulgakov, written in the Soviet Union between
The_Master_and_Margarita
1926 novel by Ernest Hemingway
novel in London under the title Fiesta. It remains in print. The novel is a roman à clef: the characters are based on people in Hemingway's circle and the
The_Sun_Also_Rises
Polish actor and director (born 1946)
following the staging of Wajda's interpretation of plays by Stanisław Witkiewicz at the Théâtre Nanterre-Amandiers. The imposition of the martial law in
Andrzej_Seweryn
American author and journalist (1899–1961)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Ernest_Hemingway
Polish actor (born 1961)
on March 15, 1986 playing the role of social activist Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz in Panna Tutli Putli staged by the Wrocławski Teatr Współczesny (Wrocław
Cezary_Żak
Regional museum in Toruń, Poland
Wyczółkowski, Stanisław Wyspiański, Jacek Malczewski, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Wojciech Weiss, Józef Mehoffer, Konrad Krzyżanowski, Ferdynand Ruszczyc
District_Museum_in_Toruń
Early 20th-century artistic style
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Fauvism
1913 ballet by Igor Stravinsky
score, superseding the older 2000 edition. Russian: Весна священная, romanized: Vesna svyashchennaya, lit. 'sacred spring'. Full name: The Rite of Spring:
The_Rite_of_Spring
Spanish painter and sculptor (1881–1973)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Pablo_Picasso
Late 19th-century movement
Tadeusz Miciński (1873-1918) Antoni Lange (1862-1929) Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885-1939) Belgian Jean Delville (1867–1953) Théodore Hannon (1851–1916)
Decadent_movement
American mercenary in Afghanistan and Punjab (1799–1871)
Count Jan Prosper Witkiewicz, who had arrived in Kabul as the representative of the emperor Nicholas I of Russia. With Witkiewicz's arrival, the "Great
Josiah_Harlan
Austrian and Czech writer (1883–1924)
(1998). Films from other genres that have been similarly described include Roman Polanski's The Tenant (1976), Joseph Losey's Monsieur Klein (1976) and the
Franz_Kafka
Polish painter (1850–1901)
Wanderer). Responsible for art affairs in these magazines was Stanisław Witkiewicz, who took up a battle for Gierymski's public recognition. Paintings, which
Aleksander_Gierymski
American filmmaker and actor (1929–1989)
Edge of the City (1957), Robert Aldrich's war film The Dirty Dozen (1967), Roman Polanski's horror film Rosemary's Baby (1968) and Elaine May's crime drama
John_Cassavetes
during his imprisonment by Benito Mussolini. 1939 – Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz committed suicide by taking an overdose of barbital and trying to slit
Deaths_of_philosophers
Cultural and artistic movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Modernism
Irish novelist and poet (1882–1941)
Dubliners, Joyce found an advertisement for a correspondence clerk in a Roman bank that paid twice his current salary. He was hired for the position and
James_Joyce
City in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland
collection of paintings by popular early-20th-century artist Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz. It is also home to the Pomeranian University in Słupsk and notable basketball
Słupsk
Art museum
(e.g., Leon Chwistek, Tytus Czyżewski), “pure form” (Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz) or Unism (Władysław Strzemiński). The collection was initiated by the
Museum_of_Art,_Łódź
American dancer and choreographer (1877–1927)
flowing, hand-painted red silk shawl, created by the Russian-born artist Roman Chatov, a gift from her friend Mary Desti, the mother of American filmmaker
Isadora_Duncan
American filmmaker and photographer (1928–1999)
an interest in literature from a young age and began reading Greek and Roman myths and the fables of the Brothers Grimm. When Kubrick was 12, his father
Stanley_Kubrick
Italian poet (1876–1944)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Filippo_Tommaso_Marinetti
1863 painting by Édouard Manet
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Olympia_(Manet)
Avant-garde art movement in the early 20th century
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Dada
portrayals of customs and significant events in Polish history. Stanisław Witkiewicz was an ardent supporter of Realism in Polish art, its main representative
Culture_of_Poland
Works that are experimental or innovative
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Avant-garde
Chronological list of authors who wrote in the Polish language
Michał Bobrzyński (1850–1917) Julian Ochorowicz (1851–1915) Stanisław Witkiewicz (1852–1915) Isaac Leib Peretz (1852–1927) Kazimierz Bartoszewicz (1858–1924)
List of Polish-language authors
List_of_Polish-language_authors
19th-century art movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Impressionism
International cultural movement (1920s–1950s)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Surrealism
1929 novel by William Faulkner
new time period, the book's font usually transitions between italic and roman type, but not always. This text formatting is non-diegetic; Benjy does not
The_Sound_and_the_Fury
German novelist (1875–1955)
to Germany with her family when she was seven years old. His mother was Roman Catholic but Mann was baptised into his father's Lutheran religion. Mann's
Thomas_Mann
1922 novel by James Joyce
example is Joyce's apparent rendering of the year 1904 into the impossible Roman numeral MXMIV (p. 669 of the 1961 Modern Library edition) "The Little Review"
Ulysses_(novel)
Forced migration during World War II
Karol Szymanowski. Future writer and painter Witkacy, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, participated in the Revolution. He emigrated to Poland with anti-revolutionary
Flight_of_Poles_from_the_USSR
Artistic and architectural philosophy originating in Russia
Constructivism (Russian: конструктивизм, romanized: konstruktivizm) is an early twentieth-century art movement founded in 1915 by Vladimir Tatlin and
Constructivism_(art)
Russian and French artist (1887–1985)
Yiddish: מאַרק זאַכאַראָוויטש שאַגאַל; Russian: Марк Захарович Шагал, romanized: Mark Zakharovich Shagal [ˈmark ʂɐˈɡal]; Belarusian: Марк Захаравіч Шагал
Marc_Chagall
(1861–1947)[a][b][c][d][e] Wilhelm Windelband, (1848–1915)[a][e]* Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, (1885–1939) Ludwig Wittgenstein, (1889–1951)[a][b][c][d][e] Woo Tsin-hang
List of philosophers born in the 19th century
List_of_philosophers_born_in_the_19th_century
Peckinpah Melvin Van Peebles Larry Peerce Arthur Penn Eagle Pennell Frank Perry Roman Polanski Sydney Pollack Abraham Polonsky Ted Post Bob Rafelson Robert Redford
List of films considered as New Hollywood
List_of_films_considered_as_New_Hollywood
1925 film by Sergei Eisenstein
Tomatoes, a film review aggregator website Russian: Броненосец «Потёмкин», romanized: Bronenosets «Potyomkin», [brənʲɪˈnosʲɪts pɐˈtʲɵmkʲɪn], sometimes rendered
Battleship_Potemkin
West Slavic language
period authors include Maria Dąbrowska (Nights and Days), Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (Insatiability), Julian Tuwim, Bruno Schulz, Bolesław Leśmian, Witold
Polish_language
City in Kuyavian-Pomeranian, Poland
Malczewski and Vlastimil Hofman (symbolism), Józef Mehoffer, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Wojciech Kossak, Alfons Karpiński, Olga Boznańska (1920s and 1930s),
Włocławek
Artistic and social movement
architects were sometimes at odds with the Fascist state's tendency towards Roman imperial-classical aesthetic patterns. Nevertheless, several Futurist buildings
Futurism
Wilczynski (1894–1978), painter and illustrator Stanisław Witkiewicz (1851–1915) Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz a.k.a. "Witkacy" (1885–1939) Karol D. Witkowski (1860–1910)
List_of_Polish_artists
Mid-20th century French cinema movement
Robbe-Grillet, and Marguerite Duras are also associated with the group. The nouveau roman movement in literature was also a strong element of the Left Bank style
French_New_Wave
(1894–1978) Mikołaj Wisznicki (1870–1954) Stanisław Witkiewicz (1851–1915) Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939) Karol D. Witkowski (1860–1910) Wincenty
List_of_Polish_painters
English writer and publisher (1873–1939)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Ford_Madox_Ford
Historical region in Poland
holds the world's biggest collection of paintings by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz. Perhaps more unusual museums include the Museum of Polish Arms (Muzeum
Farther_Pomerania
Church in Łódź Voivodeship, Poland
works began in 1947 and were headed by Jan Zachwatowicz and Jan Koszczyc Witkiewicz. The church was rebuilt without the later Gothic or Neoclassical elements
Tum_Collegiate_Church
1913–1927 novel in seven volumes by Marcel Proust
first volume of the section within In Search of Lost Time known as "le Roman d'Albertine" ("the Albertine novel"). The name "Albertine" first appears
In_Search_of_Lost_Time
Proposed state in Eastern Europe (1918)
entered Minsk without a fight on 21 February 1918, Minsk landowners (Ignacy Witkiewicz, Edmund Iwaszkiewicz, Czesław Krupski and other members of the MAS and
Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Belarus
Grand_Duchy_of_Lithuania_and_Belarus
Opera by Richard Strauss
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Salome_(opera)
Oil on canvas painting by Édouard Manet
model, in turn, ultimately derives from antiquity, in particular from two Roman sarcophagi of the second century AD, preserved respectively at Villa Medici
Le_Déjeuner_sur_l'herbe
Movement in various forms of art and design
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Minimalism
1922 poem by T. S. Eliot
not only the modern ear, gluttonous of rhyme, but also the ear trained to Roman and Hellenic music, to which rhyme seemed and seems a vulgarity". The section
The_Waste_Land
Art theory espousing pure abstraction
and Greeks, where nature and spirit were still in balance. The ancient Romans focused on the natural, while in the Middle Ages the spiritual predominated
Neoplasticism
Modernist art movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Expressionism
Israeli cinema movement
The New Sensibility (Hebrew: הרגישות החדשה, romanized: HaRagishut HaHadasha) was an Israeli film movement active during the 1960s and 1970s. It was the
New_Sensibility
French poet and writer (1880–1918)
Belarusian: Гіём Альберт Уладзімір Аляксандр Апалінарый Кастравіцкі, romanized: Giyom Alʹbyert Uladzimir Alyaksandr Apalinaryi Kastravitski; names of
Guillaume_Apollinaire
French novelist (1821–1880)
University Press. p. 89. Séginger, Gisèle (2005). "Le Roman de la Momie et Salammbô. Deux romans archéologiques contre l'Histoire". Bulletin de l'Association
Gustave_Flaubert
American post–World War II art movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Abstract_expressionism
Visual arts movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Minimalism_(visual_arts)
Polish-British writer (1857–1924)
Harper's Magazine, 1910, and collected in Twixt Land and Sea, 1912 "Prince Roman": written 1910, published 1911 in The Oxford and Cambridge Review; posthumously
Joseph_Conrad
German composer and conductor (1864–1949)
Alice von Grab-Hermannswörth, daughter of a Jewish industrialist, in a Roman Catholic ceremony. Franz and Alice had two sons, Richard and Christian.
Richard_Strauss
1907 painting by Pablo Picasso
particular the influence of African tribal masks, art of Oceania, and pre-Roman Iberian sculptures. The rounded contours of the features of the three women
Les_Demoiselles_d'Avignon
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Italian modern and contemporary architecture
Italian_modern_and_contemporary_architecture
American film director (1918–1983)
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Robert_Aldrich
Polish state from 1918 to 1939
Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz, Jan Parandowski, Bruno Schultz, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Witold Gombrowicz. Among other notable artists there were sculptor Xawery
Second_Polish_Republic
Visual art inspired by psychedelic experiences
movement include Lautreamont, Louis-Ferdinand Celine, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille, William Burroughs, De Quincey, Terence
Psychedelic_art
French composer and pianist (1866–1925)
Protestant of Scottish descent; Alfred Satie, a shipping broker, was a Roman Catholic. A year later, the Saties had a daughter, Olga, and in 1869 a second
Erik_Satie
Theatrical genre since the 1950s
such as Lewis Carroll or Edward Lear; Polish playwright Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz; the Russians Daniil Kharms, Nikolai Erdman, and others; Bertolt Brecht's
Theatre_of_the_absurd
Austrian writer (1886–1951)
manufacture and a spinning and weaving college. In 1909 he converted to Roman Catholicism and married Franziska von Rothermann, the daughter of a knighted
Hermann_Broch
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
20th-century_art
1929 French film
December 1951). "Mon ami Buñuel". L'Écran française (335): 12. Gubern, Roman, and Paul Hammond (2012). Luis Bunuel: The Red Years, 1929–1939. Milwaukee:
Un_Chien_Andalou
1952 modernist composition by John Cage
4 time signature, and the beginning of each sentence is identified with Roman numerals and a scale indication: '60 = 1⁄2-inch'. At the end of each sentence
4′33″
Art movement emerging in the mid-1950s
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Pop_art
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
List_of_art_movements
Russian painter and art theorist (1866–1944)
kænˈdɪnski/ VASS-il-ee kan-DIN-skee; Russian: Василий Васильевич Кандинский, romanized: Vasiliy Vasil'yevich Kandinskiy, IPA: [vɐˈsʲilʲɪj vɐˈsʲilʲjɪvʲɪtɕ kɐnʲˈdʲinskʲɪj]
Wassily_Kandinsky
Yugoslavian avant-garde art movement from 1921 to 1926
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Zenitism
Styles of art associated with periods of time and/or locations of artistic activity
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Art_movement
Polish national interests. Polish writer and philosopher Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz lived through the Russian Revolution while in St. Petersburg. What he
Poles_in_the_Soviet_Union
1910 ballet by Igor Stravinsky
The Firebird (French: L'Oiseau de feu; Russian: Жар-птица, romanized: Zhar-ptitsa) is a ballet and orchestral concert work by the Russian composer Igor
The_Firebird
discovering folk motives. The leading figure of this trend was Stanisław Witkiewicz, the founder of the Zakopane Style. Folk-inspired were also many World
Architecture_of_Poland
Historical period and socio-cultural norm or attitude
the Christian era of the Later Roman Empire from the Pagan era of the Greco-Roman world. In the 6th century CE, Roman historian and statesman Cassiodorus
Modernity
Art movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Color_field
independence. New avant-garde writers included Julian Tuwim, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Witold Gombrowicz, Czesław Miłosz, Maria Dąbrowska and Zofia Nałkowska
Polish_literature
20th-century avant-garde art movement
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Cubism
National museum in Warsaw, Poland
Negress, Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowiczowa Self-portrait, Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz Taking of the Warsaw Arsenal, Marcin Zaleski Crucifixus dolorosus of the
National_Museum_in_Warsaw
Architectural style
O'Neill Osborne Pirandello Piscator Strindberg Toller Wedekind Wilder Witkiewicz Dance Balanchine Cunningham Diaghilev Duncan Fokine Fuller Graham Holm
Stripped_Classicism
Day of the year
Chester W. Nimitz, American admiral (died 1966) 1885 – Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, Polish author, poet, and painter (died 1939) 1890 – Marjorie Main, American
February_24
Russian and Soviet author (1891–1940)
Sobachye Serdtse was produced by Lenfilm, starring Yevgeniy Yevstigneyev, Roman Kartsev and Vladimir Tolokonnikov. The novel The Master and Margarita is
Mikhail_Bulgakov
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
Male
Irish
Pet form of Irish Gaelic Roibéard, ROBAN means "bright fame."
Boy/Male
English American Gaelic Irish
From the rowan tree.
Male
French
French form of Latin Romanus, ROMAIN means "Roman."
Female
English
English name derived from the vocabulary word, ROWAN means "rowan tree." Compare with masculine Rowan.Â
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Czechoslovakian, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Latin, Muslim, Polish, Spanish, Swedish
Citizen of Rome; Woman from Rome
Female
Italian
Feminine form of Italian Romano, ROMANA means "Roman."Â
Male
English
 English name derived from Latin Romanus, ROMAN means "Roman." Compare with other forms of Roman.
Male
Italian
Italian form of Latin Romanus, ROMANO means "Roman."
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, Dutch, English, Gaelic, Indian, Irish
From the Rowan Tree; Red-haired; Red Haired Surname; Red
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, Dutch, German, and Catalan
English, Scottish, Dutch, German, and Catalan : patronymic from the personal name Roman.
Boy/Male
English
From the rowan tree.
Male
English
 Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Ruadhán, ROHAN means "little red one." Compare with another form of Rohan.
Surname or Lastname
Catalan, French, English, German (also Romann), Polish, Hungarian (Román), Romanian, Ukrainian, and Belorussian
Catalan, French, English, German (also Romann), Polish, Hungarian (Román), Romanian, Ukrainian, and Belorussian : from the Latin personal name Romanus, which originally meant ‘Roman’. This name was borne by several saints, including a 7th-century bishop of Rouen.English, French, and Catalan : regional or ethnic name for someone from Rome or from Italy in general, or a nickname for someone who had some connection with Rome, as for example having been there on a pilgrimage. Compare Romero.
Male
English
Irish surname transferred to forename use, derived from an Anglicized form of Gaelic Ruadhán, ROWAN means "little red one." Compare with feminine Rowan.
Boy/Male
Spanish American Russian Biblical Latin
From Rome.
Boy/Male
French Latin
A Roman.
Boy/Male
Australian, French, German, Jamaican, Latin, Swiss
A Roman; Man from Rome
Male
Polish
 Polish name derived from Latin Romanus, ROMAN means "Roman." Compare with other forms of Roman.
Male
Russian
(Роман) Russian name derived from Latin Romanus, ROMAN means "Roman." Compare with other forms of Roman.
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, Chinese, Christian, Czechoslovakian, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Latin, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss, Ukrainian
Citizen of Roman; Man from Rome
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
Boy/Male
Hindu
Goddess of melody or master of melodic modes, The Man who sings sweet ragas
Girl/Female
Tamil
Suvarnarekha | ஸà¯à®µà®°à¯à®£à®°à¯‡à®•ா
Ray of gold
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a lost or unidentified place, possibly in southwestern England.
Boy/Male
Indian
Slave of the one who seeks
Surname or Lastname
North German
North German : topographic name for someone who lived among birch trees, from a derivative of Middle Low German berke ‘birch’.Hungarian : from a pet form of the ecclesiastical names Bernát, Hungarian form of Bernhard, or Bertalan, Hungarian form of Bartholomew.English : variant spelling of Birks (see Birch).
Boy/Male
Muslim
Gift of God
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : variant spelling of Vial.German : topographic name from vil, an old word for a swamp or bog.Italian (Venetia) : from a pet form of Vito.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Who wins the heart of people
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Beautiful
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
One who Follows Worship; Spiritual
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
ROMAN WITKIEWICZ
a.
Expressed in letters, not in figures, as I., IV., i., iv., etc.; -- said of numerals, as distinguished from the Arabic numerals, 1, 4, etc.
a.
Of or pertaining to Rome, or the Roman people; like or characteristic of Rome, the Roman people, or things done by Romans; as, Roman fortitude; a Roman aqueduct; Roman art.
a.
Made of the leather called roan; as, roan binding.
a.
Upright; erect; -- said of the letters or kind of type ordinarily used, as distinguished from Italic characters.
n.
A roan horse.
n.
The Roman See in its temporal aspects, including all the machinery of administration; -- called also curia Romana.
v. t.
To act the part of a woman in; -- with indefinite it.
n.
A patrial noun. Thus Romanus, a Roman, and Troas, a woman of Troy, are patrial nouns, or patrials.
n.
A woman that sells herbs.
n.
The color of a roan horse; a roan color.
v. t.
To furnish with, or unite to, a woman.
a.
Having characteristics that are partly Greek and partly Roman; as, Greco-Roman architecture.
n.
Roman type, letters, or print, collectively; -- in distinction from Italics.
n.
A Roman Catholic.
n.
A native, or permanent resident, of Rome; a citizen of Rome, or one upon whom certain rights and privileges of a Roman citizen were conferred.
a.
Of or pertaining to the Roman Catholic religion; professing that religion.
n.
Rowan tree.
v. i.
To come under the influence of the Romans, or of the Roman Catholic Church.
n.
An adherent of the Roman Catholic church; a Roman Catholic.
n. pl.
Roman citizens.