Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Un écrivain, ou une écrivaine [note 1], est, à l'origine, une personne qui est habile dans l'art d'écrire ou qui en fait son métier (le maître écrivain). Par la suite, le terme a désigné l'auteur d'ouvrages littéraires, également désigné par l'expression « homme de lettres » ou « femme de lettres ». Cette signification est ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WriterWriter - Wikipedia

    The term writer has been used as a synonym of author, although the latter term has a somewhat broader meaning and is used to convey legal responsibility for a piece of writing, even if its composition is anonymous, unknown or collaborative. Author most often refers to the writer of a book.

  3. People also ask

  4. Wikipedia was initially conceived as a feeder project for the Wales-founded Nupedia, an earlier project to produce a free online encyclopedia, volunteered by Bomis, a web-advertising firm owned by Jimmy Wales, Tim Shell and Michael E. Davis.

  5. noun. writer [noun] a person who writes, especially for a living. Dickens was a famous English writer. the writer of this letter. (Translation of écrivain from the PASSWORD French-English Dictionary © 2014 K Dictionaries Ltd) Browse. écrits. écriture. Ecriture sainte. écritures. écrivain. écrivais. écrouer. écroulé. To top. Contents.

  6. 5 days ago · 1. Writing as style, in Roland Barthes's book Le Degré Zéro de l'Écriture (Writing Degree Zero, 1953), which attacks the illusion of a blank or neutral writing on the grounds that all writing has some style or discourse that shapes our view of the world. 2.

  7. nom. (latin populaire scribanem, du latin classique scriba, scribe) 1. Personne qui compose des ouvrages littéraires ; homme, femme de lettres. (Au féminin, on rencontre aussi une écrivain .) Synonymes : auteur - dramaturge - essayiste - homme de lettres - littérateur - poète - prosateur - romancier. 2.

  8. May 23, 2023 · 1 French. 1.1 Etymology. 1.2 Pronunciation. 1.3 Noun. 1.3.1 Related terms. 1.4 Further reading. French [ edit] Etymology [ edit] Inherited from Old French escrivain, from Vulgar Latin *scrībānem, from Latin scrība, with altered declension. Compare Occitan escrivan, Catalan escrivà, Italian scrivano, Spanish escribano.

  1. People also search for