nonconvenţional — NONCONVENŢIONÁL, Ă adj. neconvenţional. (< fr. non convenionnel) Trimis de raduborza, 15.09.2007. Sursa: MDN … Dicționar Român
ADAM — (Heb. אָדָם), city on the eastern bank of the Jordan River mentioned in Joshua 3:16 as the place where the Jordan ceased flowing at the time of the Israelite crossing. It also appears in the inscriptions of Pharaoh Shishak (10th century B.C.E.).… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ADERCA, FELIX — (Froim Zeilig; 1891–1962), Romanian novelist and journalist. Born in Puiesti (near Vaslui) and educated in Craiova, Aderca made his literary debut with volumes of poetry. The titles of the first two reflect his early preoccupation with feeling… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AXELRAD, AVRAM — (Adolf; 1879–1963), Romanian poet and publicist, editor, teacher of literature in Jewish schools. Axelrad was born in Barlad, where he finished his schooling. In 1900 he edited the literary review Aurora in Barlad and then moved to Bucharest. The … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BALTAZAR, CAMIL — (pseudonym of Leopold Goldstein; 1902–1977), Romanian poet. Baltazar s first poems appeared in 1921 in Sburatorul Literar, a review edited by the Romanian critic Eugen Lovinescu, and his contributions were published thereafter in many of the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BANUS, MARIA — (1914–1999), Romanian poet. Born in Bucharest, Banus first poems were published in 1928. She gained fame with her first collection of verse, Tara fetelor ( The Maidens Land, 1937), a lyrical description of the awakening sensuality of adolescence … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BARANGA, AUREL — (Leibovici; 1913–1979), Romanian playwright and poet. Born in Bucharest, Baranga qualified as a physician and first published poems in the avant garde review Unu (1928–32). In 1930–31 he edited Alge, a journal that cultivated the absurd. Later he … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BLANK, MAURICE — (1848–1921), Romanian banker. Born in Pitesti, Romania, Blank was one of the first Romanian Jews to receive diplomas in economics and finance at the Vienna and Leipzig universities. He went to work in Bucharest in the banking house of Jacob… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BRESLASU, MARCEL — (Bresliska; 1903–1966), Romanian poet and musician. Breslasu was born in Bucharest, where he studied law and music. His biblical poem Cantarea Cantarilor ( Song of Songs, 1938) was staged as an oratorio at the Bucharest Opera. Best known as a… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
CALIN, VERA — (Clejan; 1921–), Romanian literary historian. Born in Bucharest into a bourgeois family, she was the daughter of the architect Herman Clejan. As a consequence of the antisemitic measures of the Holocaust period, she could study only in a Jewish… … Encyclopedia of Judaism