| Nerodia ... Neuber, Johann |
| | - Nerodia
- (from the article "water snake") In North America the most abundant genus is Nerodia, which is made ...
- Nerolin II
- (from the article "chemical compound") ...is bonded to two carbon atoms through two sigma bonds is known as an ether. ...
- Neronov, Ivan
- (from the article "Nikon") During his stay there, Nikon became closely associated with the circle led by the tsar's ...
- Nerses IV Shnorhali
- (from the article "Armenian chant") In the 12th century the catholicos (patriarch) Nerses IV Shnorhali ("the Gracious") is credited with ...
- Nerthus
- ancient Germanic goddess known from a report of her given by the Roman historian Tacitus, ... [1 Related Articles]
- Neruda, Jan
- (from the article "Czech literature") ...the second half of the 19th century who sought to create a Czech literature imbued ...
- Neruda, Pablo
- Chilean poet, diplomat, and politician who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971. ... [1 Related Articles]
- Nerva
- Roman emperor from Sept. 18, 96, to January 98, the first of a succession of ... [4 Related Articles]
- Nerval, Gerard de
- French Romantic poet whose themes and preoccupations were to greatly influence the Symbolists and Surrealists. [3 Related Articles]
- nerve
- (from the article "nervous system") ...for faster reaction. That system was the nervous system, which is based upon the almost ...
- nerve conduction studies
- (from the article "nervous system disease") The speed of conduction of impulses along sensory and motor fibres can be measured with ...
- nerve ending
- (from the article "automata theory") ...automata theory lying within the area of pure mathematical study is often based on a ...
- nerve gas
- (from the article "AUM Shinrikyo") ...sect founded in 1987 by Matsumoto Chizuo, known to his followers as Master Asahara Shoko. ...
- nerve impulse
- (from the article "drug") Local anesthetics can block conduction of nerve impulses along all types of nerve fibres, including ...
- nerve net
- (from the article "automata theory") ...other incoming impulses each of which is incapable of exciting a neuron to fire but ...
- nerve plexus
- (from the article "nervous system") ...to five pairs, extend posteriorly from the brain; they are connected by transverse commissures, and ...
- nerve tissue
- (from the article "human body") ...tissues, which cover the body's surface and line the internal organs, body cavities, and passageways; ...
- nerve-growth factor
- (from the article "growth") ...that can limit growth of the organ. Thus, one theoretical view is that an organ ...
- Nervi, Pier Luigi
- Italian engineer and architect, internationally renowned for his technical ingenuity and dramatic sense of design, ... [3 Related Articles]
- Nervii
- (from the article "Low Countries, history of") ...line between Celtic and Germanic peoples. On the coast of northern France and in Flanders ...
- Nervo, Amado
- poet and diplomat, generally considered the most distinguished Mexican poet of the late 19th- and ... [1 Related Articles]
- nervous regulation
- (from the article "nervous system") In animals, in addition to chemical regulation via the endocrine system, there is another integrative ...
- nervous system
- organized group of cells specialized for the conduction of electrochemical stimuli from sensory receptors through ... [38 Related Articles]
- nervous system disease
- any of the diseases or disorders that affect the functioning of the human nervous system. ... [6 Related Articles]
- nervous system, human
- system that conducts stimuli from sensory receptors to the brain and spinal cord and that ... [17 Related Articles]
- Nesbit, E
- British children's author, novelist, and poet. [2 Related Articles]
- Nesbitt, John
- (from the article "jazz") ...their only serious rival. The distinctiveness of the Cotton Pickers' work during the band's heyday ...
- Nesch, Rolf
- German-born Norwegian printmaker and painter who was one of the first artists to use metal ... [2 Related Articles]
- Nesebur
- historic town and resort, eastern Bulgaria, on the Black Sea coast. Nesebur is situated on ... [1 Related Articles]
- neshani
- (from the article "calligraphy") ...design. A distinctive tugra was created for each sultan and affixed to ...
- Nesimi, Seyid Imadeddin
- one of the greatest Turkish mystical poets of the late 14th and early 15th centuries. [1 Related Articles]
- Nesin, Aziz
- (MEHMET NUSRET), Turkish satirist and militant secularist novelist and short-story writer who published over 90 ...
- Nesiotes
- (from the article "Critius and Nesiotes") Greek sculptors known for their bronze figures of the tyrannicides Harmodius and Aristogiton, copies of ...
- Nesite language
- (from the article "Anatolia") ...(the "Land of Hatti"), whose non-Indo-European language is known as Hattian (Khattian, Hattic, or Khattic). ...
- Nesokia bunnii
- (from the article "bandicoot rat") ...and push up mounds of earth at intervals that conceal entrances and exits. They forage ...
- Nesolagus timminsi
- (from the article "rabbit") ...Although there has been only one confirmed sighting of this animal since 1916, two pictures ...
- nesosilicate
- (from the article "Silicate minerals") The silicates can be divided into groups according to structural configuration, which arises from the ...
- Nespelim
- (from the article "Plateau Indian") ...Salish include the Shuswap, Lillooet, and Ntlakapamux (Thompson) tribes. The Interior Salish live mostly in ...
- Nesri
- historian who was a prominent figure in early Ottoman historiography.
- Ness, Eliot
- American crime fighter, head of a nine-man team of law officers called the "Untouchables," who ...
- Ness, Loch
- lake, lying in the Highland council area, Scotland. With a depth of 788 feet (240 ... [1 Related Articles]
- Nesselrode, Karl Vasilyevich, Count
- foreign minister of imperial Russia (1822-56) whose policy toward the Ottoman Empire helped precipitate the ...
- Nessus
- (from the article "Heracles") ...the Labours, Heracles undertook further enterprises, including warlike campaigns. He also successfully fought the river ...
- nest
- structure created by an animal to house its eggs, its young, or, in some cases, ... [18 Related Articles]
- nest-mate eviction
- (from the article "cuculiform") ...and incubated by the hosts, the newly hatched cuckoo faces the problem of securing enough ...
- Nesterov, Petr
- (from the article "stunt flying") In November 1913 Beachey became the first to "loop the loop" in the United States, ...
- Nestle Purina PetCare Company
- (from the article "Ralston Purina Company") former American manufacturer of cereals, packaged foods, pet food, and livestock feed. A merger with ...
- Nestle SA
- multinational manufacturer of food products. It is headquartered in Vevey, Switzerland, and operates factories in ... [2 Related Articles]
- Nestor
- a monk in Kievan Rus of the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev (from about ... [3 Related Articles]
- Nestor
- in Greek legend, son of Neleus, king of Pylos (Navarino) in Elis, and of Chloris. ... [1 Related Articles]
- Nestor at Pylos
- (from the article "megaron") ...which was usually supported by columns. Early Greek architecture used the megaron, and it also ...
- Nestor's cup
- (from the article "metalwork") ...of two main types: plain curved or carinated forms related to the silverware and pottery ...
- Nestor, Agnes
- American labour leader and reformer, remembered as a powerful force in unionizing women workers in ...
- Nestorian
- member of a Christian sect originating in Asia Minor and Syria out of the condemnation ... [37 Related Articles]
- Nestorian script
- (from the article "calligraphy") ...scripts, characters are fastened to a bottom horizontal. Modern typefaces used to print Syriac, which ...
- Nestorinae
- (from the article "parrot") The subfamily Nestorinae is found only in New Zealand. The kea (Nestor notabilis) occasionally tears ...
- Nestorius
- early bishop of Constantinople whose views on the nature and person of Christ led to ... [13 Related Articles]
- Nestos River
- river in southwestern Bulgaria and western Thrace, Greece. The Nestos rises on Kolarov peak of ...
- Nestroy, Johann
- one of Austria's greatest comic dramatists, and a brilliant character actor who dominated the mid-19th-century ...
- net
- an open fabric of thread, cord, or wire, the intersections of which are looped or ... [1 Related Articles]
- net asset
- (from the article "taxation") Taxes on net worth are levied on the total net worth of a person-that is, ...
- net energy
- (from the article "feed") ...body functions, either as a percentage of the diet or as the total grams or ...
- net loss
- (from the article "accounting") ...the gains and losses recognized during the period, including both the results of the company's ...
- net material product
- (from the article "defense economics") ...estimates of both d and GDP are possible, each giving a different d/GDP ratio. Capitalist ...
- net neutrality
- (from the article "Computers and Information Systems") There was no resolution in the dispute over U.S. policy concerning net neutrality-the principle that, ...
- net price principle
- (from the article "publishing, history of") ...and met with fierce opposition, in the general interest of the industry it was inevitable. ...
- net primary productivity
- (from the article "Average net primary production of the Earth's major habitats") ...substances. The total amount of productivity in a region or system is gross primary productivity. ...
- net reproductive rate
- (from the article "population ecology") The average number of offspring that a female leaves during her lifetime is called the ...
- net-casting spider
- (from the article "ogre-faced spider") ...the family Dinopidae (or Deinopidae; order Araneida). One pair of eyes is unusually large, producing ...
- net-transfer reaction
- (from the article "metamorphic rock") Metamorphic reactions can be classified into two types that show different degrees of sensitivity to ...
- net-winged beetle
- any of some 2,800 species of soft-bodied, brightly coloured, predominately tropical beetles (insect order Coleoptera) ... [1 Related Articles]
- Netanya
- city, west-central Israel. It lies on the Mediterranean coast, 19 miles (30 km) north of ...
- Netanyahu, Benjamin
- Israeli politician and diplomat, who was his country's prime minister from 1996 to 1999. [11 Related Articles]
- netball
- popular game in girls' schools in England and several other British Commonwealth countries, similar to ...
- Nether-Polar Urals
- (from the article "Ural Mountains") ...River in the southeast; most mountains rise to 3,300-3,600 feet (1,000-1,100 metres) above sea level, ...
- Netherlandic language
- a West Germanic language that is the national language of The Netherlands and, with French, ... [11 Related Articles]
- Netherlands Antilles
- five islands in the Caribbean Sea constituting an autonomous part of the Kingdom of The ... [16 Related Articles]
- Netherlands Antilles, flag of
- Netherlands territorial flag consisting of three equal horizontal stripes of white, blue, and white; a ...
- Netherlands Broadcasting Corporation
- (from the article "Netherlands, The") ...has remained in existence long after its contents have ebbed away. Nevertheless, religious organizations, political ...
- Netherlands Dance Theatre
- (from the article "Tetley, Glen") ...of three commedia dell'arte characters and set to the atonal song cycle of the same ...
- Netherlands gin
- (from the article "gin") Netherlands gins, known as Hollands, geneva, genever, or Schiedam, for a distilling centre near Rotterdam, ...
- Netherlands maiolica
- (from the article "Dutch ware") principally tin-enameled earthenware, with some porcelain, manufactured in the Netherlands since the end of the ...
- Netherlands Natural Gas Company, The
- (from the article "Netherlands, The") ...had its largest deficit. The natural gas discoveries began a trend in Dutch industries toward ...
- Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
- (from the article "The Rembrandt Research Project") Financial aid from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek; NWO) ...
- Netherlands Reformed Church, The
- largest Protestant church in The Netherlands, the successor of the established Dutch Reformed Church that ... [5 Related Articles]
- Netherlands South Africa Railway Company
- (from the article "Kruger, Paul") ...the independence of the Transvaal but which resulted at the same time in raising the ...
- Netherlands Trading Society
- (from the article "Indonesia") The formation in 1824 of the Netherlands Trading Society (Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij; NHM)-a company embracing all ...
- Netherlands, flag of The
- horizontally striped red-white-blue national flag. Its width-to-length ratio is 2 to 3. [2 Related Articles]
- Netherlands, The
- country located in northwestern Europe, also known as Holland. ''Netherlands'' means low-lying country; the name ... [129 Related Articles]
- Netherlands, The, history of
- (from the article "Netherlands, The") This section surveys the history of the Kingdom of The Netherlands from its founding in ...
- Netium
- (from the article "Andria") city, Puglia (Apulia) region, southeastern Italy, on the eastern slopes of the Murge plateau, just ...
- Netiv Hagdud
- (from the article "agriculture, origins of") At the Netiv Hagdud site in Israel, dating to 11,500 BP, wild barley is the ...
- Neto, Agostinho
- poet, physician, and first president of the People's Republic of Angola. [7 Related Articles]
- Netscape Communications Corp.
- American developer of Internet software with headquarters in Mountain View, California. [4 Related Articles]
- Netscape Communicator
- (from the article "Netscape Communications Corp.") Netscape also placed a greater emphasis on sales of server applications and corporate services, and ...
- Netscape Navigator
- (from the article "Netscape Communications Corp.") Clark and Andreessen planned to further this popularization process and to capitalize on it by ...
- Netscher, Caspar
- German painter of the Baroque era who established a fashionable practice as a portrait painter.
- netsuke
- ornamental togglelike piece, usually of carved ivory, used to attach a medicine box, pipe, or ... [5 Related Articles]
- netting
- in textiles, ancient method of constructing open fabrics by the crossing of cords, threads, yarns, ... [2 Related Articles]
- Netting, Robert McCorkle
- U.S. anthropologist who established cultural ecology as a scientific discipline (b. Oct. 14, 1934--d. Feb. ... [1 Related Articles]
- nettle
- (from the article "Urticaceae") the nettle family comprising about 45 genera of herbs, shrubs, small trees, and a few ...
- nettle tree
- (from the article "hackberry") The eastern North American tree called hackberry, or nettle tree, is C. occidentalis. It has ...
- Nettles, Bonnie
- (from the article "Heaven's Gate") Founders Marshall H. Applewhite (1932-1997) and Bonnie Nettles (1927-1985) met in 1972 and soon became ...
- Nettleship, Richard
- (from the article "mysticism") ...the self with God; it is nothing, therefore, but the fundamental feeling of religion, the ...
- Neturei Karta
- (from the article "fundamentalism") ...continue to reject Zionism-at least in principle-as blasphemous. In practice, the rejection of Zionism has ...
- network
- (from the article "urban culture") ...migrants or because they are subject to racial prejudice, the labourers have little legal protection ...
- network analysis
- (from the article "sociology") The patterns may be quantified and supplemented with other data to reveal a group's informal ...
- network cave
- (from the article "cave") ...borderlands and the sinking stream injected large quantities of water at a single point. Branchwork ...
- network file structure
- (from the article "database") ...treelike structure, with each level of records branching off into a set of smaller categories. ...
- network former
- (from the article "industrial glass") ...as would appear in a sodium silicate glass is shown schematically in Figure 2. Here ...
- network level
- (from the article "computer science") ...of bits across a physical link are defined. Next, the data-link layer handles standard-size "packets" ...
- network marketing
- (from the article "marketing") ...cleaners), and Avon (cosmetics). In addition, Tupperware pioneered the home-sales approach, in which friends and ...
- network modifier
- (from the article "amorphous solid") ...are called network formers. Chemical species such as sodium and calcium, which do not bond ...
- network modifier
- (from the article "industrial glass") ...(NWF) ion, (2) the connectivity of the structure, as determined by the concentration of nonbridging ...
- network organization
- (from the article "information system") In a network organization, long-term corporate partners supply goods and services to and through a ...
- network polymer
- (from the article "fibre, man-made") ...chains grow off the long chain at certain intervals, so that a branched structure is ...
- network protocol
- (from the article "computer science") Another important architectural area is the computer communications network, in which computers are linked together ...
- network routing
- (from the article "operations research") A network may be defined by a set of points, or "nodes," that are connected ...
- network software
- (from the article "software") ...Application software thus includes word processors, spreadsheets, database management, inventory and payroll programs, and many ...
- network structure
- (from the article "cluster") Still another kind of particularly stable closed shell occurs in clusters sometimes called network structures. ...
- network theory
- (from the article "Jerne, Niels K.") ...put forth in 1971, postulates that the body learns in the thymus to distinguish between ...
- network theory
- (from the article "number game") The word graph may refer to the familiar curves of analytic geometry and function theory, ...
- Neu-Darchau
- (from the article "Elbe River") ...At Dresden the discharge rate averaged 11,200 cubic feet (317 cubic metres) per second in ...
- neu-ozier
- (from the article "ozier pattern") ...basic types of ozier molding: the ordinair-ozier ("ordinary ozier"), a kind of zigzag basket weave; ...
- Neuber, Caroline
- actress-manager who was influential in the development of modern German theatre. [3 Related Articles]
- Neuber, Johann
- (from the article "Neuber, Caroline") Rebelling against her tyrannical father, she ran away at age 20 with a young clerk, ...
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