Cé·sar (Au·guste)[sey-zar oh-gyst], /seɪˈzar oʊˈgüst/, 1822–90, French composer, born in Belgium.
James, 1882–1964, U.S. physicist, born in Germany: Nobel Prize 1925.
Words nearby Franck
Francis of Sales, Francis turbine, Francis Xavier, francium, francize, Franck, Franco, Franco-American, Franco-Belgian system, Franco, Francisco, francolin
Franck has not, as they say, spelled out a mechanism by which this could happen.
The Right Wing Screams for the Wambulance Over Gay Marriage Ruling|Walter Olson|October 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Following a storm of criticism, Franck dug in on the comparison in two further posts.
The Right Wing Screams for the Wambulance Over Gay Marriage Ruling|Walter Olson|October 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
At the age of twelve, artist Franck de las Mercedes and his family fled their home in Nicaragua.
Franck de las Mercedes Lost Everything in a Fire…Except His Faberge Egg|Justin Jones|April 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Franck de las Mercedes was hitting his stride as an artist when a fire destroyed all of his work.
Franck de las Mercedes Lost Everything in a Fire…Except His Faberge Egg|Justin Jones|April 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
I am glad to think that Franck would have gloried in this shame.
Recent Developments in European Thought|Various
But, to be done with Franck, how harshly he speaks of thee and thy book.
Letters to Dead Authors|Andrew Lang
The gradual growth of phrases in melodious instalments is a trait of Franck (as it is of Richard Strauss).
Symphonies and Their Meaning; Third Series, Modern Symphonies|Philip H. Goepp
In no other instance, however, not in that of Lully nor in that of Franck, has the transfusion of blood been so successful.
Musical Portraits|Paul Rosenfeld
This music alone, which sounds like nothing before or since, would stamp Franck as an absolutely original genius.
Music: An Art and a Language|Walter Raymond Spalding
British Dictionary definitions for Franck
Franck
noun
(Frenchfrɑ̃k) César (Auguste) (sezar). 1822–90, French composer, organist, and teacher, born in Belgium. His works, some of which make use of cyclic form, include a violin sonata, a string quartet, the Symphony in D Minor (1888), and much organ music
(fræŋk) James . 1882–1964, US physicist, born in Germany: shared a Nobel prize for physics with Gustav Hertz (1925) for work on the quantum theory, particularly the effects of bombarding atoms with electrons