ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0-9
supply train ... surface irrigation
supply train
(from the article "logistics") ...Finally, the transportation costs of maintaining a flow of supply over substantial distances are heavy ...
supply-side economics
(from the article "Laffer, Arthur B.") ...1963) and international economics at Stanford University (M.B.A., 1965; Ph.D., 1972). As chief economist for ...
suppon
(from the article "hanamichi") ...path to the inner courtyards of palaces. Like the main stage, it is often equipped ...
supporter
(from the article "heraldry") These are the figures on either side of the shield of arms and are borne ...
Supporters of the Bill of Rights, Society for the
(from the article "United Kingdom") ...colonies as a martyr for liberty. His plight raised the question of whether the will ...
supportive psychotherapy
(from the article "therapeutics") Psychotherapy, the use of mental rather than physical means to achieve behavioral or attitudinal change, ...
supposition
(from the article "logic, history of") Many of the characteristically medieval logical doctrines in the Logica moderna centred around the notion ...
suppository
(from the article "Administration of drugs") ...Lozenges usually consist of a mixture of sugar and either gum or gelatin, which are ...
suppressed-combustion system
(from the article "steel") In the other system, the suppressed-combustion system, a ring-shaped hood is lowered onto the converter ...
Suppression of Communism Act
(from the article "South Africa") ...The Population Registration Act (1950) classified every South African by race. The Prohibition of Mixed ...
Suppression of Counterrevolutionaries
(from the article "China") But, beginning in 1951, the revolutionary agenda of the communists began to be felt in ...
Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Civil Aviation, Convention for the
(from the article "airport") ...1970, and went into force on Oct. 14, 1971-concerned specifically with the offence of hijacking, ...
Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft, Convention for the
(from the article "air law") ...the passengers and crew to continue their journey, and to return the aircraft and its ...
suppressive soil
(from the article "plant disease") ...incorporate green manure, such as alfalfa, into the soil. Saprophytic microorganisms feed on the green ...
suppressor grid
(from the article "grid") ...of current. A screen grid-usually maintained at a fixed potential-is placed between a control grid ...
suppressor mutation
(from the article "Yanofsky, Charles") Yanofsky was educated at the City College of New York and at Yale University (Ph.D., ...
suppuration
(from the article "inflammation") The process of pus formation, called suppuration, occurs when the agent that provoked the inflammation ...
supraclavicular nerve
(from the article "nervous system, human") ...scalp behind the ear), the great auricular nerve (to the ear and to the skin ...
supracoracoideus muscle
(from the article "bird") ...muscles that move the limbs are concentrated on the girdles and the proximal parts of ...
supraesophageal ganglion
(from the article "crustacean") The crustacean nervous system consists basically of a brain, or supraesophageal ganglion, connected to a ...
supralapsarianism
(from the article "Gomarist") follower of the Dutch Calvinist theologian Franciscus Gomarus (1563-1641), who upheld the theological position known ...
supralittoral zone
(from the article "marine ecosystem") ...which encompasses the deepest parts of the oceans from 4,000 metres to the recesses of ...
supraradical mastectomy
(from the article "mastectomy") The procedure known as the standard radical mastectomy consists of the removal of the entire ...
suprarenal vein
(from the article "human cardiovascular system") ...lie in front of the corresponding renal artery; the right renal vein receives tributaries exclusively ...
suprascapular nerve
(from the article "nervous system, human") Nerves to shoulder and pectoral muscles include the dorsal scapular (to the rhomboid muscles), suprascapular ...
suprasegmental
in phonetics, a speech feature such as stress, tone, or word juncture that accompanies or ... [2 Related Articles]
supraspinous fossa
(from the article "scapula") ...upper back between the levels of the second and eighth ribs. A scapula's posterior surface ...
Supremacy, Act of
(from the article "United Kingdom") ...sincere and perfect." A second Statute "in Restraint of Annates" severed most of the financial ...
Supremacy, Act of
(from the article "Protestantism") ...she distrusted the challenge to authority and feared the disorder that either extreme evangelical zeal ...
Suprematism
first movement of pure geometrical abstraction in painting, originated by Kazimir S. Malevich in Russia ... [4 Related Articles]
Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic
(from the article "North Atlantic Treaty Organization") ...subsumes two major commands: the European Command, headed by the SACEUR and located at Supreme ...
Supreme Allied Commander Europe
(from the article "North Atlantic Treaty Organization") ...to demonstrate that it would resist any Soviet military expansion or pressures in Europe. General ...
Supreme Chamber of Control
(from the article "administrative law") The former Communist regimes of eastern Europe established procuracies based on the Soviet model. In ...
Supreme Commander for Allied Powers
(from the article "international relations") In Japan, the American occupation under General Douglas MacArthur effected a peaceful revolution, restoring civil ...
Supreme Council
(from the article "United Arab Emirates") The highest governmental authority is the Supreme Council of Rulers, which is composed of the ...
Supreme Council for National Reconstruction
(from the article "Korea, South") ...led by General Park Chung Hee, took over the government machinery, dissolved the National Assembly, ...
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(from the article "Iraq") ...in southern Iraq. The most significant intra-Shi'ite confrontation, however, took place on August 27 in ...
Supreme Council of Judicial Ordinances
(from the article "Ottoman Empire") ...to replace the ancient bottleneck of power caused by the vesting of full administrative responsibility ...
Supreme Council of the Inquisition
(from the article "Spain") ...and as informers for the inquisitors, and with its combination of civil and ecclesiastical powers, ...
Supreme Council of the Magistrature
(from the article "Cameroon") According to the constitution, the president is responsible for guaranteeing the independence of the judiciary. ...
Supreme Council of the National Economy
(from the article "economic planning") On paper, this period of War Communism, as it is now called, was one of ...
Supreme Council of Ukraine
(from the article "Ukraine") The highest legislative unit of the Ukrainian government is the unicameral Verkhovna Rada (Supreme Council ...
supreme court
(from the article "Israeli law") ...with certain civil matters and offenses punishable with imprisonment up to three years; district courts ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Russia") Russia's highest judicial body is the Supreme Court, which supervises the activities of all other ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Pakistan") In early 2007 Musharraf began seeking reelection to the presidency. However, because he remained head ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Maldives") The highest legal authority is the Supreme Court. Its judges are appointed by the president ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Kyrgyzstan") ...of Imankulov and other security officials and laid ultimate blame for the affair on Akayev ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Indonesia") In Indonesia's judicial system the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) in Jakarta is the final court ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "South Carolina") Judicial authority is vested in the Supreme Court, and all courts are unified under the ...
Supreme Court
(from the article "Brazil") On May 10 President Lula appointed Carmen Lucia Antunes Rocha to the Supreme Court to ...
Supreme Court of Appeal
(from the article "South Africa") ...The judiciary comprises the Constitutional Court (with powers to decide on the constitutionality of legislative ...
Supreme Court of Canada
(from the article "Richards, Sir William Buell") In 1871 he visited the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington, D.C., to ...
Supreme Court of Cassation
(from the article "Italy") ...civil service sector, and their positions are interchangeable. The judicial system is unified, with every ...
Supreme Court of India
(from the article "constitutional law") ...courts and supreme courts exercising judicial review outside the United States often are not usually ...
Supreme Court of Iraq
(from the article "Iraq") Judicial affairs in Iraq are administered by the Supreme Judicial Council, which nominates the justices ...
Supreme Court of Japan
the highest court in Japan, a court of last resort with powers of judicial review ... [1 Related Articles]
Supreme Court of Judicature
in England and Wales, a court that, since 1971, has consisted of the Court of ... [3 Related Articles]
Supreme Court of Justice
(from the article "Belgium") The Supreme Court of Justice is composed of three chambers: civil and commercial, criminal, and ...
Supreme Court of Paraguay
(from the article "Paraguay") The judicial system is headed by the Supreme Court. The 1992 constitution increased the number ...
Supreme Court of Tasmania
(from the article "Tasmania") ...certain indictable offenses at the option of the defendant. Minor civil proceedings are dealt with ...
Supreme Court of the Philippines
(from the article "constitutional law") The Supreme Court of the Philippines is also worth noting for its prestige, powers, and ...
Supreme Court of the United States
final court of appeal and final expositor of the Constitution of the United States. Within ... [83 Related Articles]
Supreme Court of Ukraine
(from the article "Ukraine") The highest court in the judicial system is the Supreme Court of Ukraine, consisting of ...
Supreme Court of Virginia
(from the article "Virginia") The Virginia judicial system comprises four levels of courts. The seven judges of the Supreme ...
Supreme Economic Council
(from the article "Paris Peace Conference") The five Great Powers likewise controlled the Supreme Economic Council, created in February 1919 to ...
Supreme Economic Council
(from the article "Beccaria, Cesare") In 1771 he was appointed to the Supreme Economic Council of Milan and remained a ...
Supreme Harmony, Hall of
(from the article "Beijing") ...the three tunnel gates that form the Wu (Meridian) Gate (the southern entrance to the ...
Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force
(from the article "Anglo-American Chain of Command in Western Europe, June 1944") ...and assigned it to General Dwight D. Eisenhower, an American with a proven ability to ...
Supreme Judicial Council
(from the article "Iran") The 12-member Council of Guardians is a body of jurists-half its members specialists in Islamic ...
Supreme Judicial Council
(from the article "Iraq") Judicial affairs in Iraq are administered by the Supreme Judicial Council, which nominates the justices ...
Supreme Muslim Council
(from the article "Palestine") ...family. In 1921 the British high commissioner appointed Amin al-Husayni to be the (grand) mufti ...
Supreme National Council
(from the article "Cambodia") ...which had been conducted for some time and which had intensified after 1989, led in ...
Supreme People's Procuracy
(from the article "Vietnam") The judicial system consists of courts and tribunals at various levels and the Supreme People's ...
Supreme Privy Council
(from the article "Anna") ...her husband died on the journey to Courland after their wedding in St. Petersburg, Anna ...
Supreme Ruthenian Council
(from the article "Ukraine") The revolution of 1848 that swept the Austrian Empire politicized the Ukrainians of Galicia (see ...
Supreme Soviet
(from the article "Soviet law") ...aspects of the Soviet legal system were effectively subordinate to the leadership of the Soviet ...
Supremes, the
American pop-soul vocal group whose tremendous popularity with a broad audience made its members among ... [6 Related Articles]
Supwe moiety
(from the article "moiety system") ...in Tlingit culture traditionally performed certain tasks, such as preparing funerals, for each other. Moieties ...
Suqutri
(from the article "South Arabic language") ...dialects of the language include Mahri, Shahri (Ehkali), Harsusi, and Bathari on the Arabian shore ...
Sur
(from the article "Chile") ...(27° to 33° S); the central region, Zona Central (33° to 38° S); the south-central ...
Sur Dynasty
Afghan family that ruled in northern India from 1540 to 1556. Its founder, Sher Shah ... [2 Related Articles]
Sura Academy
(from the article "Ashi") ...had been closed since 309, was revived, and the gigantic task of collating scattered notes, ...
Sura River
river in west-central Russia, being a tributary of the Volga River. It rises in eastern ...
Sura, Lucius Licinius
(from the article "Hadrian") The greatest single political figure behind the emperor Trajan was the man who had masterminded ...
Surabaya
kotamadya (municipality) and capital of East Java (Jawa Timur) propinsi (province), Indonesia. It is situated ... [1 Related Articles]
surah
a chapter in the sacred scripture of Islam, the Qur'an. Each of the 114 surahs, ... [3 Related Articles]
Suraiya
Indian actress and singer (b. 1929, Lahore, India [now in Pakistan]-d. Jan. 31, 2004, Mumbai ...
Suraj Mal
(from the article "Bharatpur") ...Mughal emperor Aurangzeb's reign (1659-1707), with plundering raids and the establishment of robber forts. In ...
Surakarta
kotamadya (city), eastern Jawa Tengah provinsi (Central Java province), ...
suramin
synthetic drug used in the treatment of sleeping sickness (African trypanosomiasis), a disease caused by ... [2 Related Articles]
Surat
city, southeastern Gujarat state, west-central India. It lies near the mouth of the Tapti River ... [3 Related Articles]
Surat Thani
city, southern Thailand, on the Malay Peninsula. Locally the city is called Ban Don. It ...
Surayud Chulanont
(from the article "Thailand") Area: 513,120 sq km (198,117 sq mi) | Population (2007 est.): 63,884,000 | Capital: Bangkok ...
surbahar
(from the article "South Asian arts") The most prominent melody instruments used in North Indian classical music are the sitar, a ...
surcingle
(from the article "bareback bronc-riding") rodeo event in which a cowboy attempts to ride a bucking horse (bronco) for a ...
surcoat
sleeved or sleeveless outer garment worn by European men and women during the 13th and ... [2 Related Articles]
surd
(from the article "Incommensurables") ...essentially mathematical and based on whole numbers. Of special relevance was the manipulation of ratios, ...
Surdas
(from the article "Astchap") ...Seals), group of 16th-century Hindi poets, four of whom were disciples of the Vaishnava leader ...
Surduc Pass
pass, southwestern Romania. The Jiu River flows through the pass between the Valcan (west) and ...
Sure River
river rising in the Belgian province of Luxembourg and flowing 107 miles (172 km) east ...
Sureda, Bartolome
(from the article "Buen Retiro ware") Buen Retiro porcelain was reserved for the Spanish court until shortly before Charles III's death ...
Surenas
Parthian general of the noble Suren (Surenas) family, who commanded a force of 10,000 mounted ... [2 Related Articles]
Surendranagar
city, central Gujarat state, west-central India. It is situated at the centre of the base ...
Suresnes
town, Hauts-de-Seine departement, Paris region, north-central France. It is a western suburb of Paris and ...
Suresvara
(from the article "Indian philosophy") Sankara's chief direct pupils were Suresvara, the author of Varttika ("Gloss") on his bhasya and ...
surety
(from the article "insurance") ...in a position of trust. A bond involves three contracting parties instead of two. The ...
surety bond
(from the article "insurance") Surety contracts are designed to protect businesses against the possible dishonesty of their employees. Surety ...
suretyship
(from the article "guaranty and suretyship") in law, assumption of liability for the obligations of another. In modern usage the term ...
surf music
genre of popular music that arose in southern California in the early 1960s. As the ... [4 Related Articles]
surf scoter
(from the article "scoter") ...species, the scoter belongs in the diving duck group. Scoters are good swimmers and divers ...
surf zone
(from the article "ocean") ...river mouths drown and estuaries form, trapping the sediment within them and starving the shelves. ...
surface
(from the article "sculpture") The surfaces of sculpture are in fact all that one actually sees. It is from ...
surface
(from the article "topology") ...The basic incentive in this regard was to find topological invariants associated with different structures. ...
surface air-lifted mail
(from the article "postal system") ...the war. During the mid-1960s the UPU, in response to the continuing increase of aircraft ...
surface analysis
in analytical chemistry, the study of that part of a solid that is in contact ...
surface barrier-layer capacitor
(from the article "capacitor dielectric and piezoelectric ceramics") ...grain-boundary barrier layers; these are referred to as barrier-layer (BL) capacitors. In each case conductive ...
surface charge density
(from the article "electricity") ...The strength of the field is reflected by the density of these dashed lines. Again, ...
surface chemistry
(from the article "Nobel Prizes") When Ertl started his investigation of surface chemical reactions, little was known about how they ...
surface circulation
(from the article "Mediterranean Sea") Surface circulation of the Mediterranean consists basically of a separate counterclockwise movement of the water ...
surface coating
any mixture of film-forming materials plus pigments, solvents, and other additives, which, when applied to ... [1 Related Articles]
surface course
(from the article "roads and highways") The surface course of a flexible pavement protects the underlying base course from traffic and ...
surface current
(from the article "Atlantic Ocean") The surface currents of the Atlantic Ocean primarily correspond to the system of prevailing winds ...
surface defect
(from the article "crystal defect") Surface defects may arise at the boundary between two grains, or small crystals, within a ...
surface drainage
(from the article "horticulture") Removal of excess water from soils can be achieved by surface or subsurface drainage. Surface ...
surface hardening
treatment of steel by heat or mechanical means to increase the hardness of the outer ...
surface irrigation
(from the article "horticulture") There are a number of general methods of land irrigation. In surface irrigation water is ...
Syndication Syndication © 2006, Encyclopædia Universalis France S.A. Tous droits de propriété industrielle et intellectuelle réservés.