• alcohol consumption

    alcohol consumption, the drinking of beverages containing ethyl alcohol. Alcoholic beverages are consumed largely for their physiological and psychological effects, but they are often consumed within specific social contexts and may even be a part of religious practices. Because of the effects that

  • alcohol dehydrogenase (enzyme)

    alcohol consumption: Absorption through the stomach and intestines: …lower levels of the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), which breaks down alcohol prior to absorption.

  • alcohol intoxication (medical condition)

    alcohol poisoning, serious medical condition that results from intentional or accidental consumption of alcohol, generally in large quantities over a short period of time. Alcohol poisoning affects areas of the brain that regulate basic physiological functioning, including body temperature,

  • alcohol overdose (medical condition)

    alcohol poisoning, serious medical condition that results from intentional or accidental consumption of alcohol, generally in large quantities over a short period of time. Alcohol poisoning affects areas of the brain that regulate basic physiological functioning, including body temperature,

  • alcohol poisoning (medical condition)

    alcohol poisoning, serious medical condition that results from intentional or accidental consumption of alcohol, generally in large quantities over a short period of time. Alcohol poisoning affects areas of the brain that regulate basic physiological functioning, including body temperature,

  • alcohol, ethyl (chemical compound)

    ethanol, a member of a class of organic compounds that are given the general name alcohols; its molecular formula is C2H5OH. Ethanol is an important industrial chemical; it is used as a solvent, in the synthesis of other organic chemicals, and as an additive to automotive gasoline (forming a

  • alcohol-based hand sanitizer (cleansing agent)

    hand sanitizer: Types of hand sanitizers: Alcohol-based products typically contain between 60 and 95 percent alcohol, usually in the form of ethanol, isopropanol, or n-propanol.1,6 At those concentrations, alcohol immediately denatures proteins, effectively neutralizing certain types of microorganisms.2,4,6

  • alcohol-free hand sanitizer (cleansing agent)

    hand sanitizer: Types of hand sanitizers: 2,4,6 Alcohol-free products are generally based on disinfectants, such as benzalkonium chloride (BAC), or on antimicrobial agents, such as triclosan.1,6,7 The activity of disinfectants and antimicrobial agents is both immediate and persistent.1,3,8 Many hand sanitizers also contain emollients (e.g., glycerin) that soothe the

  • alcoholate (chemical compound)

    Thomas Graham: …salts and alcohol, the “alcoholates,” analogues of the hydrates. In his final paper he described palladium hydride, the first known instance of a solid compound formed from a metal and a gas.

  • alcoholic beverage

    alcoholic beverage, any fermented liquor, such as wine, beer, or distilled spirits, that contains ethyl alcohol, or ethanol (CH3CH2OH), as an intoxicating agent. A brief treatment of alcoholic beverages follows. For full treatment, see alcohol consumption. Alcoholic beverages are fermented from the

  • alcoholic hepatitis

    alcoholism: Chronic diseases: …including fatty liver disease and alcoholic hepatitis, as well as the risk of certain types of cancer, including head and neck cancer (e.g., oral cancer, pharyngeal cancer), esophageal cancer, liver cancer, breast cancer, and colorectal cancer.

  • Alcoholics Anonymous (organization)

    Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), voluntary fellowship of alcoholic persons who seek to get sober and remain sober through self-help and the help of other recovered alcoholics. Although general conventions meet periodically and Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., is headquartered in New York City,

  • alcoholism

    alcoholism, excessive and repetitive drinking of alcoholic beverages to the extent that the drinker repeatedly is harmed or harms others. The harm may be physical or mental; it may also be social, legal, or economic. Because such use is usually considered to be compulsive and under markedly

  • Alconedo, José Luis Rodríguez de (artist)

    Latin American art: Latin American themes: …by Rococo artists) self-portrait by José Luis Rodríguez de Alconedo from 1810. He depicted himself as a mestizo, with tousled hair and an open-necked shirt. His torso, in half-length, is turned in a different direction from his head, which looks spontaneously out at the viewer. This posture, in combination with…

  • Alcools (work by Apollinaire)

    Guillaume Apollinaire: But his poetic masterpiece was Alcools (1913; Eng. trans., 1964). In these poems he relived all his experiences and expressed them sometimes in alexandrines and regular stanzas, sometimes in short unrhymed lines, and always without punctuation.

  • Alcor (star)

    Alcor, star with apparent magnitude of 4.01. Alcor makes a visual double with the brighter star Mizar in the middle of the handle of the Big Dipper (Ursa Major). The two are 1.2 light-years apart and may be gravitationally bound to each other. Alcor itself is orbited by a faint red companion star.

  • Alcorn Agricultural and Mechanical College (university, Claiborne county, Mississippi, United States)

    Alcorn State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning near Lorman, Mississippi, U.S. It is a land-grant university consisting of schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, Education and Psychology, Nursing, and Agriculture and Applied Sciences. The historically black

  • Alcorn State University (university, Claiborne county, Mississippi, United States)

    Alcorn State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning near Lorman, Mississippi, U.S. It is a land-grant university consisting of schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, Education and Psychology, Nursing, and Agriculture and Applied Sciences. The historically black

  • Alcorn University (university, Claiborne county, Mississippi, United States)

    Alcorn State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning near Lorman, Mississippi, U.S. It is a land-grant university consisting of schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, Education and Psychology, Nursing, and Agriculture and Applied Sciences. The historically black

  • Alcorn, Al (American electronic game designer)

    electronic game: From chess to Spacewar! to Pong: In 1972 Bushnell, Dabney, and Al Alcorn, another Ampex alumnus, founded the Atari Corporation. Bushnell asked Alcorn to design a simple game based on Ping-Pong, explaining by way of inspiration that Atari had received a contract to make it. While there was in fact no such contract, Alcorn was adept…

  • Alcorta, José Figueroa (president of Argentina)

    Argentina: The rise of radicalism: …way to the presidency for José Figueroa Alcorta, a Cordoban who turned immediately to the task of destroying Roca’s political machine. In 1910 Alcorta installed as his successor Roque Sáenz Peña, a brilliant politician who was fully prepared to construct a governing coalition on new foundations.

  • Alcott, Amos Bronson (American philosopher and educator)

    Bronson Alcott was an American philosopher, teacher, reformer, and member of the New England Transcendentalist group. The self-educated son of a poor farmer, Alcott traveled in the South as a peddler before establishing a series of schools for children. His educational theories owed something to

  • Alcott, Amy (American golfer)

    golf: The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA): Jan Stephenson, Jo-Anne Carner, Amy Alcott, and Judy Rankin. The most notable player to emerge during the ’70s was Nancy Lopez, who, by winning nine tournaments (including a record five straight) during her first full season on the tour (1978), was a major force in increasing the popularity and…

  • Alcott, Bronson (American philosopher and educator)

    Bronson Alcott was an American philosopher, teacher, reformer, and member of the New England Transcendentalist group. The self-educated son of a poor farmer, Alcott traveled in the South as a peddler before establishing a series of schools for children. His educational theories owed something to

  • Alcott, Dylan (Australian basketball and tennis player)

    Dylan Alcott is an athlete who successfully competed in several Paralympic Games in the early 21st century in both basketball and tennis. The Paralympics, which are comparable to the Olympic Games, are a major international sports competition for athletes with disabilities. Alcott won numerous

  • Alcott, Dylan Martin (Australian basketball and tennis player)

    Dylan Alcott is an athlete who successfully competed in several Paralympic Games in the early 21st century in both basketball and tennis. The Paralympics, which are comparable to the Olympic Games, are a major international sports competition for athletes with disabilities. Alcott won numerous

  • Alcott, John (British cinematographer)

    Stanley Kubrick: Films of the 1970s of Stanley Kubrick: Perhaps not surprisingly, John Alcott won the award for best cinematography.

  • Alcott, Louisa May (American author)

    Louisa May Alcott was an American author known for her children’s books, especially the classic Little Women (1868–69). A daughter of the transcendentalist Bronson Alcott, Louisa spent most of her life in Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, where she grew up in the company of Ralph Waldo Emerson,

  • Alcoutim, Peace of (Portugal [1371])

    Portugal: Disputes with Castile: …invaded Portugal, and, by the Peace of Alcoutim (1371), Ferdinand was forced to renounce his claim and to promise to marry Henry’s daughter; however, he instead took a Portuguese wife, Leonor Teles, despite the fact that she was already married and against the wishes of the commoners of Lisbon. In…

  • alcove (architecture)

    alcove, recess opening off a room or other space enclosed by walls or hedges. In medieval architecture it was commonly used as a sleeping space off the main body of a drafty hall. The separation of the alcove from the main space was accomplished at first by means of curtains and later by timber

  • Alcoy (Spain)

    Alcoy, town, Alicante provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Valencia, southeastern Spain. It lies in rugged foothills at the confluence of the two headstreams of the Serpis River, north of Alicante city. The site was settled before Roman times, but the present

  • Alcoyll (Spain)

    Alcoy, town, Alicante provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Valencia, southeastern Spain. It lies in rugged foothills at the confluence of the two headstreams of the Serpis River, north of Alicante city. The site was settled before Roman times, but the present

  • Alcudia, Manuel de Godoy, duque de (prime minister of Spain)

    Manuel de Godoy was a Spanish royal favourite and twice prime minister, whose disastrous foreign policy contributed to a series of misfortunes and defeats that culminated in the abdication of King Charles IV and the occupation of Spain by the armies of Napoleon Bonaparte. Born into an old but poor

  • Alcuin (Anglo-Saxon scholar)

    Alcuin was an Anglo-Latin poet, educator, and cleric who, as head of the Palatine school established by Charlemagne at Aachen, introduced the traditions of Anglo-Saxon humanism into western Europe. He was the foremost scholar of the revival of learning known as the Carolingian Renaissance. He also

  • Alcune poesie di Ripano Eupilino (work by Parini)

    Giuseppe Parini: A volume of Arcadian verse, Alcune poesie di Ripano Eupilino (1752), brought him into literary circles; the following year he joined the prestigious Milanese Accademia dei Trasformati (“Academy of the Transformed”).

  • Alcyonacea (invertebrate order)

    cnidarian: Annotated classification: Order Alcyonacea Soft corals. Small to massive colonial forms. Lower parts of polyps fused into a fleshy mass; oral ends protrude. Internal skeleton of isolated calcareous spicules. Primarily tropical. Order Helioporacea (Coenothecalia) Blue coral. Massive lobed calcareous skeleton. Tropical; 1 Caribbean and 1 Indo-West Pacific species.…

  • Alcyonaria (subclass of cnidarians)

    cnidarian: Size range and diversity of structure: …of most hydroids, hydrocorals, and soft and hard corals, however, proliferate asexually into colonies, which can attain much greater size and longevity than their component polyps. Certain tropical sea anemones (class Anthozoa) may be a metre in diameter, and some temperate ones are nearly that tall. Anthozoans are long-lived, both…

  • Alcyone (poetry by D’Annunzio)

    Gabriele D’Annunzio: …third book in this series, Alcyone (1904), a re-creation of the smells, tastes, sounds, and experiences of a Tuscan summer, is considered by many his greatest poetic work.

  • Alcyone (Greek mythology)

    Pleiades: Taygete, Celaeno, Alcyone, Sterope, and Merope. They all had children by gods (except Merope, who married Sisyphus).

  • Alcyone (astronomy)

    Pleiades: …mythology the Seven Sisters (Alcyone, Maia, Electra, Merope, Taygete, Celaeno, and Sterope, names now assigned to individual stars), daughters of Atlas and Pleione, were changed into the stars. The heliacal (near dawn) rising of the Pleiades in spring of the Northern Hemisphere has marked

  • Alda, Alan (American actor, director, and screenwriter)

    Alan Alda is an American actor, director, and screenwriter best known for his role in the long-running television series M*A*S*H (1972–83). Alda was the son of actor Robert Alda (1914–86). He attended Fordham University before acting in such Broadway plays as The Apple Tree and The Owl and the

  • Aldabaran (eschatology)

    death: Judaism: …that of the “bone called Luz” (or Judenknöchlein, as it was to be called by early German anatomists). In his Glossa magna in Pentateuchum (ad 210), Rabbi Oshaia had affirmed that there was a bone in the human body, just below the 18th vertebra, that never died. It could not…

  • Aldabra giant tortoise (reptile)

    turtle: Habitats: The Aldabra giant tortoise (Geochelone gigantea) of the Indian Ocean has received modest protection, and, as a result, it has attained a total population of more than 100,000 according to some estimates, with densities in some areas of 30 to 160 individuals per hectare (12 to…

  • Aldabra Islands (atoll, Seychelles)

    Aldabra Islands, atoll, one of the world’s largest, in the Indian Ocean about 600 miles (1,000 km) southwest of the Seychelles group, and part of the Republic of Seychelles. The Aldabras, together with Farquhar and Desroches islands and the Chagos Archipelago, formed part of the British Indian

  • Aldactone A (drug)

    spironolactone, diuretic drug that is used primarily to treat conditions related to edema (fluid retention), hypertension (high blood pressure), and hormone imbalances. The therapeutic effects of spironolactone were first described in the late 1950s. In 1960 the drug was approved for the treatment

  • Aldan River (river, Russia)

    Aldan River, river in eastern Siberia, Russia. It rises in the Stanovoy Range and flows northwestward in a huge curve to join the Lena River at Batamay. The Aldan River is 1,412 miles (2,273 km) long, the second largest tributary (after the Vilyuy) of the Lena, and drains more than 281,500 square

  • Aldan Shield (geological region, Siberia, Russia)

    Arctic: Geology: …in north-central Siberia and the Aldan Shield is exposed in eastern Siberia.

  • Aldana, Thelma (Guatemalan jurist)

    Guatemala: Guatemala in the 21st century: …were part of Attorney General Thelma Aldana’s unprecedentedly aggressive investigation and prosecution of organized crime and government corruption. In July former army officer Byron Lima Oliva—who was imprisoned for the 1998 murder of Bishop Juan José Gerardi and who ran an organized criminal network that spanned the country’s prison system—…

  • Aldanov, Mark (Russian writer)

    Mark Aldanov was a Russian émigré writer best known for work bitterly critical of the Soviet system. In 1919 Aldanov emigrated to France, which he left for the United States in 1941, although six years later he returned to France. He wrote an essay on Lenin (1921); Deux révolutions (1921; “Two

  • Aldea perdida, La (work by Palacio Valdés)

    Armando Palacio Valdés: …picture of seafaring life, and La aldea perdida (1903; “The Lost Village”), on the destruction of rural life by civilization. His occasionally excessive sentimentality is mitigated by sincerity and humour.

  • Aldean, Jason (American musician)

    Kelly Clarkson: …Stay” (2010), a duet with Jason Aldean, she pursued an interest in country music that was previously made apparent on a 2007 version of “Because of You” that she recorded with Reba McEntire. After the holiday album Wrapped in Red (2013), Clarkson made Piece by Piece (2015), which was noted…

  • Aldebaran (star)

    Aldebaran, reddish giant star in the constellation Taurus. Aldebaran is one of the 15 brightest stars, with an apparent visual magnitude of 0.85. Its diameter is 44 times that of the Sun. It is accompanied by a very faint (13th magnitude) red companion star. Aldebaran lies 65 light-years from

  • Aldeburgh Festival (English music festival)

    Benjamin Britten: …undertaking gave rise to the Aldeburgh Festival (founded 1947), which became one of the most important English music festivals and the centre of Britten’s musical activities.

  • Aldecoa, Ignacio (Spanish novelist)

    Ignacio Aldecoa was a Spanish novelist whose work is noted for its local colour and careful composition. Aldecoa studied at the University of Madrid, became a newspaper writer, and from 1947 to 1956 was a broadcaster for the radio station Voice of the Falange. He published essays on politics,

  • aldehyde (chemical compound)

    aldehyde, any of a class of organic compounds in which a carbon atom shares a double bond with an oxygen atom, a single bond with a hydrogen atom, and a single bond with another atom or group of atoms (designated R in general chemical formulas and structure diagrams). The double bond between carbon

  • aldehyde condensation polymer (chemistry)

    aldehyde condensation polymer, any of a number of industrially produced polymeric substances (substances composed of extremely large molecules) that are built up in condensation reactions involving an aldehyde. In almost all cases the particular aldehyde employed is formaldehyde, a highly reactive

  • aldehyde dehydrogenase (enzyme)

    alcohol consumption: Processing in the liver: …acted upon by another enzyme, aldehyde dehydrogenase, and converted to acetate, most of which enters the bloodstream and is ultimately oxidized to carbon dioxide and water. Considerable utilizable energy—200 calories per ounce of alcohol (about 7.1 calories per gram)—is made available to the body during these processes, and in this…

  • aldehyde group (chemical compounds)

    carbohydrate: Classification and nomenclature: …group that is either an aldehyde group or a keto group, they are frequently referred to as aldopentoses or ketopentoses or aldohexoses or ketohexoses. The aldehyde group can occur at position 1 of an aldopentose, and the keto group can occur at a further position (e.g., 2) within a ketohexose.…

  • aldehyde oxidase (enzyme)

    alcohol consumption: Processing in the liver: …acted upon by another enzyme, aldehyde dehydrogenase, and converted to acetate, most of which enters the bloodstream and is ultimately oxidized to carbon dioxide and water. Considerable utilizable energy—200 calories per ounce of alcohol (about 7.1 calories per gram)—is made available to the body during these processes, and in this…

  • aldehydo group (chemical compounds)

    carbohydrate: Classification and nomenclature: …group that is either an aldehyde group or a keto group, they are frequently referred to as aldopentoses or ketopentoses or aldohexoses or ketohexoses. The aldehyde group can occur at position 1 of an aldopentose, and the keto group can occur at a further position (e.g., 2) within a ketohexose.…

  • aldeia (village)

    Brazil: Royal governors, Jesuits, and slaves: …the Jesuits settled them in aldeias (“villages”) that were akin to the missions in Spanish America. Most other Portuguese colonists owned Indian slaves, however, and resented the Jesuits’ control over such a valuable labour supply. A conflict arose between the two groups and reverberated throughout the colony, and both parties…

  • Alden, Cynthia May Westover (American social worker and journalist)

    Cynthia May Westover Alden was an American social worker and journalist whose energies in the latter half of her life focused on securing the welfare of blind infants and children. Cynthia Westover was reared largely by her father, a geologist, in western mining camps, and she could shoot a rifle

  • Alden, Isabella Macdonald (American author)

    Isabella Macdonald Alden was an American children’s author whose books achieved great popularity for the wholesome interest and variety of their situations and characters and the clearly moral but not sombre lessons of their plots. Isabella Macdonald was educated at home and at Oneida Seminary,

  • Alden, John (English colonist)

    John Alden and Priscilla Alden: John Alden was hired as a cooper by the London merchants who financed the expedition to the New World. Priscilla Mullins went to America with her parents and younger brother. The other three members of her family died during the terrible first winter of the…

  • Alden, John; and Alden, Priscilla (English colonists)

    John Alden and Priscilla Alden were Pilgrims who in 1620 immigrated to America on the Mayflower and took part in the founding of the Plymouth Colony, the first permanent English colony in New England. John Alden was hired as a cooper by the London merchants who financed the expedition to the New

  • Alden, Priscilla (English colonist)

    John Alden and Priscilla Alden: Priscilla Mullins went to America with her parents and younger brother. The other three members of her family died during the terrible first winter of the Plymouth Colony. Probably in 1623 she and John were married. They lived in Plymouth until about 1631, when they…

  • alder (plant)

    alder, (genus Alnus), genus of about 30 species of ornamental shrubs and trees in the birch family (Betulaceae). Alders are distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere and in parts of western South America on cool wet sites at elevations up to 2,500 metres (8,200 feet). An alder may be

  • alder buckthorn (shrub)

    alder buckthorn, (Rhamnus frangula), woody shrub or small tree, of the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), native to western Asia, Europe, and northern Africa. It has been introduced into North America and other regions, where it is often cultivated as an ornamental. The plant grows rapidly, reaching a

  • alder dogwood (shrub)

    alder buckthorn, (Rhamnus frangula), woody shrub or small tree, of the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), native to western Asia, Europe, and northern Africa. It has been introduced into North America and other regions, where it is often cultivated as an ornamental. The plant grows rapidly, reaching a

  • Alder, Kurt (German chemist)

    Kurt Alder was a German chemist who was the corecipient, with the German organic chemist Otto Diels, of the 1950 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their development of the Diels-Alder reaction, or diene synthesis, a widely used method of synthesizing cyclic organic compounds. Alder studied chemistry at

  • alder-leaf mountain mahogany (plant)

    mountain mahogany: Common species: …or alder-leaf, mountain mahogany (C. montanus) is a long-lived shrub common to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains and is often heavily browsed by elk and deer. One species, the rare Catalina mahogany (C. traskiae), consists of only a single population found on Santa Catalina Island off the coast…

  • Alderdice, Lord John (Northern Irish politician)

    Alliance Party of Northern Ireland: History: …Napier (1973–84), John Cushnahan (1984–87), Lord John Alderdice (1989–98), Sean Neeson (1998–2001), David Ford(2001–16), who served in the Northern Ireland Executive as justice minister from 2010 to 2016, and Naomi Long (2016– ).

  • alderfly (insect)

    alderfly, any insect of the megalopteran family Sialidae, characterized by long, filamentous antennae and two pairs of large wings (anterior wing length 20 to 50 mm [ 34 inch to 2 inches]), membranous and well-developed, with part of the hind wing folding like a fan. The adult alderfly is

  • alderman (government)

    alderman, member of the legislative body of a municipal corporation in England and the United States. In Anglo-Saxon England, ealdormen, or aldermen, were high-ranking officials of the crown who exercised judicial, administrative, or military functions. Earls, the governors of shires (counties),

  • Alderman, Edwin A. (American university president)

    University of Virginia: In 1904 Edwin A. Alderman was elected the first president; previously the chief administrative officer had been the chairman of the faculty. Under Alderman (1904–31), the university established its basic modern structure. The McIntire School of Commerce was established there in 1952 and the Center for Advanced…

  • Alderney (island, Channel Islands, English Channel)

    Alderney, one of the Channel Islands, in the English Channel, separated from the Normandy coast (Cap de la Hague) by the dangerously swift 10-mile (16-km) Race of Alderney. Swinge Race, on the west, separates it from the uninhabited Burhou, Ortac, and smaller islets, beyond which the notorious

  • Aldersgate Street Experience (life of John Wesley)

    John Wesley: On May 24, 1738, in Aldersgate Street, London, during a meeting composed largely of Moravians under the auspices of the Church of England, Wesley’s intellectual conviction was transformed into a personal experience while Luther’s preface to the commentary to the Letter of Paul to the Romans was being read.

  • Aldershot (England, United Kingdom)

    Rushmoor: …established at the town of Aldershot in 1854–55 is now the largest permanent military base in the country. Adjacent to Farnborough and lying to the north of the canal is the Royal Aircraft Establishment, which since 1906 has been the United Kingdom’s chief centre for scientific research and experimental development…

  • Alderson, Amelia (British novelist and poet)

    Amelia Opie was a British novelist and poet whose best work, Father and Daughter (1801), influenced the development of the 19th-century popular novel. Opie was the daughter of a physician. She had no formal schooling but moved in intellectual circles that included William Godwin, Mary

  • Alderson, Sandy (American baseball executive)

    sabermetrics: The rise of advanced statistics: …understudy to Athletics general manager Sandy Alderson, who had read James’s Baseball Abstract while constructing a roster that won three straight American League (AL) championships beginning in 1988. Alderson introduced Beane, an ex-player, to the Baseball Abstract in the mid-1990s. “[T]hat was the big moment,” Beane recalled, “when I figured…

  • Aldfrith (king of Northumbria)

    Aldfrith was the king of Northumbria (685–704) and patron of literature. An illegitimate son of Oswiu and the Irish princess Fína, he succeeded to the throne when his brother Ecgfrith was killed at the Battle of Nechtansmere. Educated for the priesthood, he stimulated the growth of scholarship in

  • Aldhelm (abbot of Malmesbury)

    Aldhelm was a West Saxon abbot of Malmesbury, the most learned teacher of 7th-century Wessex, a pioneer in the art of Latin verse among the Anglo-Saxons, and the author of numerous extant writings in Latin verse and prose. Aldhelm was trained in Latin and in Celtic-Irish scholarship by Malmesbury’s

  • Aldine Press (Italian publishing company)

    Aldus Manutius: …and organizer of the famous Aldine Press. Manutius produced the first printed editions of many of the Greek and Latin classics and is particularly associated with the production of small, excellently edited pocket-size books printed in inexpensive editions.

  • Aldington, Edward Godfree (English author)

    Richard Aldington was a poet, novelist, critic, and biographer who wrote searingly and sometimes irascibly of what he considered to be hypocrisy in modern industrialized civilization. Educated at Dover College and London University, Aldington early attracted attention through his volumes of Imagist

  • Aldington, Richard (English author)

    Richard Aldington was a poet, novelist, critic, and biographer who wrote searingly and sometimes irascibly of what he considered to be hypocrisy in modern industrialized civilization. Educated at Dover College and London University, Aldington early attracted attention through his volumes of Imagist

  • Aldiss, Brian W. (English author)

    Brian W. Aldiss was a prolific English author of science-fiction short stories and novels that display great range in style and approach. Aldiss served with the British army from 1943 to 1947, notably in Burma (Myanmar), and he went on to use these experiences in such autobiographical novels as The

  • Aldiss, Brian Wilson (English author)

    Brian W. Aldiss was a prolific English author of science-fiction short stories and novels that display great range in style and approach. Aldiss served with the British army from 1943 to 1947, notably in Burma (Myanmar), and he went on to use these experiences in such autobiographical novels as The

  • Aldo Manuzio il Giovane (Italian printer)

    Aldus Manutius the Younger was the last member of the Italian family of Manuzio to be active in the famous Aldine Press established by his grandfather Aldus Manutius the Elder. When only 14 years old, Aldus the Younger wrote a work on Latin spelling, “Orthographiae ratio.” While in Venice

  • Aldobrandini, Cinzio (Italian cardinal)

    Torquato Tasso: Composition of the Gerusalemme liberata.: …hospitality in Rome by Cardinal Cinzio Aldobrandini, a nephew of Pope Clement VIII. To this patron he dedicated a new version of his epic (Gerusalemme conquistata, published 1593), a poetic failure that reveals the extent of Tasso’s final submission to the moral and literary prejudices of the times. He wrote…

  • Aldobrandini, Ippolito (pope)

    Clement VIII was the pope from 1592 to 1605, the last pontiff to serve during the Counter-Reformation. The holder of numerous church offices, he was made cardinal in 1585 by Pope Sixtus V and elected pope as Clement VIII on Jan. 30, 1592. Between 1562 and 1598, France was afflicted with civil wars

  • aldol (chemical compound)

    aldehyde: Aldol reaction: Another important reaction of a carbon nucleophile with an aldehyde is the aldol reaction (also called aldol condensation), which takes place when any aldehyde possessing at least one α-hydrogen is treated with sodium hydroxide or sometimes with another base. The product of an…

  • aldol condensation (chemistry)

    acid–base reaction: Aldol condensation, base-catalyzed: Self-condensation of aldehydes, the so-called aldol condensation, occurs readily, when catalyzed by bases, to give β-hydroxy aldehydes. The prototype of this reaction is the conversion of acetaldehyde to β-hydroxybutyraldehyde, or aldol. The first step of this reaction is the production of an…

  • aldolase (enzyme)

    metabolism: The aldolase reaction: …phosphate)—the enzyme is commonly called aldolase. The two three-carbon fragments produced in step [4], dihydroxyacetone phosphate and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, are also called triose phosphates. They are readily converted to each other by a process [5] analogous to that in step [2]. The enzyme that catalyzes the interconversion [5] is triose…

  • Aldon Music (American company)

    The Brill Building: Assembly-Line Pop: …street at 1650 Broadway) was Aldon Music, founded by Al Nevins and Don Kirshner. Brill Building-era songwriting teams such as Gerry Goffin and Carole King, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, and Doc Pomus and

  • aldosterone (hormone)

    aldosterone, a steroid hormone secreted by the adrenal glands. Aldosterone serves as the principal regulator of the salt and water balance of the body and thus is categorized as a mineralocorticoid. It also has a small effect on the metabolism of fats, carbohydrates, and proteins. Aldosterone is

  • Aldous Huxley on the conquest of space

    Each year, The Great Ideas Today (1961–98), an Encyclopædia Britannica publication, focused on a topic or issue of prime importance during the year under review. In 1963 the topic selected was space exploration. The editors asked five thinkers, including the British author Aldous Huxley, best known

  • Aldred (Anglo-Saxon archbishop)

    Ealdred was an Anglo-Saxon archbishop of York from 1061, who played an important part in secular politics at the time of the Norman conquest and legitimized the rule of William the Conqueror (William I) by crowning him king on Christmas Day, 1066. Ealdred, originally a monk at Winchester, became

  • Aldrich Family, The (American television series)

    Television in the United States: Sitcoms: …sitcoms included Mama (CBS, 1949–57), The Aldrich Family (NBC, 1949–53), The Goldbergs (CBS/NBC/DuMont, 1949–56), Amos ’n’ Andy (CBS, 1951–53), and The Life of Riley (NBC, 1949–50 and 1953–58). (It is noteworthy that these last three shows featured—if not always respectfully—Jewish, African American, and lower-income characters, respectively. These groups would see…

  • Aldrich, Abby Greene (American philanthropist)

    John D. Rockefeller, Jr.: In 1901 Rockefeller married Abby Greene Aldrich (1874–1948), daughter of U.S. Senator Nelson W. Aldrich. As an art collector, she was instrumental in the founding of the Museum of Modern Art. They had six children—a daughter, Abby (1903–76), and five sons: John D. III, Nelson A., Laurance S., Winthrop,…

  • Aldrich, Bess Genevra Streeter (American author)

    Bess Genevra Streeter Aldrich was an American author whose prolific output of novels and short stories evoked the American Plains and the people who settled them. Bess Streeter graduated from Iowa State Teachers College (now the University of Northern Iowa) in 1901 and then taught school for five