• tianli (Chinese philosophy)

    Confucianism: The Song masters: …To him the presence of tianli (“heavenly principle”) in all things as well as in human nature enables the human mind to purify itself in a spirit of reverence. Cheng Yi, following his brother’s lead, formulated the famous dictum, “Self-cultivation requires reverence; the extension of knowledge consists in the investigation…

  • Tianlong (Chinese mythology)

    long: …dragons: the Celestial Dragon (Tianlong), who guards the heavenly dwellings of the gods; the Dragon of Hidden Treasure (Fuzanglong); the Earth Dragon (Dilong), who controls the waterways; and the Spiritual Dragon (Shenlong), who controls the rain and winds. In popular belief only the latter two were significant; they were…

  • Tianlong Shan (cave temples, Shanxi, China)

    Tianlong Shan, site in central Shanxi province in China containing a series of Buddhist cave temples dating from the mid-6th century. The sculptures in these temples represent the Tang dynasty style of the late 7th and 8th centuries. Many intact and fragmentary examples of these famous Tang

  • Tianming (Manchurian chieftain)

    Nurhachi was a chieftain of the Jianzhou Juchen, a Manchurian tribe, and one of the founders of the Manchu, or Qing, dynasty. His first attack on China (1618) presaged his son Dorgon’s conquest of the Chinese empire. The Juchen (Chinese: Nüzhen, or Ruzhen) were a Tungus people who belonged to those

  • tianming (Chinese philosophy)

    tianming, in Chinese Confucian thought, the notion that heaven (tian) conferred directly upon an emperor, the son of heaven (tianzi), the right to rule. The doctrine had its beginnings in the early Zhou dynasty (c. 1046–256 bce). The continuation of the mandate was believed to be conditioned by the

  • Tianqi (emperor of Ming dynasty)

    Tianqi was the reign name (niaohao) of the 16th and penultimate emperor (reigned 1620–27) of the Ming dynasty, under whose rule the infamous eunuch Wei Zhongxian (1568–1627) dominated the government while the dynasty disintegrated. Ascending the throne at the age of 15, the Tianqi emperor preferred

  • tianshi (Daoist title)

    Taoism: The Way of the Celestial Masters: …have received the title of tianshi, and by the latter part of the 2nd century, under the leadership of his descendants, the Tianshidao constituted an independent religio-political organization with authority throughout the region, a “Taocracy” (rule of Tao), in which temporal and spiritual powers converged. For ceremonial and administrative purposes,…

  • Tianshidao (Daoism)

    Tianshidao, great popular Daoist movement that occurred near the end of China’s Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) and greatly weakened the government. The Tianshidao movement became a prototype of the religiously inspired popular rebellions that were to erupt periodically throughout China for the next

  • Tianshui (China)

    Tianshui, city, southeastern Gansu sheng (province), north-central China. It is situated along the Wei River and was historically an important place along the Silk Road, the great route westward from Chang’an (present-day Xi’an, Shaanxi province) to Central Asia and Europe. This route is today

  • Tianshun (emperor of Ming dynasty)

    Zhengtong was the reign name (nianhao) of the sixth and eighth emperor of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), whose court was dominated by eunuchs who weakened the dynasty by a disastrous war with Mongol tribes. In 1435 Zhu Qizhen ascended the throne and became known as the Zhengtong emperor, with his

  • Tiant Vega, Luis Clemente (baseball player)

    Luis Tiant was a professional baseball player who was one of the outstanding pitchers of the 1970s and won more games than any other Cuban-born player, compiling a record of 229 victories and 172 losses, with an earned run average (ERA) of 3.30 in 19 major league seasons. His 2,416 strikeouts are

  • Tiant, Luis (baseball player)

    Luis Tiant was a professional baseball player who was one of the outstanding pitchers of the 1970s and won more games than any other Cuban-born player, compiling a record of 229 victories and 172 losses, with an earned run average (ERA) of 3.30 in 19 major league seasons. His 2,416 strikeouts are

  • Tiantai (Buddhist school)

    Tiantai, rationalist school of Buddhist thought that takes its name from the mountain in southeastern China where its founder and greatest exponent, Zhiyi, lived and taught in the 6th century. The school was introduced into Japan in 806 by Saichō, known posthumously as Dengyō Daishi. The chief

  • Tiantai Mountains (mountains, China)

    Tiantai Mountains, mountain chain in eastern Zhejiang province, eastern China. Tiantai is also the name of a mountain in the chain. The range forms the northeastern extension of the great Xianxia Mountains in southern Zhejiang, which form the watershed between the Ling River and the Ou River,

  • Tiantai Shan (mountains, China)

    Tiantai Mountains, mountain chain in eastern Zhejiang province, eastern China. Tiantai is also the name of a mountain in the chain. The range forms the northeastern extension of the great Xianxia Mountains in southern Zhejiang, which form the watershed between the Ling River and the Ou River,

  • Tiantan (building complex, Beijing, China)

    Temple of Heaven, large religious complex in the old outer city of Beijing, considered the supreme achievement of traditional Chinese architecture. Its layout symbolizes the belief that heaven is round and earth square. The three buildings are built in a straight line. The Hall of Prayer for Good

  • Tiantang suantai zhi ge (novel by Mo Yan)

    Mo Yan: …Tiantang suantai zhi ge (The Garlic Ballads) was published, followed in 1995 by the collection Mo Yan wenji (“Collected Works of Mo Yan”). Of the stories contained in the latter book, Mo himself was most satisfied with Jiuguo (1992; The Republic of Wine). The novel Fengru feitun (1995; Big…

  • Tiantha-Koumane (king of Luang Prabang)

    Chanthakuman was the ruler of the Lao kingdom of Luang Prabang who was confronted by increasingly serious local, regional, and international threats to his state’s survival. Chanthakuman was the second son of King Mangthaturat, and succeeded his elder brother Suk Soem (Souka-Seum) in 1852 as a

  • Tianwen (riddles by Chu Yuan)

    Chinese painting: Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bce): …questions or riddles in the Tianwen (“Questions to Heaven”), attributed to the poet Chu Yuan, are traditionally thought to have been inspired by wall paintings.

  • Tianwen-1 (Chinese space mission)

    Mars: Spacecraft exploration: The Chinese mission Tianwen-1 consisted of an orbiter and a small rover, Zhurong, which landed on Mars on May 14. The American Mars 2020 mission carried the Perseverance rover, which had a drill designed to collect core samples that could be taken to Earth for analysis. Perseverance landed…

  • Tianyi (Chinese emperor)

    Tang was the reign name of the Chinese emperor who overthrew the Xia dynasty (c. 2070–c. 1600 bc) and founded the Shang, the first historical dynasty ( c. 1600–1046 bc, though the dating of the Shang—and hence also of the Tang emperor’s founding of it—have long been the subject of much debate). As

  • Tianyige (library, Ningbo, China)

    Ningbo: The contemporary city: …oldest library building in China, Tianyige, is in the western part of the city. Its collection of rare books and documents dates to the 11th century and includes many unique local chronicles of the Ming dynasty.

  • tianyuan (Chinese poetry)

    Tao Qian: …the first great poet of tianyuan (“fields and gardens”), landscape poetry inspired by pastoral scenes (as opposed to the then-fashionable shanshui [“mountains and rivers”] poetry). Essentially a Daoist in his philosophical outlook on life and death, he also freely adopted the elements of Confucianism and Buddhism that most appealed to…

  • Tianzhou 1 (spacecraft)

    Tiangong: An uncrewed cargo spacecraft, Tianzhou 1, performed docking and refueling maneuvers with the station in 2017. Tiangong 2 reentered Earth’s atmosphere in July 2019.

  • tianzi (Chinese religion)

    tian: …as Son of Heaven (tianzi), and their authority was believed to emanate from tian. Beginning in the Zhou dynasty, sovereignty was explained by the concept of the mandate of heaven (tianming). This was a grant of authority that depended not on divine right but on virtue. Indeed, this authority…

  • tianzun (Daoism)

    Taoism: The Lingbao scriptures and liturgies: …series of “celestial worthies” (tianzun), its primordial and uncreated manifestations. These in turn were worshipped by means of a group of liturgies, which, during the 5th century, became supreme in Taoist practice, completely absorbing the older, simpler rites of the Way of the Celestial Masters. As each celestial worthy…

  • Tiaojinjiao (Chinese religious community)

    Kaifeng Jew, member of a former religious community in Henan province, China, whose careful observance of Jewish precepts over many centuries has long intrigued scholars. Matteo Ricci, the famous Jesuit missionary, was apparently the first Westerner to learn of the existence of Chinese Jews. In

  • tiara (ornament)

    taj: …developed out of the ancient tiaras (see tiara) worn in the Mesopotamian valley. A hat of notability and prestige, the taj is often made of rich fabrics, brocaded, and bejeweled. Most, however, are made of felt or leather.

  • Tiarella cordifolia (plant)

    Saxifragaceae: Heartleaf foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia) of North America is used in folk medicine as a diuretic and tonic. Creeping saxifrage (Saxifraga stolonifera), native to China and Japan, is used in Java, Vietnam, and various parts of China for earaches and other ear problems. It is also…

  • Tiaret (Algeria)

    Tiaret, city, northern Algeria. It lies at the southern end of Ouarsenis Massif (in the Tell Atlas Mountains) on the slopes of Mount Guezoul (4,510 feet [1,375 metres]) at the edge of the High Plateau (Hauts Plateaux). Wadi Tiaret flows through the city to join Wadi Mîna. Tiaret’s citadel stands on

  • Tiarnoglofi (Slavic religion)

    Slavic religion: Principal divine beings: …Chernobog), the Black God, and Tiarnoglofi, the Black Head (Mind or Brain). The Black God survives in numerous Slavic curses and in a White God, whose aid is sought to obtain protection or mercy in Bulgaria, Serbia, and Pomerania. This religious dualism of white and black gods is common to…

  • TIAW (nonprofit corporation)

    The International Alliance for Women (TIAW), nonprofit corporation founded in 1980 to empower professional women through networking at sponsored events and to promote the economic advancement of women throughout the world. TIAW’s membership includes thousands of individuals and associations.

  • Ṭīb, Raʾs aṭ- (peninsula, Tunisia)

    Sharīk Peninsula, peninsula of northeastern Tunisia, 20 miles (32 km) wide and protruding 50 miles (80 km) into the Mediterranean Sea between the Gulfs of Tunis and Hammamet. The ruins of the old Punic town of Kerkouane, which date from the 6th century bce, are located there. During World War II it

  • Tibaldi, Pellegrino (Italian painter)

    Pellegrino Tibaldi was an Italian painter, sculptor, and architect who spread the style of Italian Mannerist painting in Spain during the late 16th century. Tibaldi grew up in Bologna in a family of Lombard stonemasons. He was trained as a painter under minor Emilian artists who imitated the style

  • Tibbet, Lawrence (American opera singer)

    Lawrence Tibbett was an American baritone renowned for his success in both opera and motion pictures. Tibbett began his performing career as an actor and church singer in Los Angeles, where he studied voice with Basil Ruysdael. In 1923, after moving to New York City and beginning vocal study with

  • Tibbett, Lawrence (American opera singer)

    Lawrence Tibbett was an American baritone renowned for his success in both opera and motion pictures. Tibbett began his performing career as an actor and church singer in Los Angeles, where he studied voice with Basil Ruysdael. In 1923, after moving to New York City and beginning vocal study with

  • Tiber Island (island, Rome, Italy)

    Rome: The river lands: …bottom of the bend is Tiber Island. The island, 1,100 feet (335 metres) long and less than 330 feet (100 metres) wide at its widest, has been a place of healing since the Temple of Asclepius was erected after the plague of 291 bce; the largest building there is the…

  • Tiber River (river, Italy)

    Tiber River, historic river of Europe and the second longest Italian river (after the Po), rising on the slope of Monte Fumaiolo, a major summit of the Tuscan-Emilian Apennines. The Tiber is 252 miles (405 km) long. Twisting in a generally southerly direction through a series of scenic gorges and

  • Tiberias (Israel)

    Tiberias, city, northeastern Israel, on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee; one of the four holy cities of Judaism (Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, Ẕefat [Safed]). Tiberias was founded by Herod Antipas (ruled 4 bce–39 ce), tetrarch of Galilee under the Romans, in 18 ce, and named for the reigning

  • Tiberias, Lake (lake, Israel)

    Sea of Galilee, lake in Israel through which the Jordan River flows. It is famous for its biblical associations; its Old Testament name was Sea of Chinnereth, and later it was called the Lake of Gennesaret. From 1948 to 1967 it was bordered immediately to the northeast by the cease-fire line with

  • Tiberina (island, Rome, Italy)

    Rome: The river lands: …bottom of the bend is Tiber Island. The island, 1,100 feet (335 metres) long and less than 330 feet (100 metres) wide at its widest, has been a place of healing since the Temple of Asclepius was erected after the plague of 291 bce; the largest building there is the…

  • Tiberius (Roman emperor)

    Tiberius was the second Roman emperor (14–37 ce), the adopted son of Augustus, whose imperial institutions and imperial boundaries he sought to preserve. In his last years he became a tyrannical recluse, inflicting a reign of terror against the major personages of Rome. Tiberius’s father, also

  • Tiberius Caesar Augustus (Roman emperor)

    Tiberius was the second Roman emperor (14–37 ce), the adopted son of Augustus, whose imperial institutions and imperial boundaries he sought to preserve. In his last years he became a tyrannical recluse, inflicting a reign of terror against the major personages of Rome. Tiberius’s father, also

  • Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus (Roman poet)

    Silius Italicus was a Latin epic poet whose 17-book, 12,000-line Punica on the Second Punic War (218–201 bc) is the longest poem in Latin literature. Silius was a distinguished advocate in his earlier years. He later took to public service and was a consul in 68, the year of Nero’s death. His

  • Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (Roman emperor)

    Claudius was a Roman emperor (41–54 ce), who extended Roman rule in North Africa and made Britain a province. The son of Nero Claudius Drusus, a popular and successful Roman general, and the younger Antonia, he was the nephew of the emperor Tiberius and a grandson of Livia Drusilla, the wife of the

  • Tiberius Claudius Nero (Roman emperor)

    Tiberius was the second Roman emperor (14–37 ce), the adopted son of Augustus, whose imperial institutions and imperial boundaries he sought to preserve. In his last years he became a tyrannical recluse, inflicting a reign of terror against the major personages of Rome. Tiberius’s father, also

  • Tiberius Claudius Nero Caesar Augustus (Roman emperor)

    Tiberius was the second Roman emperor (14–37 ce), the adopted son of Augustus, whose imperial institutions and imperial boundaries he sought to preserve. In his last years he became a tyrannical recluse, inflicting a reign of terror against the major personages of Rome. Tiberius’s father, also

  • Tiberius Claudius Nero Germanicus (Roman emperor)

    Claudius was a Roman emperor (41–54 ce), who extended Roman rule in North Africa and made Britain a province. The son of Nero Claudius Drusus, a popular and successful Roman general, and the younger Antonia, he was the nephew of the emperor Tiberius and a grandson of Livia Drusilla, the wife of the

  • Tiberius II Constantinus (Byzantine emperor)

    Tiberius II Constantinus was a Byzantine emperor from 578 to 582 who succeeded in defending the empire against the Persians to the east but suffered reverses in conflicts with the Avars and Slavs to the north and west. Tiberius served in campaigns against the Avars in the Balkans under Justin II.

  • Tiberius Julius Caesar Augustus (Roman emperor)

    Tiberius was the second Roman emperor (14–37 ce), the adopted son of Augustus, whose imperial institutions and imperial boundaries he sought to preserve. In his last years he became a tyrannical recluse, inflicting a reign of terror against the major personages of Rome. Tiberius’s father, also

  • Tiberius, Mauricius Flavius (Byzantine emperor)

    Maurice was an outstanding general and emperor (582–602) who helped transform the shattered late Roman Empire into a new and well-organized medieval Byzantine Empire. Maurice first entered the government as a notary but in 578 was made commander of the imperial forces in the East. Distinguished by

  • Tibesti (mountains, Africa)

    Tibesti, part of the Mid-Sahara Rise of the central Sahara. Mostly in northwestern Chad, the mountains extend into northeastern Niger and southern Libya. The formation is about 300 miles (480 km) long and up to 175 miles (280 km) wide. The volcanic summit of Emi Koussi rises to 11,204 feet (3,415

  • Tibesti Massif (mountains, Africa)

    Tibesti, part of the Mid-Sahara Rise of the central Sahara. Mostly in northwestern Chad, the mountains extend into northeastern Niger and southern Libya. The formation is about 300 miles (480 km) long and up to 175 miles (280 km) wide. The volcanic summit of Emi Koussi rises to 11,204 feet (3,415

  • Tibesti Mountains (mountains, Africa)

    Tibesti, part of the Mid-Sahara Rise of the central Sahara. Mostly in northwestern Chad, the mountains extend into northeastern Niger and southern Libya. The formation is about 300 miles (480 km) long and up to 175 miles (280 km) wide. The volcanic summit of Emi Koussi rises to 11,204 feet (3,415

  • Tibet (autonomous region, China)

    Tibet, historic region and autonomous region of China that is often called “the roof of the world.” It occupies a vast area of plateaus and mountains in Central Asia, including Mount Everest (Qomolangma [or Zhumulangma] Feng; Tibetan: Chomolungma). It is bordered by the Chinese provinces of Qinghai

  • Tibet Autonomous Region (autonomous region, China)

    Tibet, historic region and autonomous region of China that is often called “the roof of the world.” It occupies a vast area of plateaus and mountains in Central Asia, including Mount Everest (Qomolangma [or Zhumulangma] Feng; Tibetan: Chomolungma). It is bordered by the Chinese provinces of Qinghai

  • Tibet, Plateau of (plateau, China)

    Plateau of Tibet, vast high plateau of southwestern China. It encompasses all of the Tibet Autonomous Region and much of Qinghai province and extends into western Sichuan province and southern Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. The region lies between the Kunlun Mountains and its associated

  • Tibetan (people)

    Tibetan, people who inhabit Tibet or nearby regions and speak Tibetan. All Tibetans share the same language. It is highly stylized, with an honorific and an ordinary word for most terms of reference. The honorific expression is used when speaking to equals or superiors and the ordinary word when

  • Tibetan antelope (mammal)

    chiru, (Panthalops hodgsoni), a small, gregarious, graceful antelope-like mammal of the family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla) that lives on the high alpine steppes of the Tibetan Plateau. Males carry thin, long horns that curve slightly forward; females are hornless. On each side of the blunt muzzle

  • Tibetan bear (mammal)

    Asiatic black bear, (Ursus thibetanus), member of the bear family (Ursidae) found from southern Iran to the Himalayas, Southeast Asia, and parts of eastern Asia, including Japan. The Asiatic black bear is omnivorous, eating insects, fruit, nuts, bees and honey, small mammals, and birds as well as

  • Tibetan Book of the Dead, The (Tibetan Buddhist text)

    Bardo Thödol, in Tibetan Buddhism, a funerary text that is recited to ease the consciousness of a recently deceased person through death and assist it into a favourable rebirth. A central tenet of all schools of Buddhism is that attachment to and craving for worldly things spurs suffering and

  • Tibetan Buddhism

    Tibetan Buddhism, branch of Vajrayana (Tantric, or Esoteric) Buddhism that evolved from the 7th century ce in Tibet. It is based mainly on the rigorous intellectual disciplines of Madhyamika and Yogachara philosophy and utilizes the Tantric ritual practices that developed in Central Asia and

  • Tibetan calendar (chronology)

    Tibetan calendar, dating system based on a cycle of 60 Tibetan years, each of which usually has 354 days (12 cycles of the phases of the Moon). Adjustment to the solar year of about 365 days is made by intercalation of an extra month every three years. The 60-year cycle appears to be a 9th-century

  • Tibetan carpet

    Tibetan carpet, floor covering handwoven in Tibet and, more recently, by Tibetan refugees elsewhere. Before 1959, when thousands of refugees left the country after an abortive rebellion against China, the Tibetan carpet was essentially unknown in the West. During the 1960s, however, after the

  • Tibetan fox (mammal)

    fox: Classification: ferrilata (Tibetan fox) Short-eared short-tailed fox of the barren slopes and streambeds of Nepal; length to 70 cm, weight up to 4 kg or more; colour variable. V. pallida (pale fox) 1.5–3.5-kg fox inhabiting the Sahel savannas and southern desert margin of northern Africa; coat yellow…

  • Tibetan gazelle (mammal)

    gazelle: Asian gazelles: …are also called gazelles: the Tibetan gazelle (P. picticaudata), Przewalski’s gazelle (P. przewalskii), and the Mongolian gazelle (P. gutturosa). The last, with a population estimated at well over one million, may be the most numerous of all hoofed mammals.

  • Tibetan Highlands (plateau, China)

    Plateau of Tibet, vast high plateau of southwestern China. It encompasses all of the Tibet Autonomous Region and much of Qinghai province and extends into western Sichuan province and southern Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. The region lies between the Kunlun Mountains and its associated

  • Tibetan Himalayas (mountain range, Asia)

    Himalayas: Physical features: …Range (Great Himalayas); and the Tethys, or Tibetan, Himalayas. Farther north lie the Trans-Himalayas in Tibet proper. From west to east the Himalayas are divided broadly into three mountainous regions: western, central, and eastern.

  • Tibetan language

    Tibetan language, Tibetic (or Bodic) language belonging to the Tibeto-Burman group of the Sino-Tibetan language family; it is spoken in Tibet, Bhutan, Nepal, and in parts of northern India (including Sikkim). The language is usually divided by scholars into four dialect groups: Central, Southern,

  • Tibetan literature

    Tibetan literature, body of largely religious and occult writings that has developed since the 7th century, when Tibetan became a written language. Until the 13th century most Tibetan literary works were skillfully methodical translations from Sanskrit of Buddhist texts, on which Indian scholars

  • Tibetan macaque (primate)

    macaque: Species: Another short-tailed species is the Père David’s macaque (M. thibetana), which lives in mountain forests of southern China; it is sometimes called the Tibetan macaque but is not in fact found there. Often confused with the stump-tail, Père David’s macaque is in fact more closely related to the longer-tailed Assam…

  • Tibetan Peach Pie: A True Account of an Imaginative Life (memoir by Robbins)

    Tom Robbins: The memoir Tibetan Peach Pie: A True Account of an Imaginative Life was published in 2014.

  • Tibetan Plateau (plateau, China)

    Plateau of Tibet, vast high plateau of southwestern China. It encompasses all of the Tibet Autonomous Region and much of Qinghai province and extends into western Sichuan province and southern Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. The region lies between the Kunlun Mountains and its associated

  • Tibetan poppy (plant)

    Meconopsis: …blue poppy (Meconopsis baileyi), the Tibetan poppy (M. grandis), and the hybrid M. ‘Lingholm.’ The only European representative is the yellow-flowered Welsh poppy (M. cambrica).

  • Tibetan script (writing system)

    Indic writing systems: … scripts, from which derived the Tibetan and Khotanese systems. (Khotanese was also influenced by the Kharosthi script.) From the Tibetan script were derived the writing system of the Lepcha (Rong)—the aboriginal inhabitants of Sikkim, India—and the Passepa writing system of the Chinese Imperial chancery under the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368); the…

  • Tibetan terrier (breed of dog)

    Tibetan terrier, breed of nonsporting dog that originated in Tibet to aid shepherds. It was believed to bring luck to its owner. The name terrier was adopted in reference to the dog’s size; unlike other dogs called terriers it was not bred to dig for game. Its profuse double coat is very thick and

  • Tibetic languages

    Sino-Tibetan languages: Tibetic languages: The Tibetic (also called the Bodic, from Bod, the Tibetan name for Tibet) division comprises the Bodish-Himalayish, Kirantish, and Mirish language groups.

  • Tibeto-Burman (people)

    Himalayas: People of the Himalayas: >Tibeto-Burman, Austroasiatic, and Dravidian—the first two are well represented in the Himalayas. In ancient times, peoples speaking languages from both families mixed in varying proportions in different areas. Their distribution is the result of a long history of penetrations by Central Asian and Iranian groups…

  • Tibeto-Burman languages

    Tibeto-Burman languages, language group within the Sino-Tibetan family. In the early 21st century, Tibeto-Burman languages were spoken by approximately 57 million people; countries that had more than 1 million Tibeto-Burman speakers included Myanmar (Burma; about 29 million), China (some 17.2

  • Tibeto-Chinese languages

    Sino-Tibetan languages, group of languages that includes both the Chinese and the Tibeto-Burman languages. In terms of numbers of speakers, they constitute the world’s second largest language family (after Indo-European), including more than 300 languages and major dialects. In a wider sense,

  • Tibi Dam (dam, Spain)

    Tibi Dam, dam in the Valencia region of eastern Spain, across the Monnegre River. It was erected late in the 16th century and is still in use. Its builders apparently made no stress analysis, but the dam’s massiveness has kept it serviceable. It is 34 metres (110 feet) thick at the base, 28 metres

  • tibia (musical instrument)

    aulos, in ancient Greek music, a single- or double-reed pipe played in pairs (auloi) during the Classical period. After the Classical period, it was played singly. Under a variety of names it was the principal wind instrument of most ancient Middle Eastern peoples and lasted in Europe up to the

  • tibia (bone)

    tibia, inner and larger of the two bones of the lower leg in vertebrates—the other is the fibula. In humans the tibia forms the lower half of the knee joint above and the inner protuberance of the ankle below. The upper part consists of two fairly flat-topped prominences, or condyles, that

  • tibiae (musical instrument)

    aulos, in ancient Greek music, a single- or double-reed pipe played in pairs (auloi) during the Classical period. After the Classical period, it was played singly. Under a variety of names it was the principal wind instrument of most ancient Middle Eastern peoples and lasted in Europe up to the

  • tibial artery (anatomy)

    human cardiovascular system: The aorta and its principal branches: The posterior tibial artery is a direct continuation of the popliteal, passing down the lower leg to supply structures of the posterior portion of the leg and foot.

  • tibial nerve (anatomy)

    sciatic nerve: …knee it divides into the tibial and the common peroneal nerve, both of which serve the lower leg and foot.

  • tibial vein (anatomy)

    human cardiovascular system: Inferior vena cava and its tributaries: The anterior and posterior tibial veins originate in the foot and join at the level of the knee to form the popliteal vein; the latter becomes the femoral vein as it continues its extension through the thigh.

  • Tiboku Falls (waterfall, Guyana)

    Guyana: Resources and power: … on the Demerara River and Tiboku Falls on the Mazaruni. Development is hampered, however, by the remoteness of the falls and the large amounts of capital needed for generation and transmission facilities.

  • Tibouchina organensis (plant)

    Myrtales: Economic and ecological importance: Melastomataceae contains glory bush (Tibouchina organensis), with its striking purple to violet flowers and purple anthers, often cultivated outdoors in the southeastern United States and elsewhere in the warm tropics. Some of the more beautiful greenhouse plants of Melastomataceae are Medinilla magnifica, whose purple flowers are arranged…

  • Tibullus (Latin poem)

    Priapea: An example is Tibullus, an elegy of 84 lines, in which Priapus assumes the role of a professor of love (magister amoris) and instructs the poet Albius Tibullus on how best to secure the affection of the boy Marathus.

  • Tibullus, Albius (Roman poet)

    Albius Tibullus was a Roman poet, the second in the classical sequence of great Latin writers of elegiacs that begins with Cornelius Gallus and continues through Tibullus and Sextus Propertius to Ovid. Quintilian considered Tibullus to be the finest of them all. Apart from his own poems, the only

  • Tibur (Italy)

    Tivoli, town and episcopal see, Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy. It is picturesquely situated on the western slopes of the Sabine Hills, along the Aniene River where it enters the Campagna di Roma, just east of Rome. The site commanded the principal natural route eastward from Rome along the

  • tiburio (architecture)

    Donato Bramante: Lombard period: …and structural problems of the tiburio, or crossing tower, of the cathedral of Milan. From 1487 to 1490 a number of mutual exchanges can be documented. The only written evidence of Bramante’s ideas on architecture goes back to this time (1490) and consists of a report on the tiburio problem.…

  • Tiburon (novel by Tennant)

    Kylie Tennant: Her first book Tiburon (1935), set in a New South Wales country town, accurately and sensitively describes life among the unemployed during the Great Depression. For her novels set in the slums of Sydney—Foveaux (1939), Ride On, Stranger (1943), and Tell Morning This (1967)—Tennant lived in poor areas…

  • Tiburonia granrojo (invertebrate)

    jellyfish: and Chrysaora and the big red jellyfish, Tiburonia granrojo (subfamily Tiburoniinae), one of only three species of jellyfish that lack tentacles.

  • tic (muscle movement)

    tic, (from the 17th-century French tic or ticq, “a twitching”), sudden rapid, recurring contraction in a muscle or group of muscles, occurring more often in the upper parts of the body. The tic, which may be motor or vocal, is always brief, uncontrollable, and limited to one part of the body. It

  • tic douloureux (pathology)

    human nervous system: Trigeminal nerve (CN V or 5): Trigeminal neuralgia, or tic douloureux, is an intense pain originating mainly from areas supplied by sensory fibers of the maxillary and mandibular branches of this nerve.

  • tic polonga (reptile)

    Russell’s viper, (Daboia russelii), abundant, highly venomous terrestrial snake of the family Viperidae. It is found from India to Taiwan and Java, most often in open country. It is a major cause of snakebite deaths within its range because it often exists in farmlands where human contact and

  • Ticháček, Josef (Bohemian opera singer)

    Joseph Tichatschek was a Bohemian operatic tenor praised by composers such as Richard Wagner, Hector Berlioz, and Franz Liszt for the power and beauty of his voice. Tichatschek studied music with his father and sang in the choir of the Broumov Gymnasium as a child, and later, while studying

  • Tichatschek, Joseph (Bohemian opera singer)

    Joseph Tichatschek was a Bohemian operatic tenor praised by composers such as Richard Wagner, Hector Berlioz, and Franz Liszt for the power and beauty of his voice. Tichatschek studied music with his father and sang in the choir of the Broumov Gymnasium as a child, and later, while studying