David Woodard

Neet di̱ Wikipedia
David Woodard
a̱tyubishyi
Sot mbyina̱sam Jhyuk
A̱byin mbyinMuná̱pyia̱ Sí̱tet Amerika, Ka̱na̱da Jhyuk
A̱lyoot da̱ a̱lyem mbyinDavid Woodard Jhyuk
A̱lyoot nang á̱ ku tyia̱ ngguDavid Jhyuk
A̱lyoot kyangbwakWoodard Jhyuk
A̱tuk mbyin6 Zwat Nyaai 1964 Jhyuk
A̱keang mbyinSanta Barbara Jhyuk
A̱tyunswatSonja Vectomov Jhyuk
Lilyem a̱ lyen lyiat, lyuut ku tyia̱ bwak ma̱ng a̱nhu a̱niShong Jhyuk
Ta̱mcomposer, conductor, writer Jhyuk
A̱ ku nat fang hu ma̱University of California, Santa Barbara, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, San Marcos High School Jhyuk
A̱vwuonta̱mMuná̱pyia̱ Sí̱tet Amerika Jhyuk
Khwi ku nwuan-ta̱cya̱Buddhism Jhyuk
Genrepostmodernism Jhyuk
Official websitehttps://www.davidwoodard.com Jhyuk

David James Woodard (yei Shong: /ˈwʊdɑːrd/ (fa̱k); byin 6 Zwat Nyaai 1964, Santa Barbara, California) — a̱ yet a̱tyutsot bubwom a̱ atyulyuut nkwambwat a̱byin Muná̱pyia̱ Sí̱tet a̱ghyang wa.[1][2][3][4]

Ya̱fang[jhyuk | jhyuk a̱tyin ka]

  1. Carpenter, S., "In Concert at a Killer's Death", Los Angeles Times, 9 May 2001.
  2. Allen, M., "Décor by Timothy Leary", The New York Times, 20 Zwat Jhyiung 2005.
  3. Epstein, J., "Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle", San Francisco Chronicle, 13 Zwat Tsat 2005.
  4. Woodard, D., "Musica lætitiæ comes medicina dolorum", Der Freund, Nr. 7, Zwat Tsat 2006, 34–41.

Fang a̱zanson[jhyuk | jhyuk a̱tyin ka]

A̱ka̱fwuop nta[jhyuk | jhyuk a̱tyin ka]