| 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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