William Tell - translation to English
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William Tell - translation to English

FOLK HERO OF SWITZERLAND
Wilhelm Tell; Tell, William; Three Tells; Kaspar Unternährer; Drei Tellen; Tellspiel; Tellspiele; Tellenspiel
  • chimera]] of the [[French Revolution]] (1798).
  • ''Wilhelm Tell'' by Ferdinand Hodler (1897)
  • Immensee]] and [[Küssnacht]], with a second ''Tellskapelle'' (built in 1638).
  • Tell is arrested for not saluting Gessler's hat (mosaic at the [[Swiss National Museum]], [[Hans Sandreuter]], 1901)
  • A 1782 depiction of Tell in the [[Schweizerisches Landesmuseum]], Zürich.
  • Official seal of the "smaller council" (kleiner Rath) of the [[Helvetic Republic]].
  • Ernst Stückelberg]] (1879) for his fresco at the [[Tellskapelle]].
  • Sebastian Münster's ''Cosmographia'']] (1554 edition).
  • Page of the ''White Book of Sarnen'' (p. 447, first page of the Tell legend, pp. 447–449).
  • Altdorf]] ([[Richard Kissling]], 1895).
  • William Tell depicted on [[Tell pattern playing cards]]

William Tell         
Guglielmo Tell (eroe leggendario svizzero)
William Faulkner         
  • During part of his time in New Orleans, Faulkner lived in a house in the [[French Quarter]] (pictured center yellow).
  • ''[[Light in August]]'' (1932)
  • A Parisian street named for Faulkner
  • Faulkner's home [[Rowan Oak]] is maintained by the [[University of Mississippi]].
  • One of Faulkner's typewriters
  • ''[[The Sound and the Fury]]'' (1929)
  • Faulkner was influenced by stories of his great-grandfather and namesake [[William Clark Falkner]].
  • Faulkner in 1954
  • Cadet Faulkner in [[Toronto]], 1918
AMERICAN WRITER (1897-1962)
William Cuthbert Faulkner; William faulkner; Faulkner william; Faulknerian; Faulkner William; Wililam Faulkner; William Cuthbert Falkner; Faulkner; Faulkner, William; William Faulkner filmography
William Faulkner (scrittore e poeta americano)
William Gibson         
  • [[Bruce Sterling]], co-author with Gibson of the short story "[[Red Star, Winter Orbit]]" (1983) and the 1990 steampunk novel ''[[The Difference Engine]]''
  • [[William S. Burroughs]] at his 70th birthday party in 1984. Burroughs, more than any other [[beat generation]] writer, was an important influence on the adolescent Gibson.
  • The [[San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge]], a fictional squatted version of which constitutes the setting for Gibson's [[Bridge trilogy]]
  • William Gibson in Bloomsbury, London in September 2007. His fiction is hailed by critics for its characterization of [[late capitalism]], [[postindustrial society]] and the portents of the [[information age]].
  • Gibson has often collaborated with [[performance art]]ists such as theatre group [[La Fura dels Baus]], here performing at the [[Singapore Arts Festival]] in May 2007.
  • Gibson is renowned for his visionary influence on—and predictive attunement to—technology, design, urban sociology and [[cyberculture]]. Image captured in the Scylla bookstore of Paris, France on March 14, 2008.
  • Aside from his short stories and novels, Gibson has written several film screenplays and [[television episode]]s.
  • archive-date=October 22, 2012 }}</ref>
  • Gibson signing one of his novels in 2010
  • archive-date = November 20, 2007}}</ref>
AMERICAN-CANADIAN SPECULATIVE FICTION NOVELIST AND FOUNDER OF THE CYBERPUNK SUBGENRE
William Ford Gibson; The X-Files episodes written by William Gibson; William gibson; William Gibson (novelist); Garage Kubrick; William Gibson's "The X-Files" episodes; GreatDismal; Pines Elementary School; George Wythe High School (Wytheville, Virginia); Southern Arizona School for Boys; Southern Arizona School; Arizona School for Boys; William F. Gibson (author); Gibsonian
William Gibson, scrittore di fantascienza americano

Definition

Tell
·noun A hill or mound.
II. Tell ·noun That which is told; tale; account.
III. Tell ·vi To give an account; to make report.
IV. Tell ·vt To utter or recite in detail; to give an account of; to Narrate.
V. Tell ·vi To take effect; to produce a marked effect; as, every shot tells; every expression tells.
VI. Tell ·vt To Order; to Request; to Command.
VII. Tell ·vt To make known; to Publish; to Disclose; to Divulge.
VIII. Tell ·vt To give instruction to; to make report to; to Acquaint; to Teach; to Inform.
IX. Tell ·vt To make account of; to Regard; to Reckon; to Value; to Estimate.
X. Tell ·vt To discern so as to report; to ascertain by observing; to find out; to Discover; as, I can not tell where one color ends and the other begins.
XI. Tell ·vt To mention one by one, or piece by piece; to Recount; to Enumerate; to Reckon; to Number; to Count; as, to tell money.

Wikipedia

William Tell

William Tell (German: Wilhelm Tell, German pronunciation: [ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈtɛl] (listen); French: Guillaume Tell; Italian: Guglielmo Tell; Romansh: Guglielm Tell) is a folk hero of Switzerland. According to the legend, Tell was an expert mountain climber and marksman with a crossbow who assassinated Albrecht Gessler, a tyrannical reeve of the Austrian dukes of the House of Habsburg positioned in Altdorf, in the canton of Uri. Tell's defiance and tyrannicide encouraged the population to open rebellion and a pact against the foreign rulers with neighbouring Schwyz and Unterwalden, marking the foundation of the Swiss Confederacy. Tell was considered the father of the Swiss Confederacy.

Set in the early 14th century (traditional date 1307, during the rule of Albert of Habsburg), the first written records of the legend date to the latter part of the 15th century, when the Swiss Confederacy was gaining military and political influence. Tell is a central figure in Swiss national historiography, along with Arnold von Winkelried, the hero of Sempach (1386). He was important as a symbol during the formative stage of modern Switzerland in the 19th century, known as the period of Restoration and Regeneration, as well as in the wider history of 18th- to 19th-century Europe as a symbol of resistance against aristocratic rule, especially in the Revolutions of 1848 against the House of Habsburg which had ruled Austria for centuries.

Examples of use of William Tell
1. Just as well William Tell didn‘t live in Wolverhampton.
2. But perhaps not wanting to be obvious, he whistled "The William Tell Overture" instead.
3. The National Theatre has arranged readings this autumn of Schiller‘s earliest major work, The Robbers, as well as of his last, William Tell.
4. He was the hard–hearted husband who forced his wife, Glynis Johns, to dive nightly into a blazing pool in Encore (1'52); a drug–smuggler thwarted by the bird–watcher Joyce Grenfell in Forbidden Cargo (1'54); the young singers lover in Svengali (1'54); an impoverished Irish aristocrat with a single racehorse in the comedy The March Hare (1'56) and a London gangster involved in vice and blackmail in The Shakedown (1'5'). In 1'61 Sir Francis Drake became the latest in a string of series with historical settings, following on the heels of Robin Hood, William Tell and Ivanhoe, with the hero embarking on a new self–contained adventure every week.
5. UserName Pass Friday, November 18, 2005 print this page FEATURE All News» » ‘Eagle aerie‘ in central Anatolia awaits attention » Turkish puppeteers at Jerusalem festival » 10th Ankara Theater Festival starts today » Rosanna Vitro Trio to amaze Ankara » Singaporean Tastes Festival at Swissotel » Report: More Americans get their newspaper at the click of a mouse » Novel by waitress shortlisted for Britain‘s Whitbread Award » A triumphant Mariah Carey returns to Hollywood » Leslie Nielsen, Carmen Electra team up for ‘Scary Movie 4‘ » Michael Jackson eyes tourism project in Oman ARTICLE Nov. 18: 1307 – William Tell shoots an apple off of his son‘s head. 14'7 – Bartolomeu Dias discovers the Cape of Good Hope. 1820 – U.S.