「prize‐winning」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

prize‐winning

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  • f multitrack recording, composed countless prize-winning advertising jingles, prepared film scores,
  • lism in New England, 1620-1660 (1984), the prize-winning America's Instrument: The Banjo in the 19t
  • Sophie Cabot Black (born 1958) is a prize-winning American poet who has taught creative writ
  • Matt Bondurant is a contemporary, prize-winning American writer and author of the books Th
  • is documentary review written by Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist for The New York Times
  • commentary by John W. Dower, the Pulitzer Prize-winning, American historian of modern Japan, and E
  • 18, 1971 in Columbia, South Carolina) is a prize-winning American poet.
  • (June 4, 1916 - May 19, 2009) was a Nobel Prize-winning American biochemist.
  • Leonard Bacon was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American poet, translator, and literary cr
  • y 5, 1953, New York City - ) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist.
  • d of the World is a 1990 novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning American author Michael Cunningham.
  • ry Wills (born May 22, 1934) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning and prolific author, journalist, and histo
  • Fields's 69 Love Songs, Caribou's Polaris Prize-winning Andorra, M. Ward's Hold Time, Camera Obscu
  • other, left off at the end of his Pulitzer Prize-winning Angela's Ashes.
  • He is the author of the Orwell Prize-winning anonymous blog NightJack which commented o
  • In 2004 a four-volume monograph on Pritzer Prize-winning architect Zaha Hadid was published, featur
  • Pritzker Prize-winning architect Lord Richard Rogers (Rogers Stir
  • Pritzker Prize-winning architect Fumihiko Maki was awarded the co
  • nced in late 2004 the selection of Pritzker Prizewinning architect Renzo Piano to design a new addit
  • building made Meier the youngest Pritzker Prize-winning architect at that time.
  • Designed by Sterling Prize-winning architects Feilden Clegg Bradley, the Towe
  • mko (1924-January 25, 2006) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning architectural critic and writer based in S
  • g became heritage protected because of its prize-winning architecture (Paul Bonatz Prize 1959).
  • olina, Artist/U.S.A., and three editions of Prizewinning Art.
  • The film is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning article on the same topic.
  • an Park, the audience can view the work of prize-winning artisans and master craftspeople from arou
  • ober 6, 1931) is an Italian/American Nobel Prize-winning astrophysicist who laid the foundations of
  • Michael Shaara was the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the The Killer Angels, a novel a
  • the British newspaper The Observer, Nobel Prize-winning author Doris Lessing described it as "a ke
  • Word For It is the second novel by Booker Prize-winning author Barry Unsworth published by Hutchin
  • of Simbhoonath Capildeo and uncle of Nobel Prize-winning author V.S. Naipaul and of Shiva Naipaul.
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anne Applebaum, writing in The Wash
  • ington, D.C.) is a journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author who has written extensively about c
  • ite near Gore, Virginia where the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Willa Cather was born in 1873.
  • rk on the subject was featured in Pulitzer Prize-winning author David A. Vise's book, The Google St
  • ing experts in the field, such as Pulitzer Prize-winning author Samantha Power and New York Times b
  • James Gould Cozzens, Pulitzer Prize-winning author
  • Diane McWhorter, Pulitzer Prize-winning author
  • Richard Kluger, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and book publisher
  • e Scarlet Gang of Asakusa written by Nobel Prize-winning author Yasunari Kawabata.
  • t before becoming an accomplished Pulitzer Prize-winning author and book publisher.
  • As emeritus, Binyon became a prize-winning author with the publication of the biograp
  • a Dutch born American editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, who edited the Ladies Home Journal
  • work, and pick out those written by Booker Prize-winning authors.
  • the second single by British Mercury Music Prize-winning band, The xx, to be released from their se
  • A. Scott Berg '67 - Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer
  • Merlo J. Pusey, journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer
  • Lewis produced his Pulitzer Prize-winning biographies of W. E. B. Du Bois during his
  • 1938), renowned for his Nobel Prize-winning biological research and for his vision and
  • s of the American Revolution is a Pulitzer Prize-winning book of history by Bernard Bailyn.
  • ar in North Africa 1942-1943 is a Pulitzer Prize-winning book written in 2002 by long-time Washingt
  • Russia Leaves the War (1956) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning book by George F. Kennan.
  • On Human Nature is a 1979 Pulitzer prize-winning book by the Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson
  • e was most commonly associated with his two prizewinning books, From Peasants to Farmers: The Migrat
  • Potter was also a prize-winning breeder of Herdwick sheep and a prosperous
  • It was based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning Broadway play of the same name by George K
  • now famous bust of "Sherman," the favorite prize-winning bull of John B. Sherman.
  • Notable former employees include Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Don Wright, Boston Globe column
  • ony Auth (1942- ), class of 1965, Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
  • omical chimpanzees, a kitten, a horse, her prize-winning champion pack of Briards, a raccoon and a
  • A Nobel Prize-winning chemist and activist, Pauling promoted a v
  • ing Lesley Garrett; George Porter, a nobel prize-winning chemist; Charles Spencer, a renowned piani
  • e Art Institute of Chicago's exhibition of prize-winning Chicago-area artists.
  • icut) is an American poet who authored the prize-winning collection Ampersand Revisited.
  • In addition to his Pulitzer Prize-winning column "Today and Tomorrow," he published
  • f the birth of Gian Carlo Menotti-Pulitzer Prize-winning composer and Festival founder-Spoleto pres
  • Wilson is a prize-winning conservation biologist and author.
  • ld's Hottest Trouble Spots with a Pulitzer Prize-Winning Correspondent.
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning critic Roger Ebert was more effusive, call
  • ni (born 1955), Japanese American Pulitzer Prize-winning critic
  • The News-Sentinel is a Pulitzer Prize-winning daily newspaper in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
  • In the Nobel Prize-winning Danish author Henrik Pontoppidan's partly
  • dent at Tohoku University when he wrote his prizewinning debut novel, Parasite Eve.
  • Her prizewinning doctoral thesis was awarded at Oxford.
  • ember 14, 2010 along with Reich's Pulitzer Prize-winning Double Sextet on the album Double Sextet/2
  • of the title character in 1988's Pulitzer prize-winning drama Driving Miss Daisy which was origina
  • production of Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by D
  • Heche starred in the Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Proof on Broadway.
  • British Touring Car Championship with his prize-winning drive.
  • The Nobel prizewinning economist Paul Krugman, writing in The New
  • he studied under William Sharpe, the Nobel Prize-winning economist.
  • n American painter, sculptor, and Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.
  • is a novel written and published by Nobel Prize-winning Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz in 1985.
  • The album includes 5 of his prizewinning electroacoustic pieces which he had perform
  • It was based on a prize-winning essay Rees wrote for the 1835 Carmarthen e
  • James Alan McPherson, Pulitzer Prize-winning essayist and short story writer
  • , and the egotistical, narcissistic, Nobel prize-winning father in Nobel Son.
  • Stephen Hunter - Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic, Washington Post
  • een married to Maurice Possley, a Pulitzer Prize-winning, former Chicago Tribune investigative repo
  • It was named after the Nobel Prize-winning French chemist Victor Grignard.
  • ierre et Luce is a 1920 novel by the Nobel Prize-winning French author Romain Rolland.
  • Shadow of No Towers is a comic by Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic artist Art Spiegelman.
  • ning P(Cy)3 ligands include the 2005 Nobel Prize-winning Grubbs' catalyst and the homogeneous hydro
  • a repeat championship winner and took his prize-winning Hereford to the Iowa State Fair.
  • The granddaughter of Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Allan Nevins, and great-great-gr
  • season is highlighted by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David McCullough and prize-winni
  • and wrote his dissertation under Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, Roy F. Nichols.
  • Good-bye, Billy Radish is a prize-winning, historical, young-adult novel by the Amer
  • f Freedom: The Civil War Era is a Pulitzer Prize-winning history of the American Civil War and its
  • 0 Straits Dollars a year and he placed his prize-winning horses under the charge of a European trai
  • ny of Ditvoorst's early films including the prizewinning Ik Kom Wat Later Naar Madra (I'll Be In Mad
  • olume Nine, one of an annual collection of prize-winning images.
  • in 60 countries, including the Nobel Peace Prize-winning International Physicians for the Preventio
  • of the digital age with Jack Kilby's Nobel Prize-winning invention of the integrated circuit.
  • o the San Jose Mercury News' 1985 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative series of articles “The Hidd
  • in spring 2010, and is described by Booker Prize-winning Irish novelist Anne Enright as "Electric,
  • "Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist Jack Nelson Dies at 80", Associ
  • Alex S. Jones is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who has been director of the Jo
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Leonard Pitts wrote: "Mississip
  • Susan Faludi, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and the author of Backlash: The
  • October 21, 2009) was an American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist praised for his coverage of the
  • Stanley R. Tiner (Class of 1960), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
  • Edward Humes is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and published non-fiction write
  • David S. Broder, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, columnist for The Washington P
  • l eight of his novels including the Booker Prize-winning Last Orders.
  • ders (or "rogering the Duke of York with a prize-winning leek," as he states earlier).
  • A prize-winning Modern Game in Australia
  • He also wrote a Pushcart Prize-winning monograph on Samuel Beckett, published in
  • for new, young performers for the Pulitzer Prize-winning musical Rent.
  • Blum expanded the Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper series into a book of the same t
  • concerned with Harrison Lloyd, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Newsweek photojournalist who travels on hi
  • create a mammoth machine that can write a prize-winning novel in roughly fifteen minutes.
  • y novelist Larry McMurtry for his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Lonesome Dove.
  • He is the author of the Brage Prize-winning novel Bikubesong ('Song of the Beehive'),
  • ingham (1970), author of the 1998 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Hours
  • It is based on the 1988 Booker Prize-winning novel Oscar and Lucinda by Peter Carey.
  • ral scenes in author James Agee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, A Death in the Family.
  • ting for Penelope Fitzgerald's 1979 Booker Prize-winning novel, Offshore.
  • Booker Prize-winning novelist Kazuo Ishiguro wrote the liner no
  • n recent years the house was home to Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sir William Golding who lived the
  • an in the Overstuffed Chair," and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Peter Taylor alludes to the cemet
  • lman Rushdie and Kiran Desai, and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Jhumpa Lahiri.
  • elebrated the life and work of the Pulitzer prizewinning novelist who gave the Crackers dignity in A
  • Willa Cather (1873-1947), Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist
  • He is the father of prize-winning novelist Jonathan Carroll.
  • ional acclaim for his performance as Nobel Prize-winning novelist Knut Hamsun in Jan Troell's biopi
  • Penelope Fitzgerald, Booker prize-winning novelist, poet, essayist and biographer wa
  • His prize-winning oration, "In Defense of the Tao", (the Com
  • s Across Wrecked Bridge in Korea, Pulitzer Prize-winning photo by Associated Press photographer Max
  • 1961 was the last Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph with a Speed Graphic, which tak
  • Burst of Joy is a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph by Associated Press photographe
  • he troops and, while proud of his Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph, believes that he took better p
  • Brad Loper - Pulitzer prize-winning photographer
  • Cumpiano met Juan Sotomayor, a prize-winning photographer who worked on the New York Ti
  • Carol Guzy - Three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist.
  • entist Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose and Nobel Prize-winning physicist Sir C. V. Raman.
  • work on radar information theory led Nobel Prizewinning physicist John H. Van Vleck to invite him t
  • cket scientist William Pickering and Nobel Prize-winning physicist Ernest Rutherford.
  • 1842), Nobel Prize-winning physicist.
  • Max Born - Nobel Prize-winning physicist.
  • he very last sentence of her 1974 Pulitzer Prize-winning Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.
  • is performance as Roy Cohn in the Pulitzer Prize-winning play Angels in America.
  • , or Change and Suzan-Lori Parks' Pulitzer Prize-winning play Topdog/Underdog.
  • Among her other writings were a prize-winning play about life in a nursing home, reviews
  • d in the revival of David Mamet's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Glengarry Glen Ross, where he was nom
  • Roark Bradford and the subsequent Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name by Marc Connelly.
  • Edward Albee is based on his 1966 Pultizer Prize-winning play of the same title.
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright August Wilson has visited the E
  • ntroduced her then - student (the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Suzan-Lori Parks) to Five Coll
  • other George Kelly was a popular, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright.
  • an MacLeish, artist and brother of Pulitzer Prizewinning poet and Librarian of Congress Archibald Ma
  • MacLeish was the brother of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Archibald MacLeish, and like him atte
  • Bogalusa was the birthplace of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Yusef Komunyakaa and of New Orleans p
  • W.B. Yeats, the Nobel Prize-winning poet, was born here.
  • ist columnist for The Nation, as well as a prize-winning poet."
  • This type was used by the Nobel prize-winning Portuguese neurologist Egas Moniz.
  • This is about the 2005 & 2006 prize-winning program; for the earlier winner "Jabberwoc
  • ohn Fetterman (1920 - 1975) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for the Louisville Courier-Journa
  • son (born December 15, 1945) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter.
  • His prize-winning research was conducted primarily at the Co
  • Knowles conducted this prize-winning research at Monsanto Company.
  • Dr. Urban is a leading educator, prize-winning researcher specializing in marketing and n
  • Prize-winning Russian folklore ensemble Leznaya Skazka i
  • It is named after Boris Pasternak, Nobel Prize-winning Russian poet and writer.
  • 3, 1916 - February 1, 1997) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning San Francisco columnist whose intimate awa
  • David Dietz (1897-1984) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning science journalist and author.
  • Spurred on by the work of Nobel Prize-winning scientists Karl Ziegler and Giulio Natta,
  • unwitting Americans, based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning series Welsome wrote for the Albuquerque T
  • The Color of Money, Pulitzer Prize-winning series, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May
  • iano pieces and other music, including the prize-winning set of songs, Pisne Zavisovy.
  • harles Haine and adapted from the Pushcart Prize-winning short story of the same name by Peter Moor
  • vels between 1962 and 1968, as well as two prize-winning short stories (collected in Driftglass [19
  • A double LP compiling the prize-winning songs of the festival was released in 1981
  • 006): Contains a rare interview with Nobel Prize-winning South African novelist J.M. Coetzee.
  • Prize-winning Stories from China, 1978-1979 (by Liu Xinw
  • ations on the dangers of alcohol, featured prize-winning student essays, printed stories about the
  • cher is widely established and many of her prize-winning students are well known on the internation
  • rn 1941), American journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist
  • Kitty Duval, in William Saroyan's Pulitzer Prize-winning The Time of Your Life.
  • er, Michael Shaara, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Killer Angels died in 1988.
  • y (101punt) and wrote, played and directed prize-winning theatre shows (in the Netherlands and Belg
  • essisches Landesmuseum, Darmstadt, and the prize-winning three-part NYConcerto (2004-2006).
  • r Purple by Alice Walker, Beloved by Nobel Prize-winning Toni Morrison, and fiction works by Octavi
  • Pamuk is also the older brother of Nobel Prize-winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk.
  • ic society,' said Peter Arnett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning war reporter for the AP in Vietnam and lat
  • Jim G. Lucas (1914-1970), Pulitzer Prize-winning war correspondent.
  • famously used in Beadle and Tatum's Nobel prize-winning work on the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis
  • at Wimbledon School of Art where her first, prizewinning, work was a series of narrative paintings i
  • petition, as one of the most notable former prizewinning works between 1975 and 2005.
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