Jean Jacques Rousseau - translation to English
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Jean Jacques Rousseau - translation to English

GENEVAN PHILOSOPHER, WRITER AND COMPOSER (1712–1778)
Jean Jacques Rousseau; J.J. Rousseau; Jean Jacques Rosseau; J. J. Rousseau; Jean-Jacques Rosseau; Rousseau, Jean Jacques; Rousseau; New system of musical notation; Jean–Jacques Rousseau; Jean-Jacques Roussuae; Jean-Jacques Roussaue; J j rousseau; Jean jaques rousseau; Jjrousseau; Jj rousseau; Rousseauian; Rousseau, Jean-Jacques; J.-J. Rousseau; Jean-Jaques Rousseau; JJ Rousseau; Rousseauan; Rousseauean; Russeau; Rousseau's Theory of Human Nature; Rousseauism
  • Allan Ramsay]]
  • ''Avril'', p. 2
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  • Françoise-Louise de Warens
  • Île Rousseau, Geneva
  • Panthéon]], Paris
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau on a Romanian stamp, 1962
  • Les Charmettes, where Rousseau lived with [[Françoise-Louise de Warens]] from 1735 to 1736, now a museum dedicated to Rousseau
  • A portrait of [[Thérèse Levasseur]] from 1791
  • Mme d'Épinay by [[Jean-Étienne Liotard]], ''ca'' 1759 (Musée d'art et d'histoire, Geneva)
  • [[Allegory]] of the French Revolution in honor of Rousseau, by [[Nicolas Henri Jeaurat de Bertry]] (1794). The final version of the painting was offered to the [[National Convention]]
  • Palazzo belonging to Tommaso Querini at 968 Cannaregio [[Venice]] that served as the French Embassy during Rousseau's period as Secretary to the Ambassador
  • Letter to d'Alembert]] where Rousseau recalls witnessing the popular celebrations following the exercises of the St Gervais regiment.
  • Statue of Rousseau on the Île Rousseau, Geneva
  • The house where Rousseau was born at number 40, Grand-Rue, Geneva
  • A portrait of Rousseau in later life

Jean Jacques Rousseau         
Jean Jacques Rousseau (scrittore, politico e filosofo francese del secolo diciottesimo)
John James Audubon         
  • Plate 181 of ''The Birds of America'' by Audubon depicting a [[golden eagle]], 1833–34
  • Plate 1 of ''The Birds of America'' by Audubon depicting a [[wild turkey]]
  • Portrait of Audubon at the [[National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium]]
  • Plate 41 of ''[[The Birds of America]]'' by Audubon, depicting [[ruffed grouse]]
  • [[Clipper]] ship ''Audubon''
  • An [[American crow]] by Audubon, Brooklyn Museum
  • An [[American flamingo]] by Audubon, Brooklyn Museum
  • A [[green heron]] by Audubon, Brooklyn Museum
  • Plate from ''The Birds of America'', featuring the extinct [[ivory-billed woodpecker]]
  • A cinnamon bear by J.T. Bowen after Audubon
  • Two white [[gyrfalcon]]s by Audubon
  • Audubon in later years, c. 1850
  • John James Audubon house, Henderson, Kentucky.
  • [[La Gerbetière]], mansion owned by Audubon's father in Couëron, where young Audubon was raised
  • A painting of the [[roseate spoonbill]] by John James Audubon. Plate CCCXXI.
  • John James Audubon, ''Long Haired Squirrel'', c. 1841.
  • Lucy Audubon c. 1870
  • Lucy Bakewell Audubon
  • Plate from ''The Birds of America'' by Audubon of a Carolina pigeon (now called [[mourning dove]])
AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGIST, NATURALIST, AND PAINTER (1785–1851)
John Audubon; J. J. Audubon; J.J. Audubon; John Audobon; John J. Audubon; James Audubon; John James Audobon; Jean-Jacques Audubon; Jean Rabin; JOHN J. AUDUBON
n. John James Audubon, (1785-1851) naturalista statunitense studioso e autore di scritti sui volatili del nord America
Jacques Cousteau         
  • Cousteau on the ''Calypso''
  • Cousteau's [[Diving Saucer]]
  • 40px
  • Cousteau's submarine near Oceanographic Museum in Monaco
FRENCH NAVAL OFFICER WHO CO-INVENTED OPEN CIRCUIT DEMAND SCUBA
Jacque Cousteau; Jacques Yves Cousteau; French Narrator; Jacques Custeau; Jacques cousteau; Captain Cousteau; Commandant Cousteau; Jack Cousteau; Cousteau Society; Jaques Yves Costue; Pierre-Yves Cousteau; Jacques-Yves Cousteau; Jaques Cousteau; Jock Cousteau; The Cousteau Odyssey; Jaques Costeau
n. Jacques Cousteau, (1910-1997) regista di cinema francese ed esploratore marino, co-inventore dell"Aqualung (attrezzatura per autorespiratore)

Definition

Tenonian
·adj Discovered or described by M. Tenon, a French anatomist.

Wikipedia

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (UK: , US: French: [ʒɑ̃ ʒak ʁuso]; 28 June 1712 – 2 July 1778) was a Genevan philosopher (philosophe), writer, and composer. His political philosophy influenced the progress of the Age of Enlightenment throughout Europe, as well as aspects of the French Revolution and the development of modern political, economic, and educational thought.

His Discourse on Inequality and The Social Contract are cornerstones in modern political and social thought. Rousseau's sentimental novel Julie, or the New Heloise (1761) was important to the development of preromanticism and romanticism in fiction. His Emile, or On Education (1762) is an educational treatise on the place of the individual in society. Rousseau's autobiographical writings—the posthumously published Confessions (composed in 1769), which initiated the modern autobiography, and the unfinished Reveries of the Solitary Walker (composed 1776–1778)—exemplified the late 18th-century "Age of Sensibility", and featured an increased focus on subjectivity and introspection that later characterized modern writing.

Examples of use of Jean Jacques Rousseau
1. By Tom D‘Evelyn The bare facts of the life of Jean–Jacques Rousseau are not reassuring.
2. Another character is called Rousseau÷ French philosopher Jean–Jacques Rousseau believed men were born innocent but became corrupted by society.
3. Samuel Johnson thought him, intentions aside, a "very bad man." As Leo Damrosch, the Ernest Bernbaum professor of literature at Harvard University, so vividly demonstrates in his new biography, Jean–Jacques Rousseau: Jean–Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius, Rousseau was full of contradictions.
4. Oswald was one of many revolutionary vegetarians, from the 18th century to the 21st, who imbibed the philosophy of Jean–Jacques Rousseau.
5. Scientists seem to have spent the best part of a century gleefully promoting this idea and repudiating the Romantic notion of the 18th–century philosopher Jean–Jacques Rousseau that ‘there is absolutely no fundamental perversity in the human heart‘, and that all bad behaviour is the result of society itself.