Examples of using Fenn in English and their translations into Hebrew
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Programming
Just call Fenn.
Did you call Fenn about the tree?
I agree with Fenn.
Fenn appeared days later to reveal another clue to the bounty.
And the director, Patty Fenn.
Mike, did you call Fenn about the tree?
Fenn lived, but the treasure, rumored to be worth over $1 million, has never been found.
(Laughter) More interesting is John Fenn, who, at age 70, was forcefully retired by Yale University.
Fenn said one of the reasons why he buried the treasure is to encourage Americans to become more active.
Located in a business area of Marrakesh, the 4-star El Fenn Hotel offers a sundeck, a library and a tennis court.
Fenn himself is now 88 and claims that the chest is still buried somewhere in the mountains, where he buried it eight years ago.
There's no need digging in the old outhouses,(pauses)the treasures not associated with any structure,” Forrest Fenn announced on TODAY.
When he was stricken with cancer in 2010, Fenn loaded a chest with treasure and hid it somewhere in New Mexico, thinking he would leave a legacy after his death.
Security guard Marvin Hummel says there were two, but he's not sure. He was busy trying to save his friend's life. This one shot the other guard,Tony Fenn.
Aside from generating a sense of whimsy, Fenn concocted his scheme to get people out into the American outdoors, specifically the unblemished wilderness of the Rockies.
But after he hawks a high tech stock that mysteriously crashes, an irate investor takes Gates,his crew and his ace producer Patty Fenn hostage live on air.
While Fenn claims to be encouraging families to get outdoors and spend time together searching for the treasure, Ashby is the third man to have died while searching for it.
Ashby went missing after his raft capsized earlier this year while he was on the trail of a treasure rumored tobe buried by art collector Forrest Fenn in the Rocky Mountains.
Fenn claims to have hidden a bronze chest filled with 265 gold coins, gems, rubies and gold nuggets in 2010 and has left clues in two of his books to find the treasure.
But after he hawks a high tech stock that mysteriously crashes, an irate investor(O'Connell) takes Gates, his crew,and his ace producer Patty Fenn(Roberts) hostage live on air.
Authenticity: Though no one aside from Fenn has seen the treasure, the art dealer insists it is genuine, stating his intention to retrieve it himself if the value rises to $10 million.
But after he hawks a high tech stock that mysteriously crashes, an irate investor(O'Connell) takes Gates, his crew,and his ace producer Patty Fenn(Roberts) hostage live on air.
Forrest Fenn, another alliteratively named entry on this list, was a military pilot who took survival training in the Philippines before beginning a career writing and dealing in art and antiquities.
Inspired by the stories of lionhearted treasure hunters he had read as a boy,art dealer Forrest Fenn reputedly hid a bronze chest containing over £1 million worth of plunder somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.
Forrest Fenn, an art dealer and a former Air Force fighter pilot, announced in a self-published 2010 memoir,“The Thrill of the Chase,” that he had buried a lockbox full of gold coins and nuggets, precious gems and ancient artifacts.
As well as taking all the usual precautions before heading into the mountains,would-be treasure hunters should note that Fenn maintains the treasure is located in an accessible, non-perilous location in the hills- after all, he was 80 when he hid it.
The story goes like this: In 1988, Forest Fenn- a former fighter pilot and collector of art and antiques in the present- was diagnosed with kidney cancer and believed that his days were numbered.
For example, in 2002,a prize was awarded to Koichi Tanaka and John Fenn for the development of mass spectrometry in protein chemistry, failing to recognize the achievements of Franz Hillenkamp and Michael Karas of the Institute for Physical and Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Frankfurt.
For example, in 2002,the prize was awarded to Koichi Tanaka and John Fenn for the development of mass spectrometry in protein chemistry, an award that did not recognise the achievements of Franz Hillenkamp and Michael Karas of the Institute for Physical and Theoretical Chemistry at the University of Frankfurt.