ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0-9
factor ... fairing
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 ...
Syndication Syndication © 2006, Encyclopædia Universalis France S.A. Tous droits de propriété industrielle et intellectuelle réservés.