One was Emile Amélineau, who headed up excavations at Abydos at the turn of the century.
The Nile: Where Ancient and Modern Meet|William O’Connor|June 21, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Valor – Actor Emile Hirsch chose this upstanding name for his son.
Kate Winslet’s Bear Rocknroll & Other Crazy Celebrity Baby Names of 2013|Pamela Redmond Satran/Nameberry|December 23, 2013|DAILY BEAST
This kind of combat reached its apotheosis when the guest was an insurance swindler called Emile Savundra.
‘A Fiery Tribune’|Clive Irving|September 1, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Movies about literary lions and lionesses—The Life of Emile Zola (1937) and Out of Africa (1985)—took home the gold statue.
'The Artist,' 'Hugo,' and the History of Movies About Movies|Stephen Farber|December 28, 2011|DAILY BEAST
“What his enemies say may be true,” the filmmaker Emile de Antonio once reflected.
The Svengali of Pop Art|Annie Cohen-Solal|May 13, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Would you rather avoid the Marchesino to-night, Emile, and not come with us?
A Spirit in Prison|Robert Hichens
The second in command was Emile Ollivier, whose treason to liberty, truth, and peace has since been so sternly avenged by destiny.
Modern Leaders: Being a Series of Biographical Sketches|Justin McCarthy
Take care, Emile, take care—or I shall hate you for keeping me in the dark.
A Spirit in Prison|Robert Hichens
In fact, I have seen Emile Loubet standing unrecognized in the crowd around the bird charmer.
Paris Vistas|Helen Davenport Gibbons
But Emile had surely shown much greater interest in Vere just lately than ever before?
A Spirit in Prison|Robert Hichens
Cultural definitions for Émile
Émile
[ (ay-meel) (1762) ]
A work on education by Jean Jacques Rousseau, describing how a fictional boy, Émile, should be brought up. The book had an enormous influence on education during the age of romanticism and afterward.