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en passant ... endocrine cell
en passant
(from the article "chess") ...e.g., a White pawn at f5 can move to f6 but can capture only on ...
en pointe
(from the article "dance") ...dancer's foot is not flat on the floor, it is pointed, and, of course, women ...
en resille
in the decorative arts, technique of enamelwork in which the design is incised on rock ... [1 Related Articles]
En Sof
(from the article "sefira") In the development of Kabbalistic literature, the idea was expanded and elaborated to denote the ...
Enabling Act
(from the article "Nazi Party") ...the Nazi Party 44 percent of the votes, and further unscrupulous tactics on Hitler's part ...
Enaliornis
(from the article "bird") The major diversification of modern birds probably took place in the Cretaceous, and it must ...
enamel
(from the article "art conservation and restoration") Since ancient times, glass has been used for both decorative and everyday use. Glass, glaze, ...
enamel
in anatomy, the hardest tissue of the body, covering part or all of the crown ... [3 Related Articles]
enamel miniature
portrait on a small opaque, usually white, enamel surface annealed to gold or copper plate ... [2 Related Articles]
enamelled glass
(from the article "glassware") ...Simple motifs such as lotus buds or lotus flowers were produced in this way and ...
enamelwork
technique of decoration whereby metal objects or surfaces are given a vitreous glaze that is ... [11 Related Articles]
enamine
(from the article "amine") ...can remove two hydrogen atoms from secondary amines (R2CH&singlehorzbond;NHR') to form imines (R2C&doublehorzbond;NR'). Tertiary amines ...
Enamorado, Macias El
(from the article "Spanish literature") ...century Castilian poets made it their medium for lyrics. Of 116 names in the Cancioneiro ...
enantiomorph
(from Greek enantios, "opposite"; morphe, "form"), also called Antimer, or Optical Antipode, ... [5 Related Articles]
Enantiopoda
(from the article "crustacean") ...appendages projecting sideways; antennules biramous; maxillules, maxillae, and maxillipeds uniramous and grasping; marine cave dwellers; ...
enantiotropy
(from the article "allotropy") ...of an element is the same phenomenon that in the case of compounds is called ...
enargite
sulfosalt mineral, copper arsenic sulfide (Cu3AsS4), that is occasionally an important ore of copper. It ...
enation
(from the article "lower vascular plant") Stem appendages known as leaves take various forms that evolved independently in different groups of ...
enation theory
(from the article "fern") ...more problematic as to its ultimate origin. Various hypotheses have been offered, of which the ...
Enbaqom
(from the article "Ethiopian literature") ...were destroyed; Islamization was widespread, and, even after the repulsion of the invaders, the country ...
Encalypta ciliata
(from the article "extinguisher moss") ...borne on setae (stalks) about 5 to 10 mm (0.2 to 0.4 inches) long. The ...
Encamp
village, Andorra, on a headstream of the Valira River. Its agricultural economy is supplemented by ...
EnCana
(from the article "Ecuador") ...for a week in August. Long-running legal actions involving foreign firms remained unsettled, and oil ...
Encarnacion
city, southeastern Paraguay. The city was founded in 1614 on the west bank of the ...
encaustic painting
painting technique in which pigments are mixed with hot, liquid wax. After all of the ... [4 Related Articles]
enceinte
(from the article "art and architecture, Mesopotamian") ...there was widespread building activity. Temples and ziggurats were repaired or rebuilt in almost all ...
Enceladus
second nearest of the major regular moons of Saturn and the brightest of all its ... [3 Related Articles]
Encephalartos
a genus of 65 species of palmlike cycads (family Zamiaceae), native to central and southern ...
encephalitis
from Greek enkephalos ("brain") and itis ("inflammation"), inflammation of ... [6 Related Articles]
encephalitis lethargica
(from the article "encephalitis") Encephalitis lethargica, or sleeping sickness (to be distinguished from African sleeping sickness, or African trypanosomiasis), ...
encephalization
(from the article "nervous system") Early in the evolution of vertebrates, a special sensory system became associated with each major ...
encephalocele
(from the article "neural tube defect") Another form of open neural tube defect, encephalocele, occurs when a meningeal sac containing brain ...
encephalomyelitis
(from the article "encephalitis") ...("brain") and itis ("inflammation"), inflammation of the brain. Inflammation affecting the brain ...
enchanter's nightshade
any herbaceous perennial plant of the genus Circaea, in the evening primrose family (Onagraceae), that ... [1 Related Articles]
Enchi Fumiko
Japanese novelist best known for her depiction of women's struggles within Japanese society.
enchilada
(from the article "tortilla") ...to scoop up sauced or stewed dishes and are sometimes cut into pieces and fried ...
enchondroma
solitary benign cartilaginous tumour that occurs mostly in the shafts of bones of the hands ...
enchondromatosis
(from the article "enchondroma") ...tumour called chondrosarcoma. Treatment includes curettage (scraping) or complete surgical excision. The solitary enchondroma is ...
Enciclopedia italiana di scienze, lettere ed arti
(Italian: "Italian Encyclopaedia of Science, Letters, and Arts"), major encyclopaedia of Italy, containing 35 volumes ... [2 Related Articles]
Enciclopedia universal ilustrada europeoamericana
encyclopaedia published in Madrid, an outstanding reference work of 70 volumes-published between 1905 and 1933-plus ... [1 Related Articles]
encierro
(from the article "Pamplona") ...Also Rises (1926). Starting on July 6, the eve of the saint's festival, the fiesta ...
Encina, Juan del
playwright, poet, priest, and composer of secular vocal music, who was the first Spanish dramatist ... [3 Related Articles]
Enciso, Martin Fernandez de
(from the article "Balboa, Vasco Nunez de") ...of present-day Colombia. Later, he settled in Hispaniola (Haiti), but he did not prosper as ...
Encke's Comet
faint comet having the shortest orbital period (about 3.3 years) of any known; it was ... [1 Related Articles]
Encke's gap
(from the article "Encke, Johann Franz") Besides the comet that bears his name, Encke is also known for his discovery of ...
Encke, Johann Franz
German astronomer who in 1819 established the period of the comet now known by his ... [2 Related Articles]
Enckell, Rabbe
Finnish poet, playwright, and critic, a leading representative of the Swedo-Finnish poetic revival that began ...
enclitic
(from the article "Paleo-Siberian languages") ...groups differ considerably from each other. In a broad sense, Nivkh resembles Japanese in its ...
enclosed mechanical composting
(from the article "environmental works") Open windrow composting requires relatively large land areas. Enclosed mechanical composting facilities can reduce land ...
enclosed rhyme
in poetry, the rhyming pattern abba found in certain quatrains, such as the first verse ...
enclosure
the division or consolidation of communal fields, meadows, pastures, and other arable lands in western ... [6 Related Articles]
encoding
(from the article "Table 2: Two-Bit and Variable-Bit Encoding of Four Sampled Signal Levels") Again n × r matrices H with the property Pt may be used in the ...
encogido syndrome
(from the article "primitive culture") ...the felt inferiority they act toward outsiders in an extremely withdrawn manner. This withdrawal trait ...
encomendero
(from the article "Latin America, history of") ...unit and the powers of its ruler. The size and benefits of the encomienda thus ...
encomiast
(from the article "Mesopotamian religion") That praise is of the essence of hymns, for instance, is shown by the fact ...
encomienda
in colonial Spanish America, legal system by which the Spanish crown attempted to define the ... [12 Related Articles]
encomium
a prose or poetic work in which a person, thing, or abstract idea is glorified. ...
encopresis
(from the article "mental disorder") ...physical symptoms that are often listed among psychiatric disorders of childhood include stuttering, enuresis (the ...
Encore project
(from the article "Performing Arts") In a unique attempt to keep new pieces in the repertoire, conductor Sir Simon Rattle ...
encounter group
(from the article "sensitivity training") ...technique in which intensive group discussion and interaction are used to increase individual awareness of ...
Encouragement of Industry, Law for the
(from the article "Ottoman Empire") The Young Turks were the first Ottoman reformers to promote industrialization, with a Law for ...
Encouragement pour l'Amelioration des Races de Chevaux en France, La Societe d'
(from the article "horse racing") In France, La Societe d'Encouragement pour l'Amelioration des Races de Chevaux en France (founded 1833) ...
Encratite
member of an ascetic Christian sect led by Tatian, a 2nd-century Syrian rhetorician. The name ... [2 Related Articles]
encrusted enamelling
(from the article "enamelwork") Encrusted enamelling is the term used to describe the technique of enamelling the irregular surfaces ...
enculturation
(from the article "education") The term education can be applied to primitive cultures only in the sense of enculturation, ...
encyclical
pastoral letter written by the pope for the whole Roman Catholic church on matters of ... [2 Related Articles]
encyclopaedia
reference work that contains information on all branches of knowledge or that treats a particular ... [10 Related Articles]
Encyclopaedia Britannica
the oldest English-language general encyclopaedia. The Encyclopaedia Britannica has been published since 1768, when its ... [33 Related Articles]
encyclopaedic dictionary
(from the article "encyclopaedia") ...they could be produced. Many early dictionaries were little more than enlarged glossaries, but from ...
Encyclopedia Americana, The
American general encyclopaedia, published in Danbury, Conn., by Grolier, Inc., the second largest encyclopaedia in ... [2 Related Articles]
Encyclopedie
(French: "Encyclopaedia, or Classified Dictionary of Sciences, Arts, and Trades"), the 18th-century French encyclopaedia that ... [17 Related Articles]
encystment
(from the article "amoeba") During adverse environmental periods many amoebas survive by encystment: the amoeba becomes circular, loses most ...
end block
(from the article "stringed instrument") ...outer strings. The middle bout meets the upper and lower to form outturned corners, where ...
end cam
(from the article "cam") ...on its face to fit a roller on the follower (face cam); (3) a cylindrical ...
end correction
(from the article "sound") ...located exactly at the closed end of a tube, but the antinode, owing to the ...
end pin
(from the article "stringed instrument") ..."under the chin." The cello (customary abbreviation of violoncello) and double bass both stand vertically ...
end point
(from the article "titration") ...point of a titration, an exactly equivalent amount of titrant has been added to the ...
end rhyme
in poetry, a rhyme that occurs in the last syllables of verses, as in stanza ...
end stop
in prosody, a grammatical pause at the end of a line of verse, as in ...
end-bearing pile
(from the article "soil mechanics") ...removed to place it equals the weight of the building; thus, once the building is ...
end-blown flute
(from the article "flute") ...by a stream of air directed against a sharp edge, upon which the air breaks ...
end-member
(from the article "garnet") ...formula for hydrogarnets would be A3B2(SiO4)3 - x(H4O4)x, and the general formula for an end-member ...
end-plate potential
chemically induced change in electric potential of the motor end plate, the portion of the ... [3 Related Articles]
end-product inhibition
(from the article "metabolism") ...produced as the end product of that pathway, and the pacemaker enzyme on which the ...
endangered species
any species of plant or animal that is threatened with extinction. [33 Related Articles]
Endangered Species Act
(from the article "conservation") For species that are hunted or collected, direct protection may be an essential conservation tool. ...
Endara Galimany, Guillermo
(from the article "Panama") ...Gen. Omar Torrijos and candidate of the main opposition Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD), won more ...
endbrain
(from the article "nervous system, human") The cerebrum, derived from the telencephalon, is the largest, uppermost portion of the brain. It ...
endbulb
(from the article "automata theory") ...neurons. Diagrammatically they could be represented by a circle and a line (together representing the ...
Ende
(from the article "Flores") ...found in profusion there. Flores is largely mountainous, especially in the west, where Mandasawu Peak ...
Ende, Hans am
(from the article "Worpswede school") ...of the earlier 19th-century Barbizon school in France. Fritz Mackensen and Otto Modersohn were the ...
Ende, Hermann
(from the article "arts, East Asian") The German architects Hermann Ende and Wilhelm Bockmann were active in Japan from the late ...
Ende, Michael Andreas Helmuth
German children's writer who was best known for his fantasy stories Jim Button and Luke ... [1 Related Articles]
Endecott, John
colonial governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, under whose leadership the new colony made rapid ...
Endeiolepis
(from the article "Life Sciences") ...to date for the common ancestor of the two lineages of bony fish. A fossil ...
endemic disease
(from the article "disease") When a disease is prevalent in an area over long periods of time, it is ...
endemic goitre
(from the article "goitre") The most common type of goitre is endemic goitre, caused by iodine deficiency. Iodine is ...
endemic species
(from the article "biodiversity") More generally, areas differ in the biodiversity of species found only there. Species having relatively ...
endemism
(from the article "biogeographic region") A taxon whose distribution is confined to a given area is said to be endemic ...
Enden, Franciscus van den
(from the article "Spinoza, Benedict de") Among Spinoza's Christian acquaintances was Franciscus van den Enden, who was a former Jesuit, an ...
Ender, Kornelia
East German swimmer who was the first woman to win four gold medals at a ... [1 Related Articles]
Ender, Otto
statesman and government official who served as chancellor of Austria during the early months of ...
Enderbury Atoll
one of the Phoenix Islands, part of Kiribati, in the west-central Pacific Ocean, about 1,650 ... [1 Related Articles]
Enderby Land
region of Antarctica, bordering on the Indian Ocean and extending from Prince Olav Coast of ... [1 Related Articles]
Enderlein, Casper
(from the article "metalwork") ...molds did not remain fashionable in Nurnberg for long, and toward the end of the ...
Enders, John Franklin
American virologist and microbiologist who, with Frederick C. Robbins and Thomas H. Weller, was awarded ... [4 Related Articles]
Enders, Thomas
U.S. diplomat who played a leading role in the secret bombing of Cambodia during the ...
Enderuni, Fazil
(from the article "Turkish literature") ...Enderuni combined local Istanbul speech with a strong reminder of Nedim's kasides ...
Endesa
(from the article "Business Overview") ...between SUEZ and state-owned Gaz de France in order to block a bid for SUEZ ...
Endfield, Cy Raker
U.S. blacklisted film director who took residence in Britain, after which he made such films ...
endgame
(from the article "chess") Computers have played a role in extending the knowledge of chess. In 1986 Kenneth Thompson ...
endingidi
(from the article "African music") ...exemplified by the rebeclike goje of Nigeria and the spike fiddles
endive
(Cichorium endivia), edible annual leafy plant of the family Asteraceae, variously believed to have originated ...
Endlicher, Stephan
Austrian botanist who formulated a major system of plant classification.
endlichite
(from the article "vanadinite") ...occurrences are as orange, red, or brown hairlike or barrel-shaped crystals in the oxidized zone ...
Endo Shusaku
Japanese novelist noted for his examination of the relationship between East and West through a ... [2 Related Articles]
endobyssate shell
(from the article "bivalve") ...that is retained by adults of some bivalve groups, such as the true mussels (family ...
endocannibalism
(from the article "cannibalism") In some cases, the body of a dead person was ritually eaten by his relatives, ...
endocarditis
inflammation of the heart lining, or endocardium. Endocarditis is caused by any of a number ... [5 Related Articles]
endocardium
(from the article "animal development") ...cells breaks away from the ventral edge of the lateral plate, takes a position just ...
endocarp
(from the article "angiosperm") ...form, texture, and structure of fruits are varied (notably in simple fruits), but most fall ...
endocentric construction
(from the article "linguistics") Any construction that belongs to the same form class as at least one of its ...
endocervical canal
(from the article "uterine cervix") ...(1.6 inches) long, projects about 2 centimetres into the upper vaginal cavity. The cervical opening ...
endochondral ossification
(from the article "bone formation") ...The cartilage cells die out and are replaced by osteoblasts clustered in ossification centres. Bone ...
endocochlear potential
(from the article "ear, human") ...mechanism the hair cell uses to convert sound into an electrical stimulus is not completely ...
endocrine cell
(from the article "digestive system, human") Eighteen different endocrine cells can be identified within the gastrointestinal tract, but it is probable ...
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