ERIC - translation to English
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ERIC - translation to English

MALE GIVEN NAME
Erik; Eirik; Erik (name); Eiríkr; Erick; Erich; Eirikr; Eric (male name); Eric (bishop); Erić; Eric (name); Erikk

ERIC         
(n.) = base de datos de educación
Ex: ERIC is a good example of such a database, covering most of education.
Eric Clapton         
  • Auction of Clapton's guitars and amps in aid of the [[Crossroads Centre]], a substance abuse rehabilitation facility.
  • Blind Faith in 1969, with Clapton standing far right
  • Ahoy Arena]] of Rotterdam on 1 June 2006
  • [[Yvonne Elliman]] with Clapton promoting ''[[461 Ocean Boulevard]]'' in 1974
  • Clapton (right) as a member of Cream
  • Clapton (left) and actor [[Bill Murray]] kicking off the [[Crossroads Guitar Festival]], Illinois on 27 July 2007
  • Clapton (right) with Derek and the Dominos
  • Clapton in Prague, June 2013, during his 50th Celebration World Tour
  • Clapton performing for [[Tsunami Relief Cardiff]] at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Wales on 22 January 2005
  • Clapton's handprints in Hollywood, California
  • Eric Clapton in Barcelona, 1974
  • Clapton, [[Keb' Mo']] and [[Buddy Guy]] at the [[Crossroads Guitar Festival]] on 26 June 2010
  • Clapton and B.B. King in 2010
  • Clapton at the [[Royal Albert Hall]] in 2017 during his ''A Celebration of 50 Years of Music'' tour
  • Clapton playing an [[Eric Clapton Stratocaster]] at the Hard Rock Calling concert in Hyde Park, London in 2008
  • Blackie]]" in 1978. He recorded hits such as "Cocaine", "I Shot the Sheriff", "Wonderful Tonight", "Further On Up the Road" and "Lay Down Sally" on Blackie.
  • Clapton performing in Argentina in 1990
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  • Clapton's Lead II Fender, the first ever piece of memorabilia donated to the [[Hard Rock Cafe]], London in 1979
  • [[George Harrison]] and Clapton at the [[Prince's Trust]] Concert, Wembley Arena, London, 1987
  • Beacon Theatre]], New York City in March 2009
  • Clapton and [[Tracy Chapman]] on stage at a White House Special Olympics dinner, December 1998
  • A seven-times Platinum [[RIAA]] certification for the album ''[[Timepieces: The Best of Eric Clapton]]'' (1982)
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  • The Fool guitar]] ''(replica shown)'', with its bright artwork and famous "woman tone", was symbolic of the 1960s psychedelic rock era.
  • Clapton's handprints (far right) with other members of the Yardbirds at the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]]
  • 18 June}} 1987
ENGLISH GUITARIST, SINGER, AND SONGWRITER (BORN 1945)
Eric Patrick Clapton; Duck Records; Clapton, Eric; Melia McEnery; Connor Clapton; Conor Clapton; Woman tone; Eric clapton discography; Eric Clapton Discography; Erik Clapton; Eric Clapton and his Band; Eric Clapton & His Band; Erik clapton; Eric Patrick Clapton CBE; Eric clapton; Eric P. Clapton; 1992 Eric Clapton World Tour; Clapton's World Tour; Slowhand (nickname); Eric Clapton discography; Summer 2022 European Tour; E. P. Clapton; Eric Clapton Summer European Tour 2020; Stand and Deliver (Eric Clapton song); Summer 2021 European Tour; North American Tour 2021 (Eric Clapton); North American Tour 2021; This Has Gotta Stop
n. Eric Clapton (compositor, cantante y músico de guitarra británico)
Eric Arthur Blair         
  • access-date=2 February 2011}}</ref>
  • IRD]]
  • Jura]], Scotland. Orwell completed ''[[Nineteen Eighty-Four]]'' while living in the farmhouse.
  • Orwell's birthplace in [[Motihari]], [[Bihar]], India
  • Orwell's time at Eton College was formative in his attitude and his later career as a writer.
  • [[English Heritage]] [[blue plaque]] in [[Kentish Town]], London where Orwell lived from August 1935 until January 1936.
  • date=4 June 2009}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
  • [[Statue of George Orwell]] outside [[Broadcasting House]], headquarters of the [[BBC]]
  • All Saints']] parish churchyard, [[Sutton Courtenay]], Oxfordshire
  • Orwell was an atheist and a robust critic of Christianity. Nevertheless, he was sentimentally attached to church services, and was buried in All Saints' parish churchyard in [[Sutton Courtenay]], Oxfordshire.
  • British Club in [[Katha, Myanmar]]
  • Orwell joined the British [[Independent Labour Party]] during his time in the [[Spanish Civil War]] and became a defender of [[democratic socialism]] and a critic of [[totalitarianism]] for the rest of his life.
  • No 2 Kits Lane, [[Wallington, Hertfordshire]], Orwell's residence {{circa}} 1936–1940
  • Blair pictured in a passport photo in Burma. This was the last time he had a [[toothbrush moustache]]; he would later acquire a [[pencil moustache]] similar to other British officers stationed in Burma.
  • The square in Barcelona renamed in Orwell's honour
  • The pen name George Orwell was inspired by the [[River Orwell]] in the English county of Suffolk.<ref>Voorhees (1986: 11)</ref>
  • 5th arrondissement]], where Blair lived in Paris
  • Blair family home at [[Shiplake]], Oxfordshire
  • [[Southwold Pier]] in [[Southwold]]. Orwell wrote ''[[A Clergyman's Daughter]]'' (1935) in the town, basing the fictional town of Knype Hill partly on Southwold.
  • Blair's time at St. Cyprian inspired his essay "[[Such, Such Were the Joys]]".
  • page=4}}</ref>
  • [[University College Hospital]] in London where Orwell died
  • A former warehouse at [[Wigan Pier]] is named after Orwell.
ENGLISH AUTHOR AND JOURNALIST (1903–1950)
Eric Arthur Blair; Eric Blair; George (Eric Blair) Orwell; George orwell; Geoge orwell; Orwell, George; Orwell; Eric A. Blair; G. Orwell; Arthur Blair; Orwell Day; E.A. Blair; P. S. Burton; Geroge Orwell; Orwel
Eric Arthur Blair, George Orwell (1903-1950), escritor inglés nacido en India famoso por sus trabajos "Rebelión en la granja" y "1984"

Definition

Eric
·noun A recompense formerly given by a murderer to the relatives of the murdered person.

Wikipedia

Eric

The given name Eric, Erich, Erikk, Erik, Erick, or Eirik is derived from the Old Norse name Eiríkr [ˈɛiˌriːkz̠] (or Eríkr [ˈeˌriːkz̠] in Old East Norse due to monophthongization).

The first element, ei- may be derived from the older Proto-Norse *aina(z), meaning "one, alone, unique", as in the form Æ∆inrikr explicitly, but it could also be from *aiwa(z) "everlasting, eternity", as in the Gothic form Euric. The second element -ríkr stems either from Proto-Germanic *ríks "king, ruler" (cf. Gothic reiks) or the therefrom derived *ríkijaz "kingly, powerful, rich, prince"; from the common Proto-Indo-European root *h₃rḗǵs. The name is thus usually taken to mean "sole ruler, autocrat" or "eternal ruler, ever powerful". Eric used in the sense of a proper noun meaning "one ruler" may be the origin of Eriksgata, and if so it would have meant "one ruler's journey". The tour was the medieval Swedish king's journey, when newly elected, to seek the acceptance of peripheral provinces.

Eric is one of the most commonly used Germanic names in the United States, along with Robert, William, Edward and others.

The most common spelling across Fennoscandia and in the Netherlands is Erik. In Norway, another form of the name (which has kept the Old Norse diphthong) Eirik is also commonly used. The modern Icelandic version is Eiríkur [ˈeiːˌriːkʏr̥], while the modern Faroese version is Eirikur.

In Estonia and Finland (where Fenno-Swedish remains an official minority language), the standard Nordic name form Erik is found, but it may also be spelled phonetically as Eerik (Finnish: [ˈeːrik]), in accordance with Finnic language orthography, along with a slew of other unique Balto-Finnic variant forms including Eerikki, Eero, Erki and Erkki.

Although the name was in use in Anglo-Saxon England, its use was reinforced by Scandinavian settlers arriving before the Norman conquest of England. It was an uncommon name in England until the Middle Ages, when it gained popularity, and finally became a common name in the 19th century. This was partly because of the publishing of the novel Eric, or, Little by Little by Frederic Farrar in 1858.

The Latin form of the name is Euricus or Erīcus (Medieval Latin: [ɛˈriː.kus]), which was also adopted into Old Swedish usage (for example, cf. 15th century Kalmar Swedish historian Ericus Olai). Whence come the Greek forms Ερίκος (Eríkos) or Ερρίκος (Erríkos) (both pronounced [eˈri.kos]), in addition to the direct Nordic borrowing Έρικ (Érik).

Éric (French: [e.ʁik]) is used in French, Erico or Errico in Italian, Érico in Portuguese. (Note some phonetically simplified modern forms may be conflated with descendants of cognate name Henry via Henrīcus, Henrik, from Proto-Germanic Haimarīks, sharing the stem *rīks.)

Among Slavic languages, most using the Latin alphabet borrow Erik, but there also exists Polish Eryk. The name is adapted into Cyrillic as Russian Э́йрик (Éyrik) or Э́рик (Érik), and Ukrainian Е́рік (Érik). The Baltic languages use forms such as Latvian Ēriks and Lithuanian Erikas.

And in Germany, Eric, Erik and Erich are used. In South America, the most common spelling is Erick.

In Norway, Sweden and Finland, the name day for derivations of Erik and Eirik is 18 May, commemorating the death of Saint King Eric IX of Sweden, founder of the royal House of Eric.

The feminine derivative is Erica or Erika.

Examples of use of ERIC
1. Eric Reeves ERIC REEVES: Good to be with you Jerry.
2. Eric Reeves Eric Reeves is a professor at Smith College and an expert on Darfur.
3. When it didn‘t happen, Eric did his own show called Eric Idle Rips Off Monty Python.
4. Eric W W W ATT: Eric Schmidt, Google GEO From: Sergei Brin, Google founder My dear Eric, You know you‘re never a bother.
5. His guitar playing was trebly, raga–influenced, more like Eric Dolphy than Eric Clapton.