stevens
stevens — biographical name
1. An American engineer and inventor (1749–1838) who built early steamboats and hel
An American engineer and inventor (1749–1838) who built early steamboats and helped create the first railway systems in the United States.
John Stevens designed one of the first successful steamboats on the Hudson River.
collocation: successful steamboat
Historians credit Stevens with laying the foundation for the American railway industry.
pattern: credit [someone] with [achievement]
The Stevens Institute of Technology was founded using money from the Stevens family estate.
In 1811, Stevens published a detailed argument for building steam-powered railways across America.
用法筆記
Most often encountered in discussions of early American industrial history and transportation innovation.
2. An American judge and lawyer (1920–2019) who served as a Justice of the U.S. Sup
An American judge and lawyer (1920–2019) who served as a Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1975 to 2010, known for his independent rulings and clear writing style.
John Paul Stevens wrote over one thousand opinions during his years on the Supreme Court.
collocation: write opinions / serve on the Court
Justice Stevens argued that the death penalty as then practiced was unconstitutional.
pattern: [someone] argued that + clause
Stevens was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Gerald Ford in 1975.
Law students at Yale frequently study Stevens' dissenting opinions in major civil rights cases.
用法筆記
Usually referred to as 'Justice Stevens' in legal contexts. His long tenure (35 years) makes him one of the most cited justices in constitutional law.
3. An American politician and lawyer (1792–1868) who led efforts in Congress to end
An American politician and lawyer (1792–1868) who led efforts in Congress to end slavery and to pass laws granting equal rights to formerly enslaved people after the Civil War.
Thaddeus Stevens fought for equal rights for African Americans after the Civil War ended.
collocation: fight for equal rights
Stevens helped write the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees equal protection under the law.
The 2012 film Lincoln shows Stevens as a sharp-tongued congressman pushing for emancipation.
Stevens insisted that formerly enslaved families should receive land to build independent lives.
用法筆記
Thaddeus Stevens is a central figure in Reconstruction history; he is often called a 'Radical Republican' for his strong anti-slavery views.
4. An American modernist poet (1879–1955) whose work explores the relationship betw
An American modernist poet (1879–1955) whose work explores the relationship between imagination and reality, known for poems such as 'The Emperor of Ice-Cream' and 'Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.'
Wallace Stevens worked as an insurance executive in Hartford while writing his celebrated poetry.
Stevens won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1955 for his collection The Collected Poems.
collocation: win the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
Critics describe Stevens' poetry as deeply philosophical and richly imaginative in style.
Many university courses on American modernism include the poems of Wallace Stevens.
用法筆記
Wallace Stevens led a dual life — a prominent insurance executive by day and a celebrated modernist poet by night. He did not gain wide recognition as a poet until late in his career.