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30 Sentences With "women of letters"

How to use women of letters in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "women of letters" and check conjugation/comparative form for "women of letters". Mastering all the usages of "women of letters" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Two other series—Queer Qrosswords and Women of Letters—also make representation their aim.
There's Women of Letters, a pack of crosswords by women that benefits women-centric charities.
First off, check out Queer Qrosswords (now out and proud with its 2nd edition!) and Women of Letters puzzle packs.
New crossword venues have emerged to bring women and other groups to the forefront, like the Inkubator, Queer Qrosswords and Women of Letters.
Ms. Stefanovic hosts the literary salon "Women of Letters, New York" and "This Alien Nation," a monthly celebration of immigration, and is a regular storyteller with The Moth.
I was delighted to be included in the Women of Letters project, offering a packet of puzzles by women constructors to anyone who makes a donation to women-centric charities.
If you would like to solve a brilliant set of crosswords, the "Women of Letters" pack is now available for the cost of a donation to a woman-friendly charity.
It's why we boost the signal of puzzle publishers like Women of Letters, Queer Qrosswords, The Inkubator and the new Black History Year puzzle pack from The New York Times, written by constructors of color.
On a different note, if you've still got some puzzling to do, you should get yourself "Women of Letters," a packet of 18 puzzles by female constructors that'll cost you no more than a charitable donation.
While I have the space, I wanted to promote two fantastic crossword packs that benefit charity: Women of Letters and Queer Qrosswords (which I organized) are both collections of fun, modern puzzles written by and themed around women and LGBTQ+ people.
Iowa's most eminent men and women of letters, people such as Emerson Hough, Woods Hutchinson, and Alice French (Octave Thanet) met there to exchange experiences.
Isabelle Morel (née de Gélieu, 9 July 1779 - 18 October 1834) was a French- speaking Swiss writer, translator and women of letters who was most notable for her novel Louise et Albert.
"Missive from a Women of Letters". Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star. Retrieved 27 December 2013. Hutchinson also stated that the book would gain Angelou new readers, and that her current audience would read and reread it.
Retrieved 2 May 2012 after completing a one-week challenge set by her Triple J co-presenter Lindsay McDougall. Since 2010, she and writer Michaela McGuire have co-hosted the popular international literary public event Women of Letters, in which five or six women read letters they have written on a set theme.
Carmen has published essays in Neighborhood Paper and the anthologies Meanjin on Rock 'n' Roll: All Yesterday's Parties, and in Your Mother Would be Proud: True Tales of Mayhem and Misadventure (edited by Jenny Valentish & Tamara Sheward), and contributed to two of the Women of Letters collections (edited by Marieke Hardy and Michaela McGuire)'.
30, No. 4, Fall 2007, p. 623-649 (DOI 10.1215 / 00161071-2007-010) On October 15, 1902, Hachette launched a competing monthly entitled La Vie heureux, subtitled "revue féminine universelle illustrée" ("Universal Illustrated Women's Magazine"), which gave its name to a literary prize in November 1904, awarded by a jury of women of letters.
Although successful in her lifetime, Behn was often vilified as "unwomanly" by 18th-century writers like Henry Fielding and Samuel Richardson. Likewise, the 19th-century critic Julia Kavanagh said that "instead of raising man to woman's moral standards [Behn] sank to the level of man's courseness."Julia Kavanagh, English Women of Letters. London, 1863, p. 22.
When the family returned to London, her house in Bloomsbury became a rendezvous for many eminent men and women of letters. Alice Corkran grew up in a stimulating environment. She was the playmate of Robert Browning's father, and she used to accompany the old man on his rambles along the quays in search of subjects to sketch. She was the old man's favourite.
Puvanenthiran, Bhakthi. "Michaela McGuire, Marieke Hardy take Women of Letters to the world", The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 26 April 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2015. In October 2010, an article on the Liberal Party politician Christopher Pyne written by Hardy on the ABC The Drum blog site was withdrawn on the grounds that it "failed to meet the standards for argument and well-thought opinion".
Orr writes that they "are the culmination of her work for Lardner, and represent the final stage of a sustained overview of four literatures. Few British women of letters in the 1830s could command this extensive range and write so confidently about four national cultures." Orr compares Shelley to the 19th-century historical writers Lady Morgan, Frances Trollope, Anna Jameson, and Agnes and Eliza Strickland.Orr, "Introduction", xxxix–xl.
In 2016 and 2017, she released two nonfiction books, The ABCs of Adulthood and The ABCs of Parenthood, in collaboration with illustrator Randy Polumbo. She has written several articles for The New Yorker, The New York Times, Observer, The Atlantic, Business Insider, The Nation and others. She had also used Deborah Copaken Kogan as her pen name previously. She has performed and curated live storytelling for The Moth, Afterbirth, the Six Word Memoir series, Women of Letters, and Words and Music.
In 2010 Yale University Press published De László, His Life and Art by Duff Hart-Davis and Dr. Caroline Corbeau-Parsons. His reputation still remains largely as a society portrait painter, but well numbered amongst his sitters were industrialists and scientists, politicians and painters, men and women of letters and many other eminent, as well as ordinary, people. Family members and a team of editors are compiling a catalogue raisonné published online and in progress. His oeuvre currently numbers almost 4,000 works, including drawings. Mrs.
When La Bruyère's Caractères appeared in 1688, Nicolas de Malézieu predicted at once, that it would bring "bien des lecteurs et bien des ennemis" (many readers and many enemies). That proved to be true. Foremost among the critics were Thomas Corneille, Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle, and Isaac de Benserade, who were clearly critical of the book. They were joined by innumerable others, men and women of letters as well as of society, who are identifiable by manuscript "keys" compiled by the scribblers of the day.
Findlay has had a number of speaking gigs, both individually and as a part of event panels including Women of Letters, opening for Julia Gillard at Layne Beachley's Women in Leadership luncheon, Progress 2017, University of Western England, ProBlogger, Melbourne Writers Festival, Emerging Writers Festival, Dangerous Ideas around Disability and the Royal Melbourne Hospital. Findlay also regularly appears on podcasts and radio programs. Findlay has made a number of media appearances that placed her in the spotlight and helped establish her position as a disability and appearance spokesperson.
A few years later she was also made a "Bardess of Wales", i.e. a member of the Welsh Gorsedd of the Bards of the Isle of Britain, under the title "Harp of Ireland". She was the first woman to conduct at the Royal Albert Hall. And in 1910 she was a V.I.P. at a banquet given in Dublin by Lord Aberdeen, the then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, to honour 'Irish Women of Letters'.See Níc Pheadair (1916) Her biggest single commercial success was when she won the competition for the Prize Song for the coronation of King Edward VII in 1902.
Simona Castricum, has contributed articles to publications Vice Magazine, i-D and Thump, writing on visibility and access for queer and transgender performers. She had personal memoirs published in The Guardian, The Huffington Post and Archer Magazine. Her short non-fiction and critique writing on sexuality, gender and architecture have appeared in print in The Lifted Brow, Mongrel Rapture: The Architecture of Ashton Raggatt McDougall From the Heart: Women Of Letters and Doing It: Women Tell the Truth About Great Sex. Simona is an advocate for safer spaces and inclusivity of queer and gender diverse artists.
Born in Managua on 15 October 1918, Sánchez was self-taught as a writer. According to the acclaimed poet Ernesto Cardenal, she was "the first women of letters of Nicaragua and was of great importance as a promoter of Nicaraguan culture". In 1940, she founded the literary association Círculo de Letras and opened the publishing house Nuevos Horizontes which played an important part in collecting and reviving Nicaragua's most significant literary works. Cardenal also tells us that "For a long, fruitful period for Nicaraguan literature (the 1940s and 1950s), her home was a meeting place for writers and artists, and a venue for conferences and exhibitions".
Barton became the friend of Southey, Lamb, and other men and women of letters, including the local children's writer Anne Knight, with whom he lodged, and to whom he provided poems for some of her books. His chief works are The Convict's Appeal published in 1818, a protest against the death penalty and general severity of the criminal code, and Household Verses published 1845, which came to the notice of Sir R. Peel, through whom he obtained a pension of £100 a year. Other volumes of his were entitled Napoleon and Other Poems (1822), Poetic Vigils (1824) and A New Year's Eve and Other Poems.Corvey catalogue, Sheffield Hallam University: Retrieved 2 July 2012.
AFS was founded in 1888 by William Wells Newell, who stood at the center of a diverse group of university-based scholars, museum anthropologists, and men and women of letters and affairs. In 1945, the society became a member of the American Council of Learned Societies. AFS is also an active member of the National Humanities Alliance (NHS). Over the years, prominent members of the American Folklore Society known outside academic circles have included Marius Barbeau, Franz Boas, Ben Botkin, Jan Harold Brunvand, Linda Dégh, Ella Deloria, Thomas A. DuBois, William Ferris, John Miles Foley, Joel Chandler Harris, Zora Neale Hurston, James P. Leary, Alan Lomax, John A. Lomax, Kay Turner, and Mark Twain.
She was chosen by "Organization of Afro- Asian Writers" in 2005 and According to Egypt's "Culture and Information Minister" Muhammad Majdi Marjan who heads the Organization:Muslimah Writers Alliance Muslim Women Making History Tahereh Saffarzadeh The letter reads in part, > "In a bid to commemorate the leading and elite women of letters we have > chosen the internationally renowned Iranian poetess Tahereh Saffarzadeh, > with whose long history of struggles the entire Islamic Ummah is familiar, > as the leading woman in the Islamic world and at the international scene of > 2005." According to Organization of Afro-Asian Writers:Taherehsaffarzadeh.ir > Tahereh Saffarzadeh the great Iranian committed poetess and writer is an > exalted example for the muslim believing women, that all muslims honour her > status and due to her political fighting background, and her profound > knowledge, this year she was elected to be celebrated by this organization.

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