diplomatist
11diplomatist — di•plo•ma•tist [[t]dɪˈploʊ mə tɪst[/t]] n. gov diplomat • Etymology: 1805–15 …
12diplomatist — /dəˈploʊmətəst/ (say duh plohmuhtuhst) noun 1. a diplomat. 2. someone who is astute and tactful in any negotiation …
13diplomatist — n. = DIPLOMAT …
14gunboat diplomatist — gunboat diplomatist, a supporter or advocate of gunboat diplomacy …
15AUCKLAND, WILLIAM EDEN, LORD — diplomatist, and an authority on criminal law (1744 1814) …
16FANSHAWE, SIR RICHARD — diplomatist and poet, born at Ware Park, Hertford; studied at the Inner Temple, and after a Continental tour became attached to the English embassy at Madrid; sided with the Royalists at the outbreak of the Civil War; was captured at the… …
17STRANGFORD, PERCY C. S. SMYTHE, VISCOUNT — diplomatist; graduated at Trinity College, Dublin, in 1800; entered the diplomatic service, and in the following year succeeded to the title; was ambassador to Portugal, Sweden, Turkey, and Russia; translated the Rimas of Camoëns, and was… …
18TEMPLE, SIR WILLIAM — diplomatist and essayist, born in London, and educated at Cambridge; travel on the Continent, courtship, and marriage, and some years of quiet and studious retirement in Ireland, occupied him during the Protectorate; in 1660 was returned to… …
19WOTTON, SIR HENRY — diplomatist and scholar, born in Kent; was ambassador of James I. for 20 years, chiefly at Venice; visited Kepler (q.v. KEPLER, JOHN) on one occasion, and found him a very ingenious person, and came under temporary eclipse for his definition… …
20Mary Crawford Fraser — (April 8, 1851[1] – 1922), usually known as Mrs. Hugh Fraser, was an American writer noted for her various memoirs and historical novels. She was born in Italy to the American sculptor Thomas Crawford and Louisa Cutler Ward, and was the sister to …