| | - factor
- (from the article "statistics") In an experimental study, variables of interest are identified. One or more of these variables, ...
- factor analysis
- (from the article "Burt, Sir Cyril") In 1909 Burt published his experimental tests on general intelligence, in which he used factor ...
- factor substitution
- (from the article "production, theory of") The isoquants also illustrate an important economic phenomenon: that of factor substitution. This means that ...
- factor V
- (from the article "bleeding and blood clotting") ...blood clotting does not take place in the absence of tissue injury. The clotting proteins ...
- Factor, John
- (from the article "Factor, Max") ...Max Factor, Jr., took over as head of the business, Max Factor & Co., which ...
- Factor, Max
- dean of Hollywood makeup experts. He was a pioneer in developing makeup specifically for motion-picture ... [1 Related Articles]
- Factor, Max, Jr.
- (FRANCIS FACTOR), U.S. cosmetician who, with his father, developed Pan-Cake makeup so actors would not ... [1 Related Articles]
- factorial
- in mathematics, the product of all positive integers less than or equal to a given ... [2 Related Articles]
- factorial design
- (from the article "statistics") Factorial experiments are designed to draw conclusions about more than one factor, or variable. The ...
- factoring
- in finance, the selling of accounts receivable on a contract basis by the business holding ... [2 Related Articles]
- factors of production
- (from the article "rent") However, because the return to any factor of production, not only to land, can be ...
- Factory Act
- (from the article "child labour") ...work. The first law, in 1802, which was aimed at controlling the apprenticeship of pauper ...
- factory farming
- (from the article "work, history of the organization of") One of the more-comprehensive examples of agricultural "factory" production is seen in the poultry industry ...
- factory outlet
- (from the article "marketing") ...collection of overruns, irregulars, and leftover goods and have made their biggest forays in the ...
- Factory Records
- (from the article "Factory Records") Factory Records emerged in the punk moment of the late 1970s and was the heart ...
- factory ship
- originally, a large ship used in whaling, but now, more broadly, any ship that is ... [4 Related Articles]
- factory system
- system of manufacturing that began in the 18th century and is based on the concentration ... [9 Related Articles]
- Facts Forum
- (from the article "Hunt, H L") Hunt became best known for his political views. From 1951 to 1956 he funded his ...
- factual conditional
- (from the article "applied logic") ...In these three cases, one obtains, respectively, the problematic conditional ("Should it be the case ...
- factual proposition
- (from the article "epistemology") A logical proposition is any proposition that can be reduced by replacement of its constituent ...
- facula
- in astronomy, bright granular structure on the Sun's surface that is slightly hotter or cooler ...
- facultative anaerobe
- (from the article "aerobe") ...and certain yeasts). Organisms that grow in the absence of free oxygen are termed anaerobes; ...
- faculty
- (from the article "pedagogy") The theory of learning involving mental discipline is more commonly associated with Aristotle's "faculty psychology", ...
- facundia
- (from the article "Propertius, Sextus") ...of every kind, and a pleading and melancholy tenderness; this is most obvious in his ...
- Facusse, Carlos Flores
- (from the article "Honduras") ...approach did not solve all the nation's problems but nevertheless gained him wider support than ...
- fad
- (from the article "collective behaviour") It is tempting to explain fads on the basis of a single motive such as ...
- fad diet
- (from the article "therapeutics") ...calorie expenditure (exercise). Because obesity is a chronic illness, it requires long-term lifestyle changes unless ...
- Fadden, Sir Arthur William
- accountant, politician, and for a short time prime minister of Australia (1941).
- Fader, Fernando
- (from the article "Latin American art") European Expressionism, a broadly defined movement that attempted to convey emotional states through exaggeration and ...
- Fadeyev, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich
- Russian novelist who was a leading exponent and theoretician of proletarian literature and a high ...
- Fadeyeva, Nadezhda
- (from the article "The Environment") ...prevent serious damage to their citizens' health caused by pollution from industrial installations, even when ...
- Fadiman, Annalee Whitmore
- American screenwriter and journalist (b. May 27, 1916, Price, Utah-d. Feb. 5, 2002, Captiva, Fla.), ...
- Fadiman, Clifton
- American editor, anthologist, and writer known for his extraordinary memory and his wide-ranging knowledge. [1 Related Articles]
- fading
- (from the article "telecommunications media") ...by a combination of atmospheric wave propagation, surface wave propagation, ground reflection, and ionospheric reflection. ...
- Fadl Allah
- (from the article "Nesimi, Seyid Imadeddin") Very little about his early life is known. He became acquainted with the founder of ...
- Fadl ibn ar-Rabi', al-
- (from the article "Harun ar-Rashid") ...side were the religious scholars ('ulama'), many Arabs, and many from the western provinces. Since ...
- Fadl ibn Sahl, al-
- (from the article "Ma'mun, al-") ...discord that soon developed into armed conflict between the two brothers. Al-Ma'mun, in effect stripped ...
- Fadl ibn Yahya, al-
- (from the article "Barmakids") ...It was, therefore, no surprise that he put the whole administration in the hands of ...
- fado
- (from the article "Lisbon") ...in their city: saudade ("melancholy"), a state of anxiety tempered by fatalism ...
- Fadrusz, Janos
- preeminent Hungarian sculptor at the end of the 19th century. He was renowned for his ...
- faena
- (from the article "bullfighting") Another trumpet call signals the third and final tercio, the
- Faenza
- city, Ravenna provincia, in the Emilia-Romagna regione of northern ... [1 Related Articles]
- Faenza majolica
- tin-glazed earthenware produced in the city of Faenza in the Emilia district of Italy from ... [3 Related Articles]
- Faerie Queene, The
- one of the great long poems in the English language, written in the 16th century ... [4 Related Articles]
- Faesi, Robert
- Swiss poet, dramatist, short-story writer, and literary critic, noted for his trilogy of novels on ...
- Fagaceae
- (from the article "beech") any of several different types of trees, especially about 10 species of deciduous ornamental and ...
- Fagales
- beech order of dicotyledonous woody flowering plants, comprising nearly 1,900 species in 55 genera. Members ...
- Fagaras
- town, Brasov judet (county), central Romania. It lies north of the Fagaras Mountains, a range ...
- Fagaras Mountains
- mountain range, the highest section of the Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathian Mountains), south-central Romania. Their ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fagen, Donald
- (from the article "Steely Dan") ...Walter Becker (b. February 20, 1950New York, New York, U.S.) and Donald Fagen (b. January ...
- Fageol Safety Coach Company
- (from the article "bus") ...on a truck chassis. The majority of present-day school buses are made in this way. ...
- Fagerholm, Karl August
- (from the article "Finland") Relations with the Soviet Union, however, were not entirely without complications. After the elections of ...
- Faget, Max
- American aerospace engineer who made major contributions to the design of the Mercury, Gemini, and ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fagnano, Giulio Carlo
- (from the article "mathematics") ...brothers arrived at ideas that would later develop into the calculus of variations. In his ...
- Fagne
- (from the article "Belgium") A large depression, known east of the Meuse River as the Famenne and west of ...
- Faguet, Emile
- French literary historian and moralist who wrote many influential critical works revealing a wide range ...
- Faguibine, Lake
- isolated lake in Mali, west of Timbuktu (Tombouctou). It lies north of the Niger River ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fagunwa, D.O.
- Yoruba chief whose series of fantastic novels made him one of Nigeria's most popular writers. ... [2 Related Articles]
- Fagus Works
- (from the article "Gropius, Walter") Gropius' growing intellectual leadership was complemented by his design of two significant buildings, both done ...
- Fahd
- king of the Saudi Arabians from 1982 to 2005. As crown prince and as an ... [6 Related Articles]
- Fahey, John Aloysius
- American guitarist (b. Feb. 28, 1939, Takoma Park, Md.-d. Feb. 22, 2001, Salem, Ore.), created ...
- Fahlberg, Constantin
- (from the article "saccharin") Saccharin was discovered by the chemists Ira Remsen and Constantin Fahlberg in 1879, while they ...
- Fahmi Pasha, Mustafa
- (from the article "Egypt") ...Riyad (Riaz) Pasha (1888-91), resigned because of clashes over administrative control. From then until November ...
- Fahrenheit temperature scale
- scale based on 32° for the freezing point of water and 212° for the boiling ... [5 Related Articles]
- Fahrenheit, Daniel Gabriel
- German physicist and maker of scientific instruments. He is best known for inventing the alcohol ... [3 Related Articles]
- FAI Insurance, Ltd.
- (from the article "Adler, Lawrence James") Hungarian-born Australian businessman, founder of the Fire and All Risks Insurance Co. (later renamed FAI ...
- Faial Island
- Portuguese island forming part of the Azores archipelago, in the North Atlantic Ocean. Its area ... [1 Related Articles]
- Faidherbe, Louis
- governor of French Senegal in 1854-61 and 1863-65 and a major founder of France's colonial ... [3 Related Articles]
- faience
- tin-glazed earthenware made in France, Germany, Spain, and Scandinavia. It is distinguished from tin-glzed earthenware ... [8 Related Articles]
- faience blanche
- (French: "white faience"), type of French pottery of the late 16th and early 17th centuries; ...
- faience fine
- fine white English lead-glazed earthenware, or creamware, imported into France from about 1730 onward. Staffordshire ... [1 Related Articles]
- faience parlante
- (French: "talking faience"), in French pottery, popular utilitarian 18th-century earthenware, principally plates, jugs, and bowls, ... [2 Related Articles]
- faience patriotique
- French 18th-century earthenware, chiefly plates and jugs, decorated with themes drawn from the French Revolution ... [2 Related Articles]
- faience patronymique
- (from the article "faience parlante") There were several subgenres of faience parlante. One type, faience patronymique, had pictures of saints ...
- fail-safe
- (from the article "strategic weapons system") Each of these weapons systems was an intricate network of communications among people and missiles ...
- failure to thrive
- (from the article "childhood disease and disorder") Failure to thrive is the term used to describe the condition in which a young ...
- Fain, Agathon-Jean-Francois, Baron
- French historian, secretary, and archivist to the cabinet of Napoleon, who is best known for ...
- Fain, Sammy
- prolific American composer of popular songs, including many for Broadway musicals and Hollywood motion pictures. ... [2 Related Articles]
- faint young Sun paradox
- (from the article "climate change") Astrophysical studies indicate that the luminosity of the Sun was much lower during Earth's early ...
- fair
- temporary market where buyers and sellers gather to transact business. A fair is held at ... [4 Related Articles]
- fair average quality
- (from the article "cereal farming") ...usually as precise as in North America. In many countries there is little commercial grading ...
- Fair Deal
- in U.S. history, President Harry S. Truman's liberal domestic reform program, the basic tenets of ... [4 Related Articles]
- Fair Employment Practices Committee
- (from the article "White, Walter") ...to the U.S. Supreme Court. (Parker was on record as being opposed to black suffrage.) ...
- Fair Grounds
- (from the article "Equestrian Sports") ...in temporary structures. Churchill Downs, Inc., bought the historic Fair Grounds in New Orleans in ...
- Fair Head
- (from the article "Antrim") Its northern and eastern parts were composed of the Antrim Mountains, an ancient basalt plateau ...
- Fair Isle
- (from the article "Shetland Islands") ...islands of Yell, Fetlar, and Unst, the most northerly island. One mile off the coast ...
- Fair Labor Standards Act
- the first act in the United States prescribing nationwide compulsory federal regulation of wages and ... [6 Related Articles]
- fair market value
- (from the article "accounting") Value may also be represented by the amount the company could obtain by selling its ...
- Fair Packaging and Labeling Act
- (from the article "Food and Drug Administration") ...part of its regulatory power from four laws: the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, ...
- Fair Store
- (from the article "building construction") ...was first used in the neighbouring Old Colony Building (1893) by the architects William Holabird ...
- Fair Trade Act
- (from the article "fair-trade law") ...the practice was limited in interstate commerce to the mere suggestion of prices to dealers, ...
- fair use doctrine
- (from the article "copyright") ...distribute the work, to prepare derivative works, and to perform and display the work publicly. ...
- fair-trade law
- in the United States, any law allowing manufacturers of branded or trademarked goods (or in ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fairbairn stroke
- (from the article "Fairbairn, Stephen") ...College in Australia, Fairbairn continued his education and first achieved rowing prominence at Jesus College, ...
- Fairbairn, Sir Peter
- (from the article "Fairbairn, Sir William, 1st Baronet") ...and the Conwy Bridge over the River Conwy. The Britannia Bridge, employing a type of ...
- Fairbairn, Sir William, 1st Baronet
- Scottish civil engineer and inventor who did pioneering work in bridge design and in testing ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fairbairn, Stephen
- British oarsman, coach, and writer who enjoyed great success at Cambridge University.
- Fairbank Drought
- (from the article "Great Drought") The Great Drought was but one of several major periods of drought that have affected ...
- Fairbank, Alfred John
- (from the article "calligraphy") ...script, based on the styles of Arrighi and Palatino, had already become quite popular in ...
- Fairbanks
- city, east-central Alaska, U.S. It lies along the Chena River (tributary of the Tanana), some ... [3 Related Articles]
- Fairbanks House
- (from the article "Dedham") ...River, just southwest of Boston. One of the oldest inland settlements of the Massachusetts Bay ...
- Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium
- (from the article "Saint Johnsbury") The Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium features a collection of American birds, antique toys and tools, ...
- Fairbanks, Charles Warren
- 26th vice president of the United States (1905-09) in the Republican administration of President Theodore ...
- Fairbanks, Douglas
- American motion picture actor and producer who was one of the first and greatest of ... [6 Related Articles]
- Fairbanks, Douglas Elton Ulman, Jr.
- American actor, socialite, and businessman (b. Dec. 9, 1909, New York, N.Y.-d. May 7, 2000, ... [1 Related Articles]
- Fairbanks, Thaddeus
- (from the article "Saint Johnsbury") ...French friend Michel-Guillaume-Saint-Jean de Crevecoeur, who wrote Letters from an American Farmer (1782) under the ...
- Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation
- American electronics company that shares credit with Texas Instruments Incorporated for the invention of the ... [3 Related Articles]
- Fairchild, David Grandison
- American botanist and agricultural explorer who supervised the introduction of many useful plants into the ...
- Fairchild, Mary Salome Cutler
- American librarian, a central figure in the establishment and teaching of the field of library ...
- Fairey Fox
- (from the article "military aircraft") ...when British manufacturer C.R. Fairey, impressed with the streamlining made possible by the D-12, acquired ...
- Fairey, C. R.
- (from the article "military aircraft") ...contrast to the winning speed of 145.62 miles per hour in 1922, before the Curtiss ...
- Fairfax
- city, seat (1779) of Fairfax county (though administratively independent of it), northeastern Virginia, U.S., about ...
- Fairfax's Devisee v. Hunter's Lessee
- (from the article "Cohens v. Virginia") In a case involving a dispute over extensive lands, Fairfax's Devisee v. Hunter's Lessee (1813), ...
- Fairfax, Edward
- English poet whose Godfrey of Bulloigne or the Recoverie of Jerusalem (1600), a translation of ...
- Fairfax, Ferdinando Fairfax, 2nd Baron
- general who fought on the parliamentarian side in the English Civil Wars and who was ...
- Fairfax, Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Baron
- commander in chief of the Parliamentary army during the English Civil Wars between the Royalists ... [6 Related Articles]
- Fairfield
- county, southwestern Connecticut, U.S. It is bounded by Long Island Sound to the south, New ...
- Fairfield
- city, seat (1858) of Solano county, north-central California, U.S. Adjoining Suisun City to the south, ...
- Fairfield
- urban town (township), Fairfield county, southwestern Connecticut, U.S., on Long Island Sound adjoining Bridgeport (northeast). ...
- Fairfield
- county, central South Carolina, U.S., consisting of a hilly piedmont region. The Broad River forms ...
- Fairfield
- city, seat (1838) of Jefferson county, southeastern Iowa, U.S., halfway between Mount Pleasant (east) and ...
- Fairfield University
- private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Fairfield, Conn., U.S. It is affiliated with the ...
- Fairhaven
- town (township), Bristol county, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies on Buzzards Bay across the Acushnet ...
- Fairhurst, Angus
- British artist was a founding member (with Damien Hirst and Sarah Lucas) of the Young ...
- Fairies' Stone
- (from the article "Locmariaquer") ...on the coast of the Gulf of Morbihan, Morbihan departement, Bretagne region, western France, south ...
- fairing
- (from the article "ship construction") A lines plan, usually a 148 life-size scale drawing of a ship, is used by ...
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