| | - 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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