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  2. Amador Daguio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amador_Daguio

    When Daguio was a third-year high school student, his poem "She Came to Me" got published in the July 11, 1926, edition of The Sunday Tribune. [1] After he graduated from UP, he returned to Lubuagan to teach at his former alma mater. He then taught at Zamboanga Normal School in 1938, where he met his wife Estela.

  3. Biography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biography

    One significant secular example of a biography from this period is the life of Charlemagne by his courtier Einhard. In Medieval Western India, there was a Sanskrit Jain literary genre of writing semi-historical biographical narratives about the lives of famous persons called Prabandhas.

  4. Fe del Mundo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fe_del_Mundo

    Further suggesting that she was a graduate student and not a medical student, in her autobiographical statement in Women Physicians of the World (1977), Dr. Del Mundo explains "I spent three years of my postgraduate studies at the Children’s Hospital in Boston and at Harvard Medical School, one year at the University of Chicago, six months at ...

  5. Cirilo Bautista - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirilo_Bautista

    Breaking Signs (1990); Words And Battlefields: A Theoria On The Poem (1998); The Estrella D. Alfon Anthology Vol. I – Short Stories (2000); Bullets And Roses: The Poetry Of Amado V. Hernandez / A Bilingual Edition (translated Into English And With A Critical Introduction) (2002)

  6. Sibawayh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibawayh

    Sibawayh was the first to produce a comprehensive encyclopedic Arabic grammar, in which he sets down the principles rules of grammar, the grammatical categories with countless examples taken from Arabic sayings, verse and poetry, as transmitted by Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi, his master and the famous author of the first Arabic dictionary ...

  7. George Armitage Miller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Armitage_Miller

    Miller was born on February 3, 1920, in Charleston, West Virginia, the son of George E. Miller, a steel company executive [1] and Florence (née Armitage) Miller. [3] Soon after his birth, his parents divorced, and he lived with his mother during the Great Depression, attending public school and graduating from Charleston High School in 1937.

  8. Ferdinand de Saussure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_de_Saussure

    Ferdinand de Saussure (/ s oʊ ˈ sj ʊər /; [2] French: [fɛʁdinɑ̃ də sosyʁ]; 26 November 1857 – 22 February 1913) was a Swiss linguist, semiotician and philosopher.His ideas laid a foundation for many significant developments in both linguistics and semiotics in the 20th century.

  9. Élie Metchnikoff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Élie_Metchnikoff

    In 1875, he married his student Olga Belokopytova. [50] In 1885 Olga suffered from severe typhoid and this led to his second suicide attempt. [12] He injected himself with the spirochete of relapsing fever. (Olga died in 1944 in Paris from typhoid.) [27] Despite being baptized in the Russian Orthodox Church, Metchnikoff was an atheist. [51]