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Briski, Zana ... British Transglobe Expedition
Briski, Zana
(from the article "Performing Arts") Ross Kauffman and Zana Briski's Born into Brothels won the Academy Award and the International ...
Brisson, Henri
French statesman who twice served as premier of France (1885, 1898) and was noted for ...
Brisson, Pierre
(from the article "Figaro, Le") ...Coty, the cosmetics manufacturer, and soon its reputation suffered as it became little more than ...
Brissot, Jacques-Pierre
a leader of the Girondins (often called Brissotins), a moderate bourgeois faction that opposed the ... [4 Related Articles]
bristle
(from the article "gundi") any of five North African species of rodents distinguished by its comblike rows of bristles ...
bristle grass
(from the article "foxtail") The genus Setaria (formerly called bristle grass) includes nearly 125 species of annual and perennial ...
bristle-thighed curlew
(from the article "curlew") The bristle-thighed curlew (N. tahitiensis) breeds in the mountains of Alaska and migrates some 6,000 ...
bristlecone pine
(species Pinus longaeva and P. aristata), small pine tree ranging from about 5 to 16 ... [6 Related Articles]
bristlehead
(species Psittrichas fulgidus), parrot of the forested slopes of northern New Guinea, the sole species ...
bristlemouth
(family Gonostomatidae), any of the approximately 33 species of oceanic fishes (order Stomiiformes), occurring in ... [1 Related Articles]
bristletail
any of approximately 370 species of primitive, wingless insects of the subclass Apterygota that measure ... [2 Related Articles]
bristling
(Sprattus sprattus), edible fish of the herring family Clupeidae (order Clupeiformes). Bristlings are silver-coloured marine ... [1 Related Articles]
bristly foxtail
(from the article "foxtail") ...species. Yellow foxtail (S. lutescens or S. glauca) and green foxtail (S. viridis), named for ...
Bristol
(from the article "Bristol") city and unitary authority, southwestern England. The historic centre of Bristol and the sections of ...
Bristol
city, coextensive with the town (township) of Bristol, Hartford county, central Connecticut, U.S., on the ...
Bristol
borough (town), Bucks county, southeastern Pennsylvania, U.S., on the Delaware River, just northeast of Philadelphia. ...
Bristol
county, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S., bordered to the south by Buzzards Bay and to the west ...
Bristol
city and unitary authority, southwestern England. The historic centre of Bristol and the sections of ... [5 Related Articles]
Bristol
county, eastern Rhode Island, U.S. It is located on a peninsula bordered by Massachusetts to ...
bristol
(from the article "papermaking") The general term bristol refers to a group of stiff, heavy papers with thicknesses ranging ...
Bristol
(from the article "airplane") ...with the best piston planes never made them exceptionally popular. The Vickers Viscount was adopted ...
Bristol
city, on the border of Virginia (Washington county) and Tennessee (Sullivan county), U.S., in an ...
Bristol
town (township) and seat of Bristol county, eastern Rhode Island, U.S., on a peninsula between ...
Bristol Bay
arm of the Bering Sea, indenting for 200 mi (320 km) the southwest coast of ...
Bristol Blenheim
(from the article "military aircraft") During the Battle of Britain, the RAF converted twin-engined bombers such as the Bristol Blenheim ...
Bristol Channel
inlet of the Atlantic Ocean separating southwestern England from southern Wales. The northern shore borders ... [1 Related Articles]
Bristol Old Vic
(from the article "Performing Arts") The Bristol Old Vic, Britain's oldest operating theatre, was closed down for refurbishment amid concerns ...
Bristol Turnpike
(from the article "roads and highways") ...1804, when he was appointed general surveyor for Bristol, then the most important port city ...
Bristol ware
hard-paste porcelain products of the Coxside porcelain manufactory that were produced between 1768 and 1781.
Bristol Zoo
zoological park opened in 1836 in the Clifton section of Bristol, Eng. Though occupying only ...
Bristol, George Digby, 2nd earl of
English Royalist, an impetuous and erratic statesman who had a checkered career as an adviser ...
Bristol, Horace
American photojournalist whose idea for a collaboration with John Steinbeck on a chronicle of the ...
Bristol, John Digby, 1st earl of
English diplomat and moderate Royalist, a leading advocate of conciliation and reform during the events ...
Bristol, John Hervey, 1st earl of
the first earl of Bristol in the Hervey line, son of Sir Thomas Hervey (d. ...
Bristol, University of
(from the article "Selected universities and colleges of the world") ...School, the Cathedral School, and Queen Elizabeth's Hospital, all founded in the 1500s; Colston's School ...
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
American company resulting from a merger in 1989 and dating to companies founded in 1858 ... [2 Related Articles]
Bristow, Benjamin Helm
lawyer and statesman who, as U.S. secretary of the treasury (1874-76), successfully prosecuted the Whiskey ... [2 Related Articles]
Bristow, Joseph
(from the article "Kansas") ...(Populist) Party both had their origins in Kansas, and in the 1890s they played an ...
Britain
(from the article "Sovereigns of Britain") Until late in the Mesolithic period, Britain formed part of the continental landmass and was ...
Britain, Battle of
(July-September 1940), series of intense raids directed against Great Britain by the German air force ... [10 Related Articles]
Britannia
(from the article "airplane") ...never made them exceptionally popular. The Vickers Viscount was adopted for its newness and its ...
Britannia Bridge
railroad bridge in northern Wales spanning Menai Strait, between Bangor and the Isle of Anglesey. ... [3 Related Articles]
Britannia Inferior
(from the article "United Kingdom") ...order to reduce the power of its governor to rebel, as Albinus had done in ...
britannia metal
alloy composed approximately of 93 percent tin, 5 percent antimony, and 2 percent copper, used ...
Britannia Superior
(from the article "United Kingdom") ...revenues of mines in addition to normal taxation. In the early 3rd century Britain was ...
Britannica.com
(from the article "Encyclopaedia Britannica") ...Internet-based encyclopaedia, it debuted on the World Wide Web in 1994. Users paid a fee ...
Britannicus
(from the article "Nero") ...poisoning her second husband, Agrippina incestuously became the wife of her uncle, the emperor Claudius, ...
British Aerospace PLC
(from the article "Airbus Industrie") ...Construcciones Aeronauticas S.A. (CASA) joined in 1971 with a 4.2 percent share. Hawker Siddeley and ...
British Aircraft Corporation
(from the article "BAE Systems") Through its antecedent company BAe, BAE Systems carries the heritage of some 20 British aerospace ...
British Airways PLC
British air-transport company formed in April 1974 in the fusion of British Overseas Airways Corporation ... [1 Related Articles]
British Amateur Championship
golf tournament held annually in Great Britain for male amateurs with handicaps of 2 or ... [1 Related Articles]
British American Tobacco PLC
British conglomerate that is one of the world's largest manufacturers of tobacco products. The company's ... [1 Related Articles]
British and Foreign Bible Society
first Bible society in the fullest sense, founded in 1804 at the urging of Thomas ... [2 Related Articles]
British and Irish Lions
(from the article "Football") ...teams in 2006). Many of the Crusaders players, including Justin Marshall, Daniel Carter, and Richie ...
British Antarctic "Nimrod" Expedition
(from the article "Shackleton, Sir Ernest Henry") ...82° 16' 33" S was reached. His health suffered, and he was invalided out on ...
British Antarctic "Terra Nova" Expedition
(from the article "Antarctica") ...in 1908-09 but was eventually reached on Dec. 14, 1911, by Roald Amundsen of the ...
British Antarctic Survey
(from the article "Antarctica") ...The new station was scheduled to be dedicated in January 2007. The old station's geodesic ...
British Antarctic Territory
a territory of the United Kingdom lying southeast of South America, extending from the Atlantic ... [3 Related Articles]
British army
in the United Kingdom, the military force charged with national defense and the fulfillment of ... [2 Related Articles]
British Association for the Advancement of Science
(from the article "Bessemer, Sir Henry") His announcement of the process in 1856 before the British Association for the Advancement of ...
British Blue Ensign
(from the article "British Virgin Islands, flag of") A variety of flags are displayed throughout the British Virgin Islands (BVI), although the Union ...
British blues
early to mid-1960s musical movement based in that was an important influence on the ... [2 Related Articles]
British Broadcasting Corporation
publicly financed broadcasting system in Great Britain, operating under royal charter. It held a monopoly ... [22 Related Articles]
British Cameroon
(from the article "Cameroon, history of") ...period of British rule in two small portions and French rule in the remainder of ...
British Columbia
westernmost of Canada's 10 provinces. It is bounded to the north by the Yukon and ... [13 Related Articles]
British Columbia Lions
(from the article "Football") The B.C. Lions led the league with 542 total points during the regular season (an ...
British Columbia Railway
(from the article "railroad") ...a "railway to resources" at Hay River in the Northwest Territory. British Columbia took over ...
British Columbia, flag of
Canadian provincial flag that is horizontally divided, bearing an elongated Union Jack emblem in its ...
British Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition
(from the article "Fuchs, Sir Vivian Ernest") English geologist and explorer who led the historic British Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition in 1957-58.
British Darts Organisation
(from the article "darts") ...the game is ordinarily played in the public house, or pub (tavern), or in a ...
British East Africa
territories that were formerly under British control in eastern Africa, namely Kenya, Uganda, and Zanzibar ... [1 Related Articles]
British East Africa Protectorate
(from the article "Nairobi") ...When the railhead arrived there in 1899, the British colonial capital of Ukamba province was ...
British Empire
a worldwide system of dependencies-colonies, protectorates, and other territories-that over a span of some three ... [210 Related Articles]
British Empire Medal
(from the article "British Empire, The Most Excellent Order of the") Associated with this order is the British Empire Medal (BEM) instituted by George V. This ...
British Empire, The Most Excellent Order of the
British order of knighthood instituted in 1917 by King George V to reward both civilian ...
British empiricism
(from the article "philosophy, Western") Two major philosophical problems remained: to provide an account of the origins of reason and ...
British European Airways
(from the article "British Airways PLC") ...decided to merge and nationalize Imperial Airways and British Airways. The result was the British ...
British Expeditionary Force
the home-based British army forces that went to northern France at the start of World ... [2 Related Articles]
British Falconer's Club
(from the article "falconry") ...Club expired. Falconry was kept alive in England by a few aristocratic amateurs and their ...
British Health and Morals of Apprentices Act
(from the article "labour law") The first landmark of modern labour law was the British Health and Morals of Apprentices ...
British Imperial System
traditional system of weights and measures used officially in Great ... [4 Related Articles]
British Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition
(from the article "Gerlache de Gomery, Adrien-Victor-Joseph, baron de") ...Barents and Greenland seas (1909). De Gerlache made an overland crossing of Greenland from west ...
British Indian Ocean Territory
overseas territory of the United Kingdom in the central Indian Ocean, established in 1965 by ... [4 Related Articles]
British Invasion
musical movement of the mid-1960s composed of British rock-and-roll ("beat") groups whose popularity spread rapidly ... [2 Related Articles]
British Iron and Steel Federation
(from the article "British Steel Corporation PLC") The first efforts to centralize the British iron and steel industry occurred during the Great ...
British Isles
(from the article "British Isles") group of islands off the northwestern coast of Europe. The group consists of two main ...
British Kaffraria, Crown Colony of
(from the article "Cape Frontier Wars") ...war broke out again, in 1846, over a trivial incident, and in a bitter struggle ...
British Ladies Amateur Championship
(from the article "British Amateur Championship") The British Ladies Amateur Golf Championship, the first women's golf tournament to be established, is ...
British Leyland Limited
(from the article "British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd.") ...It was formed through the 1968 merger of British Motor Holdings Ltd. and Leyland Motor ...
British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd.
historic British automotive corporation. It was formed through the 1968 merger of British Motor Holdings ... [3 Related Articles]
British Library
national library of Great Britain, formed by the British Library Act (1972) and organized by ... [5 Related Articles]
British Library Bibliographic Services Division
(from the article "library") The British Library Bibliographic Services Division was formed from the British National Bibliography Ltd., an ...
British Library Lending Division
(from the article "library") ...libraries to facilitate interlibrary lending. The National Central Library encouraged other university and special libraries ...
British Library Reference Division
(from the article "British Library") The British Museum library was long housed in the main building of the British Museum, ...
British Medical Association
(from the article "medical association") ...prominence. Other examples include the three major medical associations in Great Britain: the Royal College ...
British Motor Corporation Ltd.
(from the article "British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd.") In 1952 another venerable car manufacturer, Austin Motor Co. Ltd. (founded in 1905 by Herbert ...
British Motor Holdings Ltd.
(from the article "British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd.") historic British automotive corporation. It was formed through the 1968 merger of British Motor Holdings ...
British Museum
in London, comprehensive national museum with particularly outstanding holdings in archaeology and ethnography. It is ... [12 Related Articles]
British Museum Rules
(from the article "library") ...forms of entry. As libraries grew larger after the Renaissance, it became necessary to devise ...
British Museum technique
(from the article "thought") A problem-solving algorithm is a procedure that is guaranteed to produce a solution if it ...
British National Antarctic "Discovery" Expedition
(from the article "Antarctica") Sledge probes deep into the interior were made by Scott on the British National Antarctic ...
British National Book Centre
(from the article "library") ...of interlibrary lending, coupled with the great losses suffered by libraries in Europe and Asia ...
British National Party
(from the article "United Kingdom") ...from Britain's public services (especially in the allocation of social housing) without a commensurate willingness ...
British North America Act
the act of Parliament of the United Kingdom by which in 1867 three British colonies ... [10 Related Articles]
British North Borneo Company
(from the article "Malaysia") ...in 1872, when British merchant William Cowie founded an east-coast settlement at Sandakan, on lease ...
British Open
one of the world's four major golf tournaments-with the Masters Tournament, the U.S. Open, and ... [9 Related Articles]
British Overseas Airways Corporation
(from the article "Reith, John Charles Walsham Reith, 1st Baron") In 1938 Reith became chairman of Imperial Airways Ltd. and the following year merged it ...
British Printing Corporation
(from the article "Maxwell, Robert") ...dealings, Maxwell temporarily lost control of Pergamon (1969-74) but won control again and rejuvenated the ...
British Psychological Society
(from the article "attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder") ...of Diseases (the diagnostic system used by most medical professionals outside North America.) And the ...
British Pugilists' Protective Association
(from the article "boxing") After the British Pugilists' Protective Association initiated the London Prize Ring rules in 1838, the ...
British Railways
former national railway system of Great Britain, created by the Transport Act of 1947, which ... [1 Related Articles]
British Red Ensign
(from the article "Bermuda, flag of") The British ship Sea Venture, carrying some 150 colonists bound for Virginia, ...
British Security Coordination
(from the article "Stephenson, William") ...cipher machine Enigma. He conveyed this information to the British secret service. When Winston Churchill ...
British Sky Broadcasting
(from the article "Murdoch, Rupert") ...as HarperCollins Publishers. In Britain in 1989 Murdoch inaugurated Sky Television, a four-channel satellite service, ...
British small pipes
(from the article "bagpipe") ...society under Louis XIV, had one, later two, cylindrical chanters (the second extending the range ...
British Society for the Study of Sex Psychology
(from the article "gay rights movement") ...reform throughout Germany and in The Netherlands and Austria, developing some 25 local chapters by ...
British soldiers
(Cladonia cristatella), species of lichen with erect, hollow branches that end in distinctive red fruiting ...
British Somaliland
(from the article "Somaliland") ...were occupied by Egypt, and southern Somaliland recognized the overlordship of the sultan of Zanzibar. ...
British South Africa Company
mercantile company, based in London, that was incorporated in 1889 under a royal charter at ... [9 Related Articles]
British South Sea Company
(from the article "asiento de negros") The last and most notable asiento was that granted to the British South Sea Company, ...
British Steel Corporation PLC
former British corporation that merged with Dutch steel firm Koninklijke Hoogovens in 1999 to create ... [1 Related Articles]
British storm petrel
(from the article "storm petrel") ...leucorhoa), for example, breeds on islands in the North Atlantic and south to about 28° ...
British Telecommunications Act
(from the article "postal system") ...rather than as a government revenue department. The process of achieving full commercial status took ...
British thermal unit
a measure of the quantity of heat, defined since 1956 as approximately equal to 1,055 ... [1 Related Articles]
British Trade Boards Acts
(from the article "labour law") Minimum-wage regulation takes varied forms; it may, following the pattern originally set by the British ...
British Transglobe Expedition
(from the article "Antarctica") ...Filchner Ice Shelf on Nov. 24, 1957, and by way of the South Pole reached ...
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