donzel

donzel

(ˈdɒnzəl)
n
archaic a man of high birth
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
[9.] Bearman, Peri J., Thierry Bianquis, Clifford Edmund Bosworth, Emeri van Donzel y Wolfhart P.
Gog and Magog by van Donzel and Schmidt seeks to make two main points: first, that Sallam did in fact embark on the journey that he describes and reach what he thought was Alexander's barrier; and second, that Sallam's description of the barrier was influenced by earlier Syriac accounts of it.
Pero dado que la informacion novedosa seria incomprensible sin la informacion antigua, podemos identificar esa division--y no somos los unicos en hacerlo--con la dicotomia tema/rema (Bates y Ostendorf, 2001, Van Donzel yKooPMANS-VAN Beinum, 1998, Valldubi, 1998, Prince, 1988, Halliday, 1985).
Van Donzel, former editor of the Encyclopedia of Islam and Schmidt (Christian Orient, University of Louvain) discuss the evolution of Gog and Magog in Syriac and early Islamic sources.
See: Bearman, P., Bianquis, Th., Bosworth, C.E., van Donzel, E., Heinrichs, W.
(5.) Fournier PE, Roux V, Caumes E, Donzel M, Raoult D.
A spokesman for Swiss, Jean-Claude Donzel, agrees that armed guards are a fact of life on many Swiss planes, and doesn't believe it's anything to worry about.