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Pastry War ... Patmore, Coventry
Pastry War
(1838-39), brief and minor conflict between Mexico and France, arising from the claim of a ...
Pastukhov, Mount
(from the article "astronomical observatory") The largest modern-day optical telescopes are the 6-metre (236-inch) reflector on Mount Pastukhov, in the ...
pasture
(from the article "feed") Pasture grasses and legumes, both native and cultivated, are the most important single source of ...
Pastures, The
(from the article "Voysey, Charles Francis Annesley") ...their theories to the design of simple, well-built houses, such as Broadleys, near Windermere, Westmorland ...
pasul
(from the article "kosher") ...ritual bathing (mikvah), and the ritual ram's horn (shofar). When applied to food, kosher is ...
Pasupatinatha
(from the article "Pashupati") ...River, just east of Kathmandu. Regarded as the holiest place in Nepal, it is the ...
Pasuruan
city, Jawa Timur (East Java) provinsi (province), Java, Indonesia, on Madura Strait. ... [1 Related Articles]
Pasvanoglu, Osman
(from the article "'ayn") ...in Rumelia (the Balkan section of the empire) played an important part in Ottoman affairs, ...
Pat
(from the article "Bahawalpur") ...with groves of date palms, and thickly populated. The chief crops are wheat, gram, cotton, ...
pat
(from the article "Jashpur Pats") ...state, central India, extending over Jashpur Tahsil (northeastern Raigarh district) and forming part of the ...
Patagonia
semiarid scrub plateau that covers nearly all of the southern portion of mainland Argentina. With ... [8 Related Articles]
Patagonia Ice Cap
(from the article "Pleistocene Epoch") ...to form ice sheets on the shallow shelf areas of the Arctic Ocean. Glaciers and ...
Patagonian Andes
(from the article "Andes Mountains") The Patagonian Andes rise north of the Strait of Magellan. Numerous transverse and longitudinal depressions ...
Patagonian conure
(from the article "conure") ..."dwarf parrot"; from Central America, it is 24 cm (about 10 inches) long and mostly ...
Patagonian Desert
(from the article "Deserts of the world") South American Indians who formerly inhabited the Patagonian plains from the Strait of Magellan to ...
Patagonian Indian
(from the article "Argentina") Most approaches to Patagonia from the sea were hampered by inhospitable coastal cliffs and by ...
Patagonian mara
(from the article "mara") either of two South American rodents in the genus Dolichotis of the ...
Patagonian Theatre
(from the article "puppetry") ...to burlesque heroic tragedy in 1758 and sentimental comedy in 1773. In a similar vein, ...
Patagonian toothfish
(from the article "Agriculture and Food Supplies") ...state of marine ecosystems generally. Other reports during the year pinpointed stocks of Mediterranean bluefin ...
Patagonian weasel
(from the article "weasel") Weasels belong to the family Mustelidae, and there are three weasel genera in addition to ...
Patala
(from the article "Alexander the Great") On reaching Patala, located at the head of the Indus delta, he built a harbour ...
Patan
town, northern Gujarat state, west-central India. It is situated on the Saraswati River in the ...
Patangoro
Indian people of western Colombia, apparently extinct since the late 16th century. They spoke a ... [1 Related Articles]
Patanjali
author or one of the authors of two great Hindu classics: the first, Yoga-sutras, a ... [6 Related Articles]
Patapsco Female Institute
(from the article "Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln") In 1841 Phelps became principal and her husband business manager of the Patapsco Female Institute ...
Patarine
member of a medieval group of lay craftsmen, tradesmen, and peasants organized in Milan about ... [5 Related Articles]
Patarkatsishvili, Badri
Georgian oligarch made a fortune in labyrinthine business dealings during the post-Soviet period of privatization ...
patas monkey
long-limbed and predominantly ground-dwelling primate found in the grass and scrub regions of West and ... [1 Related Articles]
Patasse, Ange-Felix
(from the article "Central African Republic") ...in The Hague opened an investigation on May 22 into alleged war crimes committed in ...
Patawomeck
(from the article "Jamestown Colony") Sir Samuel Argall, a mariner who had taken West back to England, returned to the ...
Patay, Battle of
(from the article "Joan of Arc, Saint") The French and English armies came face to face at Patay on June 18, 1429. ...
patch box
small, usually rectangular, sometimes oval box used mostly as a receptacle for beauty patches, especially ...
patch reef
(from the article "coral reef") ...reef patches, some of them elongated into ribbon reefs. The third category of reefs consists ...
patch test
controlled application of biological or chemical substances to the skin in order to detect if ...
patch-clamp technique
(from the article "Neher, Erwin") German physicist, winner with Bert Sakmann in 1991 of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or ...
Patchen, Kenneth
American experimental poet, novelist, painter, and graphic designer.
Patchett, Ann
American author whose novels often portrayed the intersecting lives of characters from disparate backgrounds. [1 Related Articles]
Patchett, Jean
American model (b. Feb. 16, 1926, Preston, Md.-d. Jan. 22, 2002, La Quinta, Calif.), became ...
patchwork
the process of joining strips, squares, triangles, hexagons, or other shaped pieces of fabric (also ... [1 Related Articles]
Pate
(from the article "eastern Africa, history of") ...masonry pillars. Chinese imports arrived in ever larger quantities, and there are signs that eating ...
pate
(French: "paste"), in French cuisine, a filled pastry, analogous to the English pie. The term ...
pate de foie gras
(from the article "poultry") ...meat goose is the Toulouse. In Great Britain, geese of just under one year of ...
pate en croute
(from the article "pate") ...pate en terrine, a meat, game, or fish mixture wrapped in suet or other animal ...
pate en terrine
(from the article "pate") ...in French cuisine, a filled pastry, analogous to the English pie. The term pate is ...
pate feuilletee
(from the article "pastry") ...with butter, lard, or vegetable shortening so that the fat is broken into bits. A ...
pate-de-riz
(from the article "opaline glass") ...not produced after 1840). In the mid-19th century, opaline was made in more vivid colours, ...
pate-sur-pate
(French: "paste on paste"), method of porcelain decoration in which a relief design is created ... [3 Related Articles]
Pategi
town, Kwara state, west-central Nigeria. It lies on the south bank of the Niger River ...
Patel, Vallabhbhai Jhaverbhai
Indian barrister and statesman, one of the leaders of the Indian National Congress during the ... [2 Related Articles]
patella
(from the article "knee") ...rounded ends, or condyles, of the femur and tibia that meet at the knee are ...
Patellacea
(from the article "gastropod") ...waters along rocky shores of western North America, Japan, Australia, and South Africa; keyhole limpets ...
Patellariales
(from the article "fungus") ...a longitudinal slit that renders it apothecium-like; asci borne among pseudoparaphyses; example genera include Hysterium ...
Patellidae
(from the article "gastropod") ...areas.Conical-shelled limpets, without slits or holes, found in rocky shallow waters (Acmaeidae and ...
Patelliformia
(from the article "gastropod") ...The following superfamilies, though not grouped into formal orders and suborders, are listed in order ...
patent
a government grant to an inventor of the right to exclude others from making, using, ... [12 Related Articles]
Patent Cooperation Treaty
(from the article "patent") ...in 1883 and amended several times since, it gave inventors who filed an application in ...
patent ductus arteriosus
congenital heart defect characterized by the persistence of the ductus arteriosus, a channel that shunts ... [3 Related Articles]
patent flour
(from the article "cereal processing") The purest flour, selected from the purest flour streams released in the mill, is often ...
patent leather
(from the article "shoe") ...slippers. Reptile leathers (alligator, lizard, and snake) are used in women's and some men's shoes. ...
patent log
(from the article "navigation") As early as 1688 an English instrument maker, Humphry Cole, invented the so-called patent log, ...
patent sail
(from the article "energy conversion") ...upon in 1807 by Sir William Cubitt, who combined Meikle's shutters with Hooper's remote control ...
patent theatre
any of several London theatres that, through government licensing, held a monopoly on legitimate dramatic ...
Patents and Designs Act
(from the article "Lloyd George, David") ...for important legislation: the Merchant Shipping Act (1906), improving seamen's living conditions, but also endangering ...
pater
(from the article "parent") ...This distinction is particularly common in the case of fathers, and to accommodate it anthropologists ...
pater
(from the article "Mithraism") ...were organized in seven grades: corax, Raven; nymphus, Bridegroom; miles, Soldier; leo, Lion; Perses, Persian; ...
pater patratus
(from the article "fetial") ...injured by another state, four fetials were sent out to seek redress. One member, the ...
pater patriae
in ancient Rome, a title originally accorded (in the form parens urbis ...
Pater, Walter
English critic, essayist, and humanist whose advocacy of "art for art's sake" became a cardinal ... [4 Related Articles]
paterfamilias
(from the article "inheritance") The basic unit of society in ancient Rome was the "house," the extended family ruled ...
Paterinida
(from the article "lamp shells") ...biconvex, shape nearly circular to elongated; position of pedicle opening variable; dorsal valve with marginal ...
Paterna ware
tin-glazed earthenware produced in the 14th and 15th centuries at Paterna, near Valencia, in eastern ...
paternalism
(from the article "industrial relations") The other stance begins with the assumption that management has a social responsibility to the ...
paternally imprinted gene
(from the article "genetic disease, human") ...so that they are expressed unequally, depending on the sex of the parent of origin. ...
Paterno
town, eastern Sicily, Italy, situated at the southwestern foot of Mount Etna, overlooking the Simeto ...
Paterno, Joe
American collegiate gridiron football coach who, as head coach at Pennsylvania State University (1966- ), ... [2 Related Articles]
paternoster lake
(from the article "glacial landform") Some glacial valleys have an irregular, longitudinal bedrock profile, with alternating short, steep steps and ...
Paterson
city, seat (1837) of Passaic county, northeastern New Jersey, U.S., situated on the Passaic River, ...
Paterson Inlet
(from the article "Stewart Island") ...of 674 square miles (1,746 square km). It is generally hilly (rising to 3,215 feet ...
Paterson, A B
Australian poet and journalist noted for his composition of the internationally famous song "Waltzing Matilda." ... [2 Related Articles]
Paterson, Don
(from the article "Literature") ...their ballads of joy/ As they gallop across the big world/ Praising America's God./ The ...
Paterson, Jennifer Mary
British chef and cookbook writer who gained international popularity in the late 1990s as the ...
Paterson, Neil
(from the article "1959: Other Winners") Adapted Screenplay: Neil Paterson for Room at the TopCinematography, Black-and-White: William C. Mellor for The ...
Paterson, Sir Alexander
penologist who modified the progressive Borstal system of English reformatories for juvenile offenders to emphasize ...
Paterson, William
Scottish founder of the Bank of England, writer on economic issues, and the prime mover ...
Paterson, William
(from the article "Orange River") ...as it was then called, near the river mouth in 1760. Later expeditions across the ...
Paterson, William
Irish-born jurist, one of the framers of the U.S. Constitution, U.S. senator (1789-90) and governor ... [1 Related Articles]
patet
(from the article "gamelan") ...the other to pelog (a scale consisting of seven notes of varying ...
path
(from the article "graph theory") Another important concept in graph theory is the path, which is any route along the ...
pathe
(from the article "apathy") in Stoic philosophy, condition of being totally free from the pathe, which roughly are the ...
Pathe Freres Company
(from the article "motion picture, history of the") Melies's decline was assisted by the industrialization of the French and, for a time, the ...
Pathe, Charles
French pioneer motion-picture executive who controlled a vast network of production and distribution facilities that ... [3 Related Articles]
Pathe, Emile
(from the article "Pathe, Charles") With his brother Emile, he founded Pathe Freres (Pathe Brothers, 1896) in Paris, a company ...
Pathecolor
(from the article "motion picture, history of the") ...films were very short. In the mid-1900s, as films began to approach one reel in ...
Pathein
city, southern Myanmar (Burma). It lies on the Bassein River, which is the westernmost distributary ...
Pathet Lao
left-oriented nationalist group in Laos that took control of the country in 1975. Founded in ... [8 Related Articles]
pathetic fallacy
poetic practice of attributing human emotion or responses to nature, inanimate objects, or animals. The ...
pathogen
(from the article "Signs of pathogen presence in diseased plants") ...energy-efficient than water chilling, and the birds lose weight because of dehydration. Air chilling prevents ...
pathological curve
(from the article "number game") A mathematical curve is said to be pathological if it lacks certain properties of continuous ...
pathological fracture
(from the article "fracture") ...overlying skin is not broken and the bone is not exposed to the air; it ...
pathology
medical specialty concerned with the determining causes of disease and the structural and functional changes ... [11 Related Articles]
pathos
(from the article "comedy") ...the pathos, or suffering, of mankind. This distinction goes back to Aristotle, who, in the ...
Pathum Thani
town and changwat (province) in the Central region of Thailand. The provincial capital, Pathum Thani ...
pati
(from the article "Plata, Rio de la") ...its length. Among its many edible fish are the dorado (a gold-coloured river fish that ...
pati-ganita
(from the article "mathematics, South Asian") ...subjects seem to have evolved rapidly in the second half of the 1st millennium. Brahmagupta's ...
Patia River
(from the article "Andes Mountains") Between the Cordilleras Central and Occidental is a great depression, the Patia-Cauca valley, divided into ...
Patia-Cauca
(from the article "Andes Mountains") Between the Cordilleras Central and Occidental is a great depression, the Patia-Cauca valley, divided into ...
Patiala
(from the article "Cis-Sutlej states") ...Punjab States Union (PEPSU). They subsequently were absorbed into the Indian states of the Punjab ...
Patiala
city, administrative headquarters of Patiala district, Punjab state, northwestern India. The city lies on a ...
Patiala and East Punjab States Union
(from the article "Punjab") ...state, led first by Tara Singh and later by his political successor, Sant Fateh Singh. ...
Patiale, Sio
(from the article "Tuvalu") ...his position and named his predecessor, Saufatu Sopoanga, deputy prime minister. Early in the year ...
patient
(from the article "bioethics") The issues studied in bioethics can be grouped into several categories. One category concerns the ...
patient compliance
(from the article "bioethics") ...Is a doctor obliged to tell a patient that he is terminally ill if there ...
patient marker
(from the article "Life Sciences") ...were relevant and identifying their influence on the severity of a disease and the disease's ...
patients' rights
(from the article "health law") In addition to granting patients the means for the effective redress for negligent injury (which ...
Patil, Pratibha
Indian lawyer and politician who was the first woman to serve as president of India ... [2 Related Articles]
patimokkha
Buddhist monastic code; a set of 227 rules that govern the daily activities of the ... [1 Related Articles]
Patina
(from the article "Anatolia") ...conquered Arpad, and a large group of princes, among them the kings of Kummuhu, Que, ...
patination
(from the article "art conservation and restoration") ...regularly used, as was chemical stripping (which dissolved the mineral alteration products) and electrochemical reduction, ...
Patinir, Joachim
painter, the first Western artist known to have specialized in landscape painting. Little is known ... [2 Related Articles]
Patino, Jose Patino, marques de
Spanish statesman who was one of the most outstanding ministers of the Spanish crown during ... [1 Related Articles]
patio
in Spanish and Latin American architecture, a courtyard within a building, open to the sky. ... [1 Related Articles]
patio process
method of isolating silver from its ore that was used from the 16th to early ... [3 Related Articles]
Patjitanian industry
(from the article "Chopper chopping-tool industry") ...of later Pleistocene age, characterized by roughly worked pebble chopper (q.v.) tools. These traditions include ...
Patkai Range
(from the article "Nagaland") ...Naga Hills rise abruptly from the Brahmaputra valley to about 2,000 feet (610 metres) and ...
Patkul, Johann Reinhold von
Baltic German diplomat who played a key role in the initiation of the Northern War ...
Patmore, Coventry
English poet and essayist whose best poetry is in The Unknown Eros and Other Odes, ... [1 Related Articles]
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