- Intruder (aircraft)
attack aircraft: types were the Grumman A-6 Intruder, first flown in 1960; the U.S. Navy’s McDonnell Douglas A-4 Skyhawk, first flown in 1954; and the Ling-Temco-Vought A-7 Corsair, first flown in 1965. The Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II (better known as the “Warthog”), a twin-engine aircraft first flown in 1972, became…
- Intruder in the Dust (novel by Faulkner)
Intruder in the Dust, novel by American author William Faulkner, published in 1948. Set in Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha county, the novel combines the solution of a murder mystery with an exploration of race relations in the South. Charles (“Chick”) Mallison, a 16-year-old white boy, feels
- Intruder, The (film by Corman [1962])
Roger Corman: Other cult classic films: The Intruder (1962) was a serious parable about race relations, with William Shatner as a rabble-rousing racist in the South. The Wild Angels (1966) was a sordid biker film that was based on the exploits of the Hells Angels and starred Peter Fonda, Bruce Dern,…
- Intruders (British television series)
Millie Bobby Brown: Childhood and early roles: …the British paranormal drama series Intruders, which aired on BBC Two in 2014. The show centers around a secret society whose members seek immortality by possessing the bodies of others. Brown played a nine-year-old who becomes possessed by one such intruder. Intruders ran for only one season, but Brown continued…
- intrusion detection system (information science)
information system: Securing information: To continually monitor information systems, intrusion detection systems are used. They detect anomalous events and log the information necessary to produce reports and to establish the source and the nature of the possible intrusion. More active systems also attempt to prevent the intrusion upon detection in real time.
- intrusive igneous rock (geology)
intrusive rock, igneous rock formed from magma forced into older rocks at depths within the Earth’s crust, which then slowly solidifies below the Earth’s surface, though it may later be exposed by erosion. Igneous intrusions form a variety of rock types. See also extrusive
- intrusive rock (geology)
intrusive rock, igneous rock formed from magma forced into older rocks at depths within the Earth’s crust, which then slowly solidifies below the Earth’s surface, though it may later be exposed by erosion. Igneous intrusions form a variety of rock types. See also extrusive
- intrusive tuff (geology)
peperite, subsurface rock containing fragments ejected by an underground volcanic explosion (see
- INTUC (Indian trade union federation)
Indian National Trade Union Congress (INTUC), largest trade-union federation in India. INTUC was established in 1947 in cooperation with the Indian National Congress, which favoured a less militant union movement than the All-India Trade Union Congress. INTUC is largely anticommunist; it is
- Intuit Inc. (American company)
Intuit Inc., provider of financial, accounting, and tax-preparation software for individuals and small businesses. Intuit Inc. was founded in 1983 by American entrepreneurs Scott Cook and Tom Proulx. The company headquarters is in Mountain View, California The company’s first product was Quicken, a
- Intuition (album by Foxx)
Jamie Foxx: Music: Intuition (2008), Foxx’s third studio album, featured the single “Blame It,” a Grammy Award-winning collaboration with vocalist and producer T-Pain. His later albums included Best Night of My Life (2010) and Hollywood: A Story of a Dozen Roses (2015). In 2021 Foxx published the memoir…
- intuition (philosophy)
intuition, in philosophy, the power of obtaining knowledge that cannot be acquired either by inference or observation, by reason or experience. As such, intuition is thought of as an original, independent source of knowledge, since it is designed to account for just those kinds of knowledge that
- intuitionism (ethics)
intuitionism, In metaethics, a form of cognitivism that holds that moral statements can be known to be true or false immediately through a kind of rational intuition. In the 17th and 18th centuries, intuitionism was defended by Ralph Cudworth, Henry More (1614–87), Samuel Clarke (1675–1729), and
- intuitionism (philosophy of mathematics)
intuitionism, school of mathematical thought introduced by the 20th-century Dutch mathematician L.E.J. Brouwer that contends the primary objects of mathematical discourse are mental constructions governed by self-evident laws. Intuitionists have challenged many of the oldest principles of
- intuitionistic calculus (logic)
formal logic: Natural deduction method in PC: …precisely the theorems of the intuitionistic calculus.
- intuitionistic type theory (mathematics)
foundations of mathematics: Intuitionistic type theories: Topoi are closely related to intuitionistic type theories. Such a theory is equipped with certain types, terms, and theorems.
- intuitive cognition (philosophy)
intuition, in philosophy, the power of obtaining knowledge that cannot be acquired either by inference or observation, by reason or experience. As such, intuition is thought of as an original, independent source of knowledge, since it is designed to account for just those kinds of knowledge that
- intuitive knowledge (philosophy)
intuition, in philosophy, the power of obtaining knowledge that cannot be acquired either by inference or observation, by reason or experience. As such, intuition is thought of as an original, independent source of knowledge, since it is designed to account for just those kinds of knowledge that
- intussusception (pathology)
intussusception, telescoping of a segment of the intestine into an adjacent segment, producing a mechanical obstruction of the alimentary canal. Primary intussusception is sometimes congenital and rarely appears later than the third year of life; it arises in the course of intestinal development,
- Inu tsukuba shū (work by Sōkan)
Yamazaki Sōkan: The Inu tsukuba shū, containing haikai by Sōkan and others, was probably written over a period of several years but was not published until some 100 years after its completion. The delay in publication may have been because Sōkan compiled the book for the use of…
- Inugsuk culture (Inuit culture)
Inugsuk culture, Eskimo culture that developed from the Thule culture (q.v.) in northern Greenland during the 12th and 13th centuries. It was distinguished by an increased dependence on hunting by means of a kayak (a one-man skin boat) and implements associated with this development. Dog-drawn
- Inuinnaqtun (dialect)
Nunavut: Population composition: The territorial government recognizes Inuinnaqtun, an Inuktitut dialect spoken in western Nunavut and written in roman letters, as one of the territory’s four main languages (Inuktitut, English, and French are the other three).
- Inuit (people)
Inuit, group of culturally and linguistically unique Indigenous peoples of the Arctic and subarctic regions whose homelands encompass Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland, a self-governing overseas administrative division of Denmark), Arctic Canada, northern and southwestern Alaska in the United States, and
- Inuit Ataqatigiit (political party, Greenland)
Greenland: Government and society: …historical relations with Denmark; and Inuit Ataqatigiit, which calls for full independence from Denmark. The Inatsisartut elects the prime minister as well as the other members of the Landsstyre, a council that assumes the island’s executive responsibilities. The prime minister is typically the leader of the majority party in the…
- Inuit Circumpolar Conference (international organization)
Arctic: Contemporary developments: In 1977 the Inuit Circumpolar Conference was formed by the Inuit peoples of Greenland, Canada, and Alaska; in 1983 it was recognized officially by the United Nations. By the early 21st century it represented some 180,000 individuals of Inuit and Yupiit heritage, including those of Siberia. The Aleut…
- Inuit Circumpolar Council (pan-Arctic nongovernmental organization)
Inuit: Founded in 1977, the pan-Arctic Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) is a nongovernmental organization that seeks to strengthen unity among the Inuit, to promote their rights and interests internationally, and to ensure the endurance and growth of Inuit culture and societies. Inuit have entered into a variety of governance arrangements throughout…
- Inuit language
Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit
- Inuit-Yupik-Unangan language family
Eskimo-Aleut languages, family of languages spoken in Greenland (Kalaallit Nunaat), Canada, the United States (in Alaska), and Russia (in eastern Siberia), by the Inuit and Unangan (Aleut) peoples. Unangan is a self-name; Aleut is the name the Russians used for these people. The term Eskimo was
- Inuk language
Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit
- Inukai Tsuyoshi (prime minister of Japan)
Inukai Tsuyoshi was a Japanese politician and prime minister whose assassination marked the end of party participation in the Japanese government in the period preceding World War II. Of samurai origin, Inukai began his career as a reporter. He became minister of education in 1898 and then founded
- Inuktitut language
Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit
- inulin (polysaccharide)
inulin, polysaccharide that is a commercial source of the sugar fructose. It occurs in many plants of the family Asteraceae (Compositae), particularly in such roots and tubers as the dahlia and the Jerusalem artichoke. Inulin forms a white, crystalline powder that is as sweet as sucrose. The inulin
- inulin clearance (medicine)
inulin clearance, procedure by which the filtering capacity of the glomeruli (the main filtering structures of the kidney) is determined by measuring the rate at which inulin, the test substance, is cleared from blood plasma. Inulin is the most accurate substance to measure because it is a small,
- Inupiaq (Alaska, United States)
Kotzebue, city, northwestern Alaska, U.S. Lying 550 miles (885 km) northwest of Anchorage, it is situated at the northwestern end of Baldwin Peninsula, on Kotzebue Sound. The area, which was a trading centre for a number of widely scattered Arctic villages, has long been inhabited by Inupiat
- Inupiaq language
Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit
- Inupiat (people)
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Human impact: Inupiat Eskimo (Inuit) inhabit the northern coastal area, subsisting primarily by hunting a variety of game. Their community of Kaktovik is located on a barrier island just off the coast of the refuge.
- Inupik language
Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit
- inútil de la familia, El (work by Edwards)
Jorge Edwards: …leftist Chilean expatriates in Paris; El inútil de la familia (2004; “The Worthless One in the Family”), a fictionalized account of the life history of Edwards’s uncle; and La casa de Dostoievsky (2008; “Dostoievsky’s House”), about an unnamed avant-garde poet who travels to 1960s Cuba. Edwards’s nonfiction works include Adiós,…
- Inutile Beauté, L’ (work by Maupassant)
Guy de Maupassant: Mature life and works of Guy de Maupassant: …Rose-Bush of Madame Husson”), and L’Inutile Beauté (1890; “The Useless Beauty”). Four more novels also appeared: Mont-Oriol (1887), on the financing of a fashionable watering place; Pierre et Jean; Fort comme la mort (1889; “As Strong as Death”); and Notre coeur (1890; “Our Heart”).
- Inuvik (Northwest Territories, Canada)
Inuvik, town, Inuvik region, Northwest Territories, Canada. It lies along the East Channel of the Mackenzie River delta, just east of the northernmost point of the Yukon. Planned as a model community by the Canadian government, with an Inuit (Eskimo) name meaning “place of man,” it was built
- Inuvik (region, Northwest Territories, Canada)
Inuvik, northwestern region of the Northwest Territories, Canada. Inuvik region was created in the early 1970s by the territorial government and was formerly part of Mackenzie and Franklin districts. It extends from Wrigley northward along the middle reaches of the Mackenzie River, which forms its
- Invader (aircraft)
attack aircraft: …1940s and ’50s were the Douglas B-26 Invader and the Douglas A-1 Skyraider. All these types were piston-engined, propeller-driven aircraft.
- Invaders from Mars (film by Menzies [1953])
William Cameron Menzies: Later films: Invaders from Mars (1953) is probably Menzies’s best-known work. Made during the height of the sci-fi craze, it is a nightmarish, at times surrealistic, tale told from the perspective of a little boy who sees a Martian saucer descend in a field but finds no…
- Invaders, The (work by Plomer)
William Plomer: …Case Is Altered (1932) and The Invaders (1934). Additional publications included a semifictional memoir, Museum Pieces (1952), and three volumes of family and personal memoirs, Double Lives (1943), At Home (1958), and Autobiography of William Plomer (1975). Between 1938 and 1940 he edited three volumes of the diaries of the…
- Invalides Esplanade (park, Paris, France)
Paris: The Invalides of Paris: One street to the northeast of the Military Academy is the Hôtel des Invalides, founded by King Louis XIV to shelter 7,000 aged or invalid veterans. The enormous range of buildings was completed in five years (1671–76). The gold-plated dome (1675–1706) that rises…
- Invalides, Dôme des (church, Paris, France)
Western architecture: France: Hardouin-Mansart’s Dôme des Invalides, Paris (begun in 1676), is generally agreed to be the finest church of the last half of the 17th century in France. The correctness and precision of its form, the harmony and balance of its spaces, and the soaring vigour of its…
- Invalides, Hôtel des (architectural complex, Paris, France)
Les Invalides, an extensive complex of 17th-century structures and courtyards in Paris designed for the care and housing of disabled veterans and as a place of worship. Parts of Les Invalides were later converted into museums and into tombs for Napoleon I and others. Situated on the Left Bank of
- Invalides, Les (architectural complex, Paris, France)
Les Invalides, an extensive complex of 17th-century structures and courtyards in Paris designed for the care and housing of disabled veterans and as a place of worship. Parts of Les Invalides were later converted into museums and into tombs for Napoleon I and others. Situated on the Left Bank of
- Invar (alloy)
Invar, alloy of iron that expands very little when heated; it contains 64 percent iron and 36 percent nickel. Invar was formerly used for absolute standards of length measurement and is now used for surveying tapes and in watches and various other temperature-sensitive devices. The trademark name
- invariance (physics)
symmetry, in physics, the concept that the properties of particles such as atoms and molecules remain unchanged after being subjected to a variety of symmetry transformations or “operations.” Since the earliest days of natural philosophy (Pythagoras in the 6th century bce), symmetry has furnished
- invariant (mathematics)
projective geometry: Projective invariants: With Desargues’s provision of infinitely distant points for parallels, the reality plane and the projective plane are essentially interchangeable—that is, ignoring distances and directions (angles), which are not preserved in the projection. Other properties are preserved, however. For instance, two different points have a…
- invariant point (phase change)
phase: Unary systems: Point C is therefore an invariant point; a change in either pressure or temperature results in the loss of one or more phases. The phase rule also reveals that no more than three phases can stably coexist in a one-component system because additional phases would lead to negative variance.
- invariant theory (mathematics)
Arthur Cayley: …branch of algebra known as invariant theory.
- invasion (biology)
migration: …followed by a return journey; invasion or interruption, both of which involve the appearance and subsequent disappearance of great numbers of animals at irregular times and locations; and range expansion, which tends to enlarge the distribution of a species, particularly its breeding area.
- Invasion of Privacy (album by Cardi B)
Cardi B: Bodak Yellow and Invasion of Privacy: …released her debut studio album, Invasion of Privacy, in 2018. The song “I Like It” reached number one on the Billboard 100, making Cardi B the first female rapper to have two songs reach the top of the chart. Cardi B earned five nominations at the 2019 Grammys, including record…
- Invasion of the Body Snatchers (film by Kaufman [1978])
Philip Kaufman: Early work: …ventured into science fiction with Invasion of the Body Snatchers, a remake of Don Siegel’s 1956 classic. Kaufman created an atmosphere of mounting dread, and the cast—which included Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams, Leonard Nimoy, and Jeff Goldblum—was notable.
- Invasion of the Body Snatchers (film by Siegel [1956])
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, American science-fiction film, released in 1956, that was directed by Don Siegel and has been hailed as one of the most intelligent films of the genre. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) In the small California town of Santa Mira, several
- Invasion USA (film by Allen [1952])
Alfred E. Green: Invasion USA (1952) has some historical value as an example of red-baiting during the Joseph McCarthy era.
- Invasion, L’ (play by Adamov)
Arthur Adamov: In L’Invasion, he attempted to depict the human situation more realistically; it impressed André Gide and the director Jean Vilar, and, under Vilar’s direction, it opened in Paris in 1950, with his third play, La grande et la petite manoeuvre. The latter reveals the influence of…
- Invasions barbares, Les (film by Arcand [2003])
Denys Arcand: …notably Les Invasions barbares (2003; The Barbarian Invasions), embody his intellectual curiosity and passion for politics, art, and life.
- invasive aspergillosis (pathology)
aspergillosis: Severe invasive aspergillosis is almost entirely limited to those whose immune systems have been severely compromised, either by drug therapies or by disease—i.e., immunosuppressed patients. People with leukemia or other cancers are unable to contain the organism in the lungs and may develop widespread disease involving…
- invasive mole (pathology)
pregnancy: Hydatidiform mole: …mole, referred to as an invasive mole or chorioadenoma destruens, may in rare instances perforate the uterus and cause death from hemorrhage. Molar villi rarely are carried to the lung or brain. When they are, the patient may suffer from hemorrhage into the lung or die from hemorrhage within the…
- invasive species (ecology)
invasive species, any nonnative species that significantly modifies or disrupts the ecosystems it colonizes. Such species may arrive in new areas through natural migration, but they are often introduced by the activities of other species. Human activities, such as those involved in global commerce
- invasiveness (pathology)
human disease: Infectious agents: …must have sufficient virulence and invasiveness to cause significant tissue injury.
- invcel
incel, member of an online subculture of primarily heterosexual men who identify as being unable to have romantic or sexual relationships. This self-described inability to form attachments is often expressed as grievance toward women. Incel subculture has been associated with misogyny, extremism,
- invención de Morel, La (novel by Bioy Casares)
Adolfo Bioy Casares: …La invención de Morel (1940; The Invention of Morel). A carefully constructed and fantastic work, it concerns a fugitive (the narrator) who has fallen in love and strives to establish contact with a woman who is eventually revealed to be only an image created by a film projector. The novel…
- Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence (work by Wills)
Garry Wills: …for Thomas Jefferson’s political thought, Inventing America: Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence (1978).
- Inventing Anna (American television miniseries)
Julia Garner: Inventing Anna and other projects from the 2020s: …con artist Anna Sorokin in Inventing Anna (2022). That Netflix series was inspired by journalist Jessica Pressler’s 2018 New York Magazine article about Sorokin, a woman who went by the name Anna Delvey and claimed to be a wealthy German heiress to swindle money and goods from banks, hotels, and…
- Inventing the Enemy, and Other Occasional Writings (work by Eco)
Umberto Eco: …e altri scritti occasionali (2011; Inventing the Enemy, and Other Occasional Writings) collected pieces—some initially presented as lectures—on a wide range of subjects, from fascist reactions to Joyce’s Ulysses (1922) to the implications of WikiLeaks. Storia delle terre e dei luoghi leggendari (2013; The Book of Legendary Lands) investigates a…
- invention (sociology)
William Fielding Ogburn: Ogburn considered what he termed invention—a new combination of existing cultural elements—to be the fundamental cause of social change and cultural evolution. Noting that an invention directly affecting one aspect of culture may require adjustments in other cultural areas, he introduced the term cultural lag to describe delays in adjustment…
- invention (technology)
invention, the act of bringing ideas or objects together in a novel way to create something that did not exist before. Ever since the first prehistoric stone tools, humans have lived in a world shaped by invention. Indeed, the brain appears to be a natural inventor. As part of the act of
- invention (musical form)
invention, in music, any of a number of markedly dissimilar compositional forms dating from the 16th century to the present. While its exact meaning has never been defined, the term has often been affixed to compositions of a novel, progressive character—i.e., compositions that do not fit
- Invention of Lefse, The (work by Woiwode)
Larry Woiwode: … (2013), and a children’s book, The Invention of Lefse (2011). He also wrote several biographies, including A Legacy of Passion (2022), about the Scheel family, founders of a retail chain. What I Think I Did (2000) and A Step from Death (2008) are memoirs.
- Invention of Love, The (play by Stoppard)
Tom Stoppard: …house, premiered in 1993, and The Invention of Love, about A.E. Housman, was first staged in 1997.
- Invention of Lying, The (film by Gervais and Robinson [2009])
Ricky Gervais: …and directed (with Matthew Robinson) The Invention of Lying (2009), which centers on a down-on-his-luck screenwriter (played by Gervais) who discovers that he alone can lie in a world where everyone tells the truth. His other film credits include Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009), Muppets Most…
- Invention of Morel, The (novel by Bioy Casares)
Adolfo Bioy Casares: …La invención de Morel (1940; The Invention of Morel). A carefully constructed and fantastic work, it concerns a fugitive (the narrator) who has fallen in love and strives to establish contact with a woman who is eventually revealed to be only an image created by a film projector. The novel…
- Invention of Solitude, The (autobiography by Auster)
Paul Auster: The Invention of Solitude (1982) is both a memoir about the death of his father and a meditation on the act of writing. Auster also penned several verse volumes including Unearth (1974) and Wall Writing (1976) as well as the essay collections White Spaces (1980)…
- Invention of Verity, The (treatise by Geber)
Geber: …and De inventione veritatis (The Invention of Verity, 1678). They are the clearest expression of alchemical theory and the most important set of laboratory directions to appear before the 16th century. Accordingly, they were widely read and extremely influential in a field where mysticism, secrecy, and obscurity were the…
- Inventionshorn (musical instrument)
wind instrument: Trumpet-type aerophones: …German horn known as the Inventionshorn.
- inventor
inventor, a person who brings ideas or objects together in a novel way to create an invention, something that did not exist before. Inventors defy definition; as a result, they are frequently defined by what they are not. For example, though there is a close relation between invention and science
- inventory (business)
inventory, in business, any item of property held in stock by a firm, including finished goods ready for sale, goods in the process of production, raw materials, and goods that will be consumed in the process of producing goods to be sold. Inventories appear on a company’s balance sheet as an
- inventory control (business)
operations research: Inventory control: Inventories include raw materials, component parts, work in process, finished goods, packing and packaging materials, and general supplies. The control of inventories, vital to the financial strength of a firm, in general involves deciding at what points in the production system stocks shall…
- inventory control system (computer science)
automation: Service industries: Each transaction depletes the store’s inventory, so the item purchased must be identified for reorder. Much clerical effort is expended by the store when inventory is managed by strictly manual procedures. Computerized systems have been installed in most modern retail stores to speed sales transactions and automatically update inventory records…
- inventory profit (accounting)
accounting: Problems of measurement and the limitations of financial reporting: …is usually called the “inventory profit.” The implication is that this is a component of net income that is less “real” than other components because it results from the holding of inventories rather than from trading with customers.
- Inventory, The (novel by Josipovici)
Gabriel Josipovici: The first three—The Inventory (1968), Words (1971), and The Present (1975)—were written mostly in dialogue, whereas Migrations (1977) and The Air We Breathe (1981) were composed of a series of images and sound patterns following a loosely narrative form.
- Invenzioni (work by Bonporti)
Francesco Antonio Bonporti: …notable for his highly original Invenzioni, short instrumental suites from which Johann Sebastian Bach took the title for his keyboard Inventions.
- Inveraray (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Inveraray, royal burgh (town), Argyll and Bute council area, historic county of Argyllshire, Scotland, on Loch Fyne on the Atlantic coast near the mouth of the River Aray. It was made a royal burgh in 1648. Inveraray was the ancestral seat of the Campbells of Argyll and was rebuilt by them in the
- Invercargill (New Zealand)
Invercargill, city, Southland regional council, South Island, New Zealand. Invercargill lies in the southernmost part of the South Island along the Waihopai River, near its confluence with the New River estuary. A service centre for the region’s agricultural industries, the city is situated on a
- Inverclyde (council area, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Inverclyde, council area, west-central Scotland, lying entirely within the historic county of Renfrewshire. Inverclyde extends along the River Clyde and the Firth of Clyde on the north and encompasses an area of hills and valleys to the south. Its economy historically depended on docks,
- Inverell (New South Wales, Australia)
Inverell, town, northeastern New South Wales, Australia. It is situated at the junction of the Swanbrook and Macintyre rivers in the Western Slopes district. It was established in 1848 as a stock station. It was declared a town in 1858 and a municipality in 1872, when it was given its Gaelic name,
- Invergordon (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Invergordon, small North Sea port, Highland council area, historic county of Ross-shire, historic region of Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, on the deep sheltered waters of the Cromarty Firth. Situated on one of the deepest and safest harbours in Great Britain, Invergordon served as a Royal Navy
- Inverkelly (New Zealand)
Invercargill, city, Southland regional council, South Island, New Zealand. Invercargill lies in the southernmost part of the South Island along the Waihopai River, near its confluence with the New River estuary. A service centre for the region’s agricultural industries, the city is situated on a
- Invermein (New South Wales, Australia)
Scone, town, eastern New South Wales, Australia. It lies in the upper Hunter River valley, along the New England Highway and the main northern rail line 80 miles (130 km) northwest of Newcastle. Settlers came to the site as early as 1825; they called their village Invermein, although it was also
- Inverness (Michigan, United States)
Cheboygan, city, seat (1853) of Cheboygan county, northern Michigan, U.S. The city lies along the Cheboygan River as it enters Lake Huron near the eastern end of the Straits of Mackinac. According to some reports, the site was a Native American camping ground until it was settled by Jacob Sammons
- Inverness (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Inverness, royal burgh (town), Highland council area, historic county of Inverness-shire, Scotland. It is the long-established centre of the Highlands and lies at the best crossing place of the River Ness, which flows from Loch Ness at the east end of Glen Mor. Situated astride the river and the
- Inverness-shire (former county, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Inverness-shire, historic county of northern Scotland. It is Scotland’s largest historic county and includes a section of the central Highlands, Glen Mor, and a portion of the Highlands to the north. It also encompasses several islands of the Inner and Outer Hebrides, such as Skye, Harris (part of
- inverse (mathematics)
mathematics: The theory of equations: Examples of groups include the integers with * interpreted as addition and the positive rational numbers with *…
- inverse function (mathematics)
inverse function, Mathematical function that undoes the effect of another function. For example, the inverse function of the formula that converts Celsius temperature to Fahrenheit temperature is the formula that converts Fahrenheit to Celsius. Applying one formula and then the other yields the
- inverse halftone gravure (printing)
photoengraving: Other methods: The Henderson process, sometimes referred to as “direct transfer,” or “inverse halftone,” gravure, has won some acceptance in the printing of packaging materials. Retouched continuous-tone positives are used in preparation of halftone negatives and, by a contact-printing operation, halftone positives. These positives show dot size variations…
- inverse probability (probability)
Bayes’s theorem, in probability theory, a means for revising predictions in light of relevant evidence, also known as conditional probability or inverse probability. The theorem was discovered among the papers of the English Presbyterian minister and mathematician Thomas Bayes and published