The name of an Irish story teller is "Shanachie"...here's a fuller explanation.... http://www.answers.com/shanachie The correct Irish spelling is seanchaí - 'shanachie' is the English spelling of the Irish word.
Homer.
a good story teller
No, he was a story teller in Greece. He wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey
An Anglo-saxon storyteller is a Scop. An Old English historian or poet who was responsible for passing stories down from generation to generation.
There is no Irish version of the name.
"Story-teller" isseanchaí [shan-a-khee]or scéalaí [shkael-ee] in Irish.
"Story-teller" is seanchaí [shan-a-khee] or scéalaí [shkael-ee] in Irish.
A story-teller or a raconteur.
Story-Teller was created in 1907.
Story-Teller ended in 1937.
A story teller is a real, live person who does verbally what the narrator does in print.
They just look like an ordinary Irish person. It is as simple as that. There is no particular special look to them. People might picture them as an old person sitting on a chair as others listen, but that's about it.
Edward Teller's birth name is Ede Teller.
An Irish storyteller is called a seanchai. A seanchai was a teller of stories, or seanches, and they were respected in their villages.
Teller's birth name is Teller, Raymond Joseph.
Penn's full name is Penn Fraser Jillet, Teller's birth name is Raymond Joseph Teller. However Teller legally changed his name to just "Teller", and possesses a single named passport.
the dudes name is (or wuz) Aesop (i think)