Edmund Clerihew Bentley — [Edmund Clerihew Bentley] (1875–1956) an English journalist who wrote detective stories and invented a form of comic verse with four lines, now called a clerihew after his middle name. Clerihews are usually about well known people. A typical… … Useful english dictionary
Edmund Clerihew Bentley — E. C. Bentley (July 10, 1875 ndash; March 30, 1956), was a popular English novelist and humorist of the early twentieth century, and the inventor of the clerihew, an irregular form of humorous verse on biographical topics.Born in London, and… … Wikipedia
Edmund Clerihew Bentley — E.C. Bentley Edmund Clerihew Bentley (10 juillet 1875 30 mars 1956) est un écrivain et humoriste anglais, bien connu dans le monde anglo saxon comme l inventeur de la forme poétique à laquelle il a donné son second prénom, le Clerihew , et qui… … Wikipédia en Français
Edmund Clerihew Bentley — ➡ Bentley (II) * * * … Universalium
Bentley, Edmund Clerihew — (1875 1956) London born and educated at Merton College, Oxford, he studied law but abandoned it for journalism, which he practiced for most of his life. By the end of 1899 he was a regular contributor to the Speaker, the Liberal weekly. He is… … British and Irish poets
Clerihew — Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875 1956) was a British journalist who became a detective fiction writer; his best known novel was Trent s Last Case. But Bentley was immortalized not by his novels, but by his humorous quatrains about a person or… … Dictionary of eponyms
Bentley (disambiguation) — Bentley can refer to:Organizations and institutions*Bentley College, a university in Waltham, Massachusetts, USA *Bentley Film Festival, in Kansas City, Missouri, USA *Bentley High School, a public high school in Burton, Michigan, USA *Bentley… … Wikipedia
clerihew — humorous verse form, 1928, from English humorist Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875 1956), who described it in a book published 1906 under the name E. Clerihew … Etymology dictionary
Clerihew — A clerihew is a whimsical, four line biographical poem invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley. One of his best known is this (1905): Sir Christopher Wren Said, I am going to dine with some men. If anyone calls Say I am designing St. Paul s. [1]… … Wikipedia
clerihew — /kler euh hyooh /, n. Pros. a light verse form, usually consisting of two couplets, with lines of uneven length and irregular meter, the first line usually containing the name of a well known person. [1925 30; named after E. Clerihew Bentley… … Universalium