| | - 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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