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Definition of John James Audubon
1. Noun. United States ornithologist and artist (born in Haiti) noted for his paintings of birds of America (1785-1851).
Lexicographical Neighbors of John James Audubon
Literary usage of John James Audubon
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Edinburgh Review by Sydney Smith (1870)
"The Life and Adventures of John James Audubon, the Naturalist. Edited, from
Materials supplied by his Widow, by ROBERT BUCHANAN. London : 1868. ..."
2. Our Foreign-born Citizens: What They Have Done for America by Annie E. S. Beard (1922)
"... 1828, by the great Italian painter Gerard to John James Audubon, after looking
at his wonderful lifesize drawings of the birds of America. ..."
3. The Auk: Quarterly Journal of Ornithology by American Ornithologists' Union, Nuttall Ornithological Club (1907)
"MAURICE C. BLAKE, Hanover, NH Notes on the Ornithological Works of John James
Audubon. — In ' The Auk' for July, 1906, pp. 298-312, Mr. Witmer Stone has ..."
4. Southern Literature from 1579-1895: A Comprehensive Review, with Copious by Louise Manly (1895)
"John James Audubon. 1780-1851. John James Audubon was born near New Orleans and
educated in France where he studied painting under David. ..."
5. Leading American Men of Science by David Starr Jordan (1910)
"John James Audubon ORNITHOLOGIST 1780-1851 BY WITMER STONE PROBABLY no name is
more nearly synonymous with the study of birds than that of Audubon, ..."