HENRY JAMES
\hˈɛnɹi d͡ʒˈe͡ɪmz], \hˈɛnɹi dʒˈeɪmz], \h_ˈɛ_n_ɹ_i dʒ_ˈeɪ_m_z]\
Definitions of HENRY JAMES
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 1910 - Warner's dictionary of authors ancient and modern
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By Princeton University
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An American scholar; born at Albany, N. Y., June 3, 1811; died at Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 18, 1882. He resided at Cambridge. Among the most noted of his works on morals and religion are: "What Is the State?\" (1845); "Moralism and Christianity" (1852); "Lectures and Miscellanies" (1852); "The Nature of Evil" (1855); "Christianity the Logic of Creation" (1857); "Substance and Shadow" (1863); "The Secret of Swedenborg" (1869).
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An American novelist and miscellaneous prose-writer, son of Henry (1st); born in New York, April 15, 1843. His works include: "Transatlantic Sketches" (1875); "A Passionate Pilgrim and Other Tales" (1875); "Roderick Hudson" (1876); "The American" (1877); "Watch and Ward" (1878); "French Poets and Novelists" (1878); "Daisy Miller: a Study" (1878); "The Europeans: a Sketch" (1878); "An International Episode" (1879); "The Madonna of the Future and Other Tales" (1879); "Hawthorne" (1879); "A Bundle of Letters" (1880); "Confidence" (1880); "The Diary of a Man of Fifty" (1880); "Washington Square" (1880); "The Portrait of a Lady" (1882); "Daisy Miller: a Comedy" (1883); "The Siege of London; The Pension Beaurepas; and The Point of View" (1883); "Portraits of Places" (1883); "Tales of Three Cities" (1884); "A Little Tour in France" (1885); "The Art of Fiction" (1885), with Walter Besant; "Stories Revived" (2 vols., 1885); "The Author of Beltraffio" (1885); "The Bostonians" (1886); "The Princess Casamassima" (1886); "Partial Portraits" (1888); "The Aspern Papers and Other Stories" (1888); "The Reverberator" (1888); "A London Life" (1889); "The Tragic Muse" (1890); "Port Tarascon" (1891), a translation; "The Lesson of the Master" (1892), a volume of stories; "The Real Thing and Other Tales" (1893); "Picture and Text" (1893); "The Private Life" (1893), a volume of stories; "Essays in London and Elsewhere" (1893); "The Wheel of Time" (1894); "Theatricals" (1894); "Terminations" (1895); "What Maisie Knew" (1897); "The Awkward Age" (1899); "The Sacred Fount" (1901); "The Wings of the Dove" (1902); "The Better Sort" (1903); "The Lesson of Balzac" (1905); "American Scenes" (1906).
By Charles Dudley Warner
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Quinones
- Hydrocarbon rings which contain two moieties position. They can be substituted in any position except at the ketone groups.