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Definition of Keller
1. Noun. United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months; Anne Sullivan taught her to read and write and speak; Helen Keller graduated from college and went on to champion the cause of blind and deaf people (1880-1968).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Keller
Literary usage of Keller
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. American Annals of the Deaf by Conference of Executives of American Schools for the Deaf (1911)
"HELEN Keller IN BERLIN* IN Berlin I found much skepticism among educators regarding
... But when I told them some of my own experiences with Miss Keller, ..."
2. Library of Southern Literature by John Calvin Metcalf (1909)
"Captain Keller was a man of liberal culture and unbounded hospitality; kindly,
... At the age of nineteen months, Miss Keller, through the effects of acute ..."
3. Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern by Charles Dudley Warner, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George H Warner (1902)
"Keller is the most distinguished novelist in German literature since Goethe wrote
... Keller has taken his place in the front rank - among German writers of ..."
4. A Treatise on the Bankruptcy Law of the United States by Harold Remington (1915)
"And the assent is sufficient if not made until bankruptcy has intervened.24 In
re Keller, 6 ABR 336, 109 Fed. 118 (DC Iowa): "Counsel for the claimant take ..."
5. Mark Twain: A Biography : the Personal and Literary Life of Samuel Langhorne by Albert Bigelow Paine (1912)
"ROGERS AND HELEN Keller IT was during the winter of '96, in London, that Clemens
took an active interest in the education of Helen Keller and enlisted the ..."
6. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Surrogates' Courts of the by Theodore Frelinghuysen Cornell Demarest (1883)
"HASSEY V. Keller. will should, in accordance with the provision of section 2623
of the Code be ... In the matter of the estate of XAVIER Keller, deceased. ..."