Examples of using Geisel in English and their translations into Serbian
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The Geisel School of Medicine.
You know his real name was Theodor Geisel?
Theodor geisel is his real name. He went to dartmouth.
Register of the Dr. Seuss Collection, UC San Diego Dr. Seuss at Library of Congress Authorities,with 190 catalog records Theodor Seuss Geisel(real name), Theo.
Geisel credits his mother for his gift at rhythms and rhymes.
As most Americans mispronounced the Bavarian name, Geisel eventually gave up correcting people on the correct pronunciation.
Geisel had an alternate pen name that he also wrote under which was theo lesieg.
For example,“Dr. Seuss” should actually be pronounced“Dr. Zoy-ce”, but Theodore Geisel got tired of correcting people, so we all now say“Sue-s” instead of how he, Dr. Seuss himself.
Geisel once stated that he got all his ideas from“Switzerland, near the Forka Pass.
Along with advertising andwriting children's books, Geisel also wrote over 400 political cartoons, between 1941 and 1943 while working for the New York City daily newspaper.
Geisel and Helen Palmer never had any children due to the fact that Helen could not conceive.
The Cat in the Hat was published in 1957 and went on to sell around one million copies in the first three years after being published,allowing Geisel to stop working in advertising and to focus on writing children's books.
Geisel wrote Green Eggs and Ham on a bet that he couldn't write a book using only 50 different words.
He died suddenly(on July 10, 1914), in the course of diplomatic consultation related to the threats to Serbia subsequent to the assassination in Sarajevo,when he tried to get an explanation form the Austrian Ambassador, Baron Geisel.
The woman Geisel had an affair with was Audrey Stone Dimond, who he married about a year after his wife had killed herself.
His unusual combination of being a world-class pianist and successful politician made Saul Kripke use Paderewski in a famous philosophical example in his article"A Puzzle about Belief."[39] Paderewski was so famous that in the 1953 motion picture The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T,written by Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, piano teacher Terwilliker tells his pupils that he will"make a Paderewski" out of them.
Andreas Geisel, the Interior Minister, asserted that Demirci's idea would not be used in other parks within the country.
As a response to this, William Spaulding, director of Houghton Mifflin's educational division,challenged Geisel to“write a story that first-graders can't put down” and asked that it be limited to 225 distinct words from a list of 348 words that were selected from a standard first grader's vocabulary list.
Geisel then looked through the list of words and spotted“hat”, which obviously rhymed with“cat”, so decided to make a story out of that instead.
Lead researcher Marlene Goldman, at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, concluded that the series of treatments that doctors have followed for years may not give older women the best chances of getting pregnant.
Geisel was a particular fan of the song“You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch”, and the lines“you're cuddly as a cactus, you're as charming as an eel.”.
Helen Palmer Geisel later committed suicide in 1967 after Geisel had an affair while Helen was struggling with cancer and other sicknesses.
Geisel stated, possibly humorously or possibly factually,“I would like to say I went into children's book writing because of my great understanding of children.
Theodore Geisel, winning the bet by producing one of his most popular works Green Eggs and Ham using exactly 50 unique words, Cerf never paid up.
Geisel's first wife,Helen Palmer Geisel was the one who originally convinced him to drop out of the PhD program at Oxford and pursue becoming a cartoonist.
Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, he dreamed up many of his amazing creations in a lonely bell tower office that he had in the back of his house in La Jolla, California.
Geisel was convinced the United States“have no choice in the matter” when it came to going to war and themed his cartoons to help convince and prepare Americans for what he felt was inevitable.
Geisel stated that his first book, And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street, was rejected 20-30 times(the exact number varied over the years in his story telling) before he finally ran into a former classmate, Mike McClintock, who was an editor at Vanguard Press, on the street.