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wasp flower ... water soldier
wasp flower
(from the article "pollination") ...jackets, however, occurring occasionally in large numbers and visiting flowers for nectar for their own ...
Wasps
(from the article "Football") In Europe the Wasps were the dominant side, lifting the Heineken (European) Cup and the ...
wassail bowl
vessel generally made of wood and often mounted in silver, used on ceremonial occasions for ...
Wasser Mountain
(from the article "Hessen") ...(Vogelsberg), which are the largest continuous basalt area in Europe, covering some 950 square miles ...
Wasseralfingen
(from the article "Aalen") ...It passed to Wurttemberg in 1802. The old city hall dates from 1636 and the ...
Wasserfall
(from the article "Braun, Wernher von") ...as the technical director. Liquid-fueled rocket aircraft and jet-assisted takeoffs were successfully demonstrated, and the ...
Wasserman, Al
American filmmaker (b. Feb. 9, 1921, Bronx, N.Y.-d. March 31, 2005, New York, N.Y.), produced ...
Wasserman, Lewis Robert
American film and record company executive (b. March 15, 1913, Cleveland, Ohio-d. June 3, 2002, ...
Wassermann test
(from the article "preventive medicine") ...Toward the close of the century the principle of insect-borne transmission of disease was established. ...
Wassermann, August von
German bacteriologist whose discovery of a universal blood-serum test for syphilis helped extend the basic ... [1 Related Articles]
Wassermann, Jakob
German novelist known for his moral fervour and tendency toward sensationalism; his popularity was greatest ...
Wasserstein, Wendy
American playwright whose work probes, with humour and sensibility, the predicament facing educated women who ... [1 Related Articles]
Wassilieff, Marie
(from the article "Arc-en-Ciel") ...prestigious designers including Karoly Koffan, Zsigmond Kolozsvary, Sandor Toth, Tivadar Fried, and Antal Prinner. A ...
Wassoulou
(from the article "Mali") ...traditional elements are adapted and combined to suit a tourist audience. Mali also has a ...
Wassukkani
capital of the Mitannian empire (c. 1500-c. 1340 BC), possibly located near the head of ... [2 Related Articles]
Wast al-Balad
(from the article "Cairo") The central business district, referred to as the Wast al-Balad ("city centre," or downtown), is ...
Wast, Hugo
Argentine novelist and short-story writer, probably his country's most popular and most widely translated novelist.
Wastani Gate
(from the article "Baghdad") ...madrasah (an Islamic law college built by the caliph al-Mustansir in 1233), ...
waste disposal system
(from the article "waste disposal") the collection, processing, and recycling or deposition of the waste materials of human society. The ...
waste mold casting
(from the article "sculpture") ...material such as plaster, concrete, or fibreglass-reinforced resin. Fourth, the mold is carefully chipped away ...
waste product
(from the article "excretion") Waste products may be categorized as metabolic or nonmetabolic. The difference lies in whether the ...
waste product
(from the article "Major soil pollutants") A firm's waste materials must be positively managed. The firm attempts to both sell them ...
waste-to-energy plant
(from the article "environmental works") ...a boiler. Boilers convert the heat of combustion into steam or hot water, thus allowing ...
wastepaper
(from the article "papermaking") By using greater quantities of wastepaper stock, the need for virgin fibre is reduced, and ...
wastewater
(from the article "ice in lakes and rivers") Wastewater from the cooling of power plants, both fossil-fueled and nuclear, has sometimes been suggested ...
Wasulunka
(from the article "Western Africa") ...map, are the following: the Wolof of Senegal, the Serer to the south, and the ...
wat
(from the article "Bangkok") The most important cultural feature of Bangkok is the wat. There are more than 300 ...
Wat Arun
(from the article "Bangkok") ...built during the reigns of Rama II (1809-24) and Rama III (1824-51). They served as ...
Wat Bowon Niwet
(from the article "Bangkok") ...Rama III (1824-51). They served as schools, libraries, hospitals, and recreation areas, as well as ...
Wat Chet Yot
(from the article "Southeast Asian arts") ...which rise one or more pyramidal towers reminiscent of the tower of the Mahabodhi temple ...
Wat Pho
(from the article "Bangkok") ...Rama I modeled the new city on the former capital, Ayutthaya, 40 miles (64 km) ...
Wat Phra Kaeo
(from the article "Bangkok") ...of the city, in 1882, was marked by the inauguration of many social reforms, manifested ...
Wat Phra Si Sanphet
(from the article "Ayutthaya") The town is intersected by many canals, and houseboats and shop boats crowd the water. ...
Wat Phra That Doi Suthep
(from the article "Chiang Mai") The temple complex of Wat Phra That Doi Suthep is one of Thailand's most famous ...
Wat Sutat
(from the article "Bangkok") ...and recreation areas, as well as religious centres. During these years Wat Arun, noted for ...
Wat Yan Nawa
(from the article "Bangkok") ...(1809-24) and Rama III (1824-51). They served as schools, libraries, hospitals, and recreation areas, as ...
watadono
(from the article "shinden-zukuri") ...the Imperial Palace. The complex centred on the shinden, which faced south on an open ...
Watampone
(from the article "Sulawesi Tengah") ...empires that ruled Indonesia until the arrival of Islam in the beginning of the 16th ...
Watanabe
(from the article "Osaka-Kobe metropolitan area") ...imperial capital in 794, land and water routes between Osaka and Kyoto were improved. The ...
Watanabe Kazan
original name Watanabe Sadayasu Japanese scholar and painter noted for his character-revealing portraits and his ... [1 Related Articles]
Watanabe Osamu
Japanese freestyle featherweight wrestler who was the undefeated world champion in 1962 and 1963 and ...
Watanabe, Michio
Japanese politician (b. July 28, 1923, Tochigi prefecture, Japan--d. Sept. 15, 1995, Tokyo, Japan), had ...
Watanabe, Tsuneo
(from the article "Japan") ...morning and evening circulation, reversed a long-standing conservative editorial policy on issues involving Japan's military ...
Watanabe, Yoko
Japanese opera singer (b. July 12, 1953, Fukuoka, Japan-d. July 15, 2004, Milan, Italy), made ...
watch
portable timepiece that has a movement driven either by spring or by electricity and that ... [7 Related Articles]
watch ball
(from the article "witch ball") ...sometimes as large as 7 inches (18 cm) in diameter. Witch balls are made in ...
watch fob
short ribbon or chain attached to a watch and hanging out of the pocket in ...
Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society
(from the article "Russell, Charles Taze") ...rule the earth. Russell dedicated his life and his fortune to preaching Christ's millennial reign. ...
Watch Tower Bible School of Gilead
(from the article "Jehovah's Witness") Rutherford's successor, Nathan Homer Knorr (1905-77), assumed the presidency in 1942 and continued and expanded ...
watch-and-ward system
(from the article "wait") an English town watchman or public musician who sounded the hours of the night. In ...
watchtower
(from the article "warning system") ...to the ancient historian Livy, the Romans used geese to detect the night attack of ...
water
a substance composed of the chemical elements hydrogen and oxygen and existing in gaseous, liquid, ... [182 Related Articles]
water activity
(from the article "food preservation") Bacteria also require a certain amount of available water for their growth. The availability of ...
water arum
(from the article "calla") either of two distinct kinds of plants of the arum family (Araceae). The genus Calla ...
water bed
(from the article "bed") Exotic innovations in bed design in the 1960s were the inflatable air mattress and the ...
water beetle
any of several thousand species of aquatic beetles (order Coleoptera), including members of the families ... [2 Related Articles]
water birch
(from the article "birch") Water birch (B. occidentalis; B. fontinalis of some authorities), a shrubby tree native to moist ...
water bloom
dense aquatic population of microscopic photosynthetic organisms produced by an abundance of nutrient salts in ... [7 Related Articles]
water board
(from the article "Low Countries, history of") ...communities (i.e., the towns). In Flanders, Zeeland, Holland, and Utrecht this struggle against the sea ...
water boatman
any of more than 300 species of insects in the true bug order, Heteroptera, that ... [2 Related Articles]
water brake
(from the article "dynamometer") ...mechanical friction on the periphery of a rotating pulley by means of brake blocks that ...
water budget
(from the article "atmosphere") The water budget at the air-surface interface is also of crucial importance in influencing atmospheric ...
water buffalo
either of two forms, wild and domestic, of Asian mammal similar to the ox. There ... [4 Related Articles]
water burial
(from the article "burial") The association between water and immortality is reflected in the myths of many cultures, myths ...
water caltrop
(from the article "water chestnut") The water caltrop (T. natans) has submerged leaves that are long, feathery, and rootlike, and ...
water channel
(from the article "Agre, Peter") American doctor, corecipient of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2003 for his discovery of ...
water chestnut
any of several perennial water plants of the genus Trapa (family Trapaceae, order Myrtales), native ... [3 Related Articles]
water chevrotain
(from the article "chevrotain") The Asiatic chevrotains are placed in the genus Tragulus, which includes about three species found ...
water chilling
(from the article "poultry processing") After the carcasses have been washed, they are chilled to a temperature below 4° C ...
water closet
(from the article "building construction") ...in the 1860s. Permanent plumbing fixtures appeared in buildings with water supply and drainage, replacing ...
water clover
(from the article "fern") ...sporocarps (highly modified leaves), these very complex internally, each containing both megasporangia and microsporangia; 3 ...
water cock
(Gallicrex cinerea), marsh bird of the rail family, Rallidae (order Gruiformes). It occurs from India ...
water consumption
(from the article "environmental works") Water consumption in a community is characterized by several types of demand, including domestic, public, ...
water couch
(from the article "Paspalum") ...in Australian and North American (where it is known as dallis grass) pastures. Paspalum urvillei, ...
water dropwort
(from the article "cowbane") ...marshes and are widely distributed in North America. They have clusters of white flowers surrounded ...
water drum
(from the article "Native American music") ...trutruka, a long bamboo trumpet played by men for ceremonial events. Instruments ...
water elm
(from the article "Ulmaceae") Elms (Ulmus) and hackberries (Celtis) are important shade and ornamental trees. The planer tree, or ...
water fern
any member of a group of ferns in the subfamily Parkerioideae, family Pteridaceae, plant division ... [2 Related Articles]
water flea
any member of the crustacean order Anomopoda (class Branchiopoda), a large group containing about 450 ... [5 Related Articles]
water forget-me-not
(from the article "forget-me-not") The water forget-me-not (M. scorpioides), shorter and more weak-stemmed, grows in marshlands but is otherwise ...
water frame
(from the article "mass production") ...significantly increased weaving speed; (2) Edmund Cartwright's power loom in 1785, which increased weaving speed ...
water gap
(from the article "valley") ...of a fold belt erode into the valleys of transverse streams that must cross the ...
water garden
(from the article "gardening") The water garden represents one of the oldest forms of gardening. Egyptian records and pictures ...
water gas
(from the article "chemical industry") The red-hot coke can also be heated with steam to yield carbon monoxide and hydrogen, ...
water gel
(from the article "explosive") ...of the most revolutionary change in the explosives industry since the invention of dynamite, saw ...
water glass
crystal-like lumps that range from colourless to white or grayish white and resemble glass but ... [4 Related Articles]
water gourd
(from the article "percussion instrument") Water gourds-half gourds floated open side down in a pan of water and struck rhythmically ...
water hemlock
any of about 10 species of poisonous plants of the genus Cicuta, in the parsley ... [1 Related Articles]
water hyacinth
any aquatic plant of the genus Eichhornia of the pickerelweed family (Pontederiaceae), consisting of about ... [3 Related Articles]
water ice
(from the article "sherbet") ...added to ensure a fine texture. Sherbets may also be flavoured with wine or liqueurs. ...
water lettuce
(from the article "Africa") ...the African interior plateau. Characteristic is the sudd along the White Nile River in The ...
water level
(from the article "surveying") The water level consisted of either a trough or a tube turned upward at the ...
water lily
any of the species of freshwater plants of the family Nymphaeaceae, comprising eight genera native ... [3 Related Articles]
water main
(from the article "environmental works") The pipeline system of a municipal water distribution network consists of arterial water mains or ...
water mass
body of ocean water with a distinctive narrow range of temperature and salinity and a ... [2 Related Articles]
water milfoil
any member of the genus Myriophyllum (family Haloragaceae), about 45 widely distributed species of submerged ...
water mint
(from the article "Mentha") ...the characteristic mint fragrance. Peppermint (M. piperita) has a heavier scent, stalked leaves, and reddish ...
water moccasin
(from the article "moccasin") either of two venomous aquatic New World snakes of the viper family (Viperidae): the water ...
water mold
any of about 150 species of fungi belonging to the order Saprolegniales (phylum Oomycota, kingdom ...
water mongoose
(from the article "mongoose") Most species are active during the day and are terrestrial, although the marsh mongoose (
water moss
(Fontinalis), genus of mosses belonging to the subclass Bryidae, often found in flowing freshwater streams ... [1 Related Articles]
water net
alga of the genus Hydrodictyon, sometimes found on the surface of quiet ...
water oak
(from the article "willow oak") Water oak (Q. nigra), laurel oak (Q. laurifolia), shingle oak (Q. imbricaria), and live oak ...
Water of Leith
(from the article "Edinburgh") ...to natural contours and softened the regimentation of the right angle with curves and crescents. ...
water of maceration
(from the article "sugar") ...mills in which the cane cells are crushed and juice extracted. As the crushed cane ...
water parsnip
any of several aromatic herbs of the genus Sium, especially S. latifolium, belonging to the ...
water plantain
any freshwater perennial herb of the genus Alisma, commonly found in lakes, ponds, and ditches. ...
water pollution
(from the article "The Perils of China's Explosive Growth") The UN 2006 Human Development Report cited China's worsening water pollution and its failure to ...
water polo
sport played in a swimming pool by teams of seven with a buoyant ball resembling ...
water poppy
(from the article "Hydrocleys") genus of perennial aquatic plants of the family Limnocharitaceae, consisting of three or four species, ...
water pump
(from the article "cooling system") ...liquid to carry away heat; (2) a radiator, consisting of many small tubes equipped with ...
water purification
treatment of water to make it safe and acceptable for human use. Such treatment grew ... [6 Related Articles]
water rail
(Rallus aquaticus), slender marsh bird of the family Rallidae (order Gruiformes), native to most of ...
water rat
any of 18 species of amphibious carnivorous rodents. They exhibit many adaptations associated with hunting ... [2 Related Articles]
water resource
any of the entire range of natural waters that occur on the Earth, regardless of ... [7 Related Articles]
water retting
(from the article "retting") In water retting, the most widely practiced method, bundles of stalks are submerged in water. ...
water sapphire
(from the article "cordierite") The natural mineral has little commercial use. When clear, cordierite is sometimes cut as a ...
water scavenger beetle
any of the approximately 2,000 species of the predominately aquatic insect family Hydrophilidae (order Coleoptera). ... [1 Related Articles]
water scorpion
any of the approximately 150 species of aquatic invertebrates of the family Nepidae (order Hemiptera). ... [1 Related Articles]
water shield
(Brasenia schreberi), small purple-flowered aquatic plant of the fanwort family (Cabombaceae), found in northern ponds ... [1 Related Articles]
water shrew
any of 12 species of amphibious shrews that have a broad, fleshy muzzle, large chest, ...
water snake
any of about 200 species of semiaquatic snakes belonging to 38 genera (family Colubridae). Water ...
water snowflake
(from the article "buckbean") ...or bogbean (Menyanthes trifoliata), a medicinal plant of wet soils, has white or pink flowers, ...
water softener
device for removing calcium and magnesium from water; water so treated will not form insoluble ... [2 Related Articles]
water softening
(from the article "hard water") ...small scale by the addition of ammonia, borax, or trisodium phosphate, together with sodium carbonate ...
water soldier
(from the article "Hydrocharitaceae") ...the family receives its common name, is Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, a rootless water plant with round ...
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