Popularly known by his celebrated pseudonym, El Caribe, Jose Gualberto Padilla (1829-1896) is nineteenth-century Puerto Rico's most accomplished, winningly pugnacious lyric satirist and
polemist.
Not surprisingly, given his short fuse and a long acquaintance with the
polemist writer Gore Vidal, Paul and Jeanne Woodward became fiery activist actors long before the term entered the lexicon.
Doerksen, "
Polemist or Pastor?: Donne and Moderate Calvinist Conformity"; Jeanne Shami, "'Speaking Openly and Speaking First': John Donne, the Synod of Dort, and the Early Stuart Church"; Mary Arshagouni Papazian, "The Augustinian Donne: How a 'Second S.
Oide, a former member of the opposition Japan Socialist Party, now called the Social Democratic party, was known as a leading
polemist on security and defense issues in Diet debates, particularly in the 1970s and 1980s.
The following year his own "Palinodiae" were published.(151) As a
polemist and a professor of theology, he was active mostly in Great Poland, which testifies to the still relatively strong position of Protestantism in that region.
He also helped prepare for publication the first Romanian edition of the book of canon law, the Nomocanon, was active as a
polemist, worked on a book about magic, and kept up with the fast-changing situation in east Eastern Europe.
From Jackie O to the electronics genius William Hewlett (of Hewlett-Packard fame), from the baseball star Goose Gossage to the
polemist William F.
Herbert was a member of Thomas Becket's episcopal household and an ardent
polemist for him during his life and hagiographer after his murder in 1170.
There are several ways to translate the phrase Du luan vien into English, including propaganda agents, pro-government Internet commentators, Internet
polemists and pro-regime bloggers.
The basnbedan, in this context, can denote anyone whom the Manichaen
polemists deemed "idol-worshippers"--that is, simply devotees of the wrong gods, such as the adherents of the "traditional" Sogdian religion.