|
Definition of Irving berlin
1. Noun. United States songwriter (born in Russia) who wrote more than 1500 songs and several musical comedies (1888-1989).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Irving Berlin
Literary usage of Irving berlin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Hail Columbia!: Random Impressions of a Conservative English Radical by Walter Lionel George (1921)
"... dress for tea, dress for dinner; to pass from the midday band, inspired by
irving berlin, and delightful, to the orchestra of the afternoon, ..."
2. The Armies of Industry: Our Nation's Manufacture of Munitions for a World in by Benedict Crowell, Robert Forrest Wilson (1921)
"... MISCELLANEOUS QUARTERMASTER UNDERTAKINGS SERGEANT irving berlin, one of the
fountain sources of American jazz music, found a special job cut out for him ..."
3. The Best Plays by Burns Mantle, Louis Kronenberger (1921)
""ZIEGFELD FOLLIES" Fourteenth annual production; music and lyrics by Irving
Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor ..."
4. The Cambridge History of American Literature by William Peterfield Trent (1921)
"There is a quality to his music which has been brought nearer the psycho-state
of a nervous crowd by irving berlin, with nis jazz noises and his syncopated ..."
5. Theatre Arts by Society of Arts and Crafts, Detroit (1917)
"... entire drapery department on parade, all in an endless stream of pictures
turned out by the scenic trust to interfere with the tunes of irving berlin. ..."
6. Hail Columbia!: Random Impressions of a Conservative English Radical by Walter Lionel George (1921)
"... dress for tea, dress for dinner; to pass from the midday band, inspired by
irving berlin, and delightful, to the orchestra of the afternoon, ..."
7. The Armies of Industry: Our Nation's Manufacture of Munitions for a World in by Benedict Crowell, Robert Forrest Wilson (1921)
"... MISCELLANEOUS QUARTERMASTER UNDERTAKINGS SERGEANT irving berlin, one of the
fountain sources of American jazz music, found a special job cut out for him ..."
8. The Best Plays by Burns Mantle, Louis Kronenberger (1921)
""ZIEGFELD FOLLIES" Fourteenth annual production; music and lyrics by Irving
Berlin, Dave Stamper, Gene Buck, Joseph McCarthy, Harry Tierney and Victor ..."
9. The Cambridge History of American Literature by William Peterfield Trent (1921)
"There is a quality to his music which has been brought nearer the psycho-state
of a nervous crowd by irving berlin, with nis jazz noises and his syncopated ..."
10. Theatre Arts by Society of Arts and Crafts, Detroit (1917)
"... entire drapery department on parade, all in an endless stream of pictures
turned out by the scenic trust to interfere with the tunes of irving berlin. ..."