Jason Graham wrote a poem called "I Wrote your Name into my Heart" I wrote your name into the sky, But the wind blew it away. I wrote your name into the sand, but the waves washed it away. I wrote your name into my heart, And forever it will stay.
François Rabelais wrote Gargantua and Pantagruel
It's a play when Shakespeare wrote it, a poem when Arthur Brooke wrote it, a short story when Luigi da Porto wrote it, a symphonic poem when Tchaikovsky wrote it, a ballet when Prokofiev wrote it, and a popular song when Dire Straits wrote it.
People who could write at the time Shakespeare wrote most likely wrote. I assume at least one of your (the reader or who the reader is reading to) ancestors wrote unless I'm wrong somehow.
Rudyard Kipling wrote the poem The Answer
Yes. "Mathematike Syntaxis." was written by Ptolemy.
Mathematike Syntaxis, also known as Syntaxis mathematica, was written by Claudius Ptolemy in the 2nd century. It was written in Greek, and is also known as Almagest.
ptoelmy
Aristarchus of Samos
The treatise was written by the Greek, Claudius Ptolemaeus or Ptolemy (90-168 AD).
The treatise was written by the Greek, Claudius Ptolemaeus or Ptolemy (90-168 AD).
Some of the books he wrote include: 1. The Almagest (13 books long; It was originally titled the Syntaxis Mathmatica, which was called the Megale Syntaxis. When it was translated into Arabic it was called the al-Magisti, and when it was translated into Latin it was called the Almagestum. Finally it was translated into english-- The Almagest). 2. Tetrabiblos (Astrology/geography) 3. The Geographica (maps, atlas-- 7 books long) 4. A book on Optics which was reportedly 5 books long.
a bend in fault and it is marked by deformation is called syntaxis and a large geological unit having series of faults and folds is called syntaxial belt. By: Tarib Jalees student of Earth Sciences in Comsats Abbottabad, Pakistan. email: sheikh_tarib@yahoo.com sheikhtaribjalees@gmail.com
J. M. van der Horst has written: 'Kleine middelnederlandse syntaxis' -- subject(s): Dutch language, Grammar, Historical, Historical Grammar, Syntax
a bend in fault and it is marked by deformation is called syntaxis and a large geological unit having series of faults and folds is called syntaxial belt. By: Tarib Jalees student of earth sciences in Comsats Abbottabad, Pakistan. Email: sheikh_tarib@yahoo.com sheikhtaribjalees@gmail.com
(he/she wrote) - kirjutas ; (i wrote) - kirjutasin ; (they wrote, you wrote) - kirjutasid
Wrote is a past tense verb.I wrote a play.He wrote her a letter.They wrote and drew on the sidewalk with chalk.