• Bruniaceae (plant family)

    Bruniaceae, family of shrubby evergreen plants, comprising 12 genera native to southern Africa, many resembling heather in habit. Members of the family, which is unplaced in the Asterids II clade, have clusters of thin branches and small leaves. Brunia stokoei develops hairy red and white flowers

  • Bruniales (plant order)

    angiosperm: Annotated classification: Order Bruniales Families: Bruniaceae, Columelliaceae. Order Dipsacales Families: Adoxaceae, Caprifoliaceae (includes the former families Diervillaceae, Dipsacaceae, Linnaeaceae, Morinaceae, and Valerianaceae). Order

  • Brüning Museum (museum, Lambayeque, Peru)

    Brüning Museum, archaeological museum in Lambayeque, Peru, displaying objects and artifacts of Peru’s ancient civilizations. Upon opening in 1966, the Brüning Museum became northern Peru’s preeminent museum, specializing in Peru’s pre-Hispanic cultures. The museum was named for Hans Heinrich

  • Brüning National Archaeological Museum (museum, Lambayeque, Peru)

    Brüning Museum, archaeological museum in Lambayeque, Peru, displaying objects and artifacts of Peru’s ancient civilizations. Upon opening in 1966, the Brüning Museum became northern Peru’s preeminent museum, specializing in Peru’s pre-Hispanic cultures. The museum was named for Hans Heinrich

  • Brüning, Enrique (German engineer and ethnographer)

    Brüning Museum: The museum was named for Hans Heinrich (Enrique) Brüning, a German engineer and amateur ethnographer who lived in and studied the region in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Brüning’s photography, drawings, and cultural findings galvanized anthropological and archaeological study in the region. The museum displays items from Brüning’s…

  • Brüning, Hans Heinrich (German engineer and ethnographer)

    Brüning Museum: The museum was named for Hans Heinrich (Enrique) Brüning, a German engineer and amateur ethnographer who lived in and studied the region in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Brüning’s photography, drawings, and cultural findings galvanized anthropological and archaeological study in the region. The museum displays items from Brüning’s…

  • Brüning, Heinrich (German statesman)

    Heinrich Brüning was a conservative German statesman who was chancellor and foreign minister shortly before Adolf Hitler came to power (1930–32). Unable to solve his country’s economic problems, he hastened the drift toward rightist dictatorship by ignoring the Reichstag and governing by

  • Brunis, George (American musician)

    Chicago style: including Leon Rappolo, Paul Mares, George Brunis, and others), a white New Orleans band playing at Chicago’s Friar’s Society.

  • brunisolic soil (soil type)

    France: Soils of France: …of brown forest soils, or brown earths. These soils, which develop under deciduous forest cover in temperate climatic conditions, are of excellent agricultural value. Some climate-related variation can be detected within the French brown earth group; in the high-rainfall and somewhat cool conditions of northwestern France, carbonates and other minerals…

  • Brunist Day of Wrath, The (novel by Coover)

    Robert Coover: Books: His later novels include The Brunist Day of Wrath (2014), a sequel to The Origin of the Brunists, and Huck Out West (2017), which centers on Mark Twain’s classic fictional characters Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer. In 2021 Coover published Street Cop, a short novel with a dystopian theme,…

  • brunizem (soil)

    South America: Soils: …most important of those are brunizems (deep, dark-coloured prairie soils, developed from wind-deposited loess), chestnut soils, and ferruginous tropical soils. On the low coastal ranges, in the foothills of the western Andes, and on the nearby plains and terraces of Colombia and Ecuador, the soils consist mainly of red-yellow latosols,…

  • Brunkeberg, Battle of (Swedish history)

    Sweden: Political conflict: …defeated Christian’s troops in the Battle of Brunkeberg on the outskirts of Stockholm (1471). During Sten’s rule, Uppsala University was founded (1477). When Christian I died in 1481, the matter of the union again arose, and in 1483 John, Christian’s son, was accepted as king of Sweden; Sten, however, managed…

  • Brünn (Czech Republic)

    Brno, city, southeastern Czech Republic. It is the traditional capital of Moravia. Brno lies in the eastern foothills of the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands, at the confluence of the Svratka and Svitava rivers. North of Brno is the Moravian Karst, a region famous for its caves, grottoes, and gorges.

  • Brunn response

    hormone: Neurohypophysis and the polypeptide hormones of the hypothalamus: …arginine vasotocin evokes the so-called Brunn (water-balance) response; that is, water accumulates within the body as a result of a combination of increased water uptake through the skin and the wall of the bladder and decreased urinary output. This response, which also involves the uptake of sodium by the skin,…

  • Brunnen, Pact of (European history)

    Battle of Morgarten: …than a month later (Pact of Brunnen, Dec. 9, 1315). It was one of the first victories by dismounted commoners over armoured knights in many years and marked the beginning of the rise of the Swiss eidgenossen (“oath brothers”) as the most ferocious shock combatants in Europe. Because of…

  • Brunner glands

    small intestine: Secretions from Brunner glands, in the submucosa of the duodenum, function principally to protect the intestinal walls from gastric juices. Lieberkühn glands, occupying the mucous membrane, secrete digestive enzymes, provide outlet ports for Brunner glands, and produce cells that replace surface-membrane cells shed from the tips of…

  • Brunner, Emil (Swiss theologian)

    Emil Brunner was a Swiss theologian in the Reformed tradition who helped direct the course of modern Protestant theology. Ordained in the Swiss Reformed Church, Brunner served as a pastor at Obstalden, Switzerland, from 1916 to 1924. In 1924 he became professor of systematic and practical theology

  • Brunner, Heinrich Emil (Swiss theologian)

    Emil Brunner was a Swiss theologian in the Reformed tradition who helped direct the course of modern Protestant theology. Ordained in the Swiss Reformed Church, Brunner served as a pastor at Obstalden, Switzerland, from 1916 to 1924. In 1924 he became professor of systematic and practical theology

  • Brunner, John Tomlinson (German-British chemist)

    Ludwig Mond: In 1873 he and John Tomlinson Brunner founded the important chemical-manufacturing firm of Brunner, Mond and Company. They began on a large scale to make soda ash (sodium carbonate) by the newly developed Solvay process, a process that was significantly improved by Mond. In attempting to find ways of…

  • Brunner, Mond, and Company (British company)

    Ludwig Mond: …the important chemical-manufacturing firm of Brunner, Mond and Company. They began on a large scale to make soda ash (sodium carbonate) by the newly developed Solvay process, a process that was significantly improved by Mond. In attempting to find ways of obtaining ammonia from coal and coke, Mond also invented…

  • Brünnich’s guillemot (bird)

    murre: The thick-billed, or Brünnich’s, murre (U. lomvia), with a somewhat heavier beak, often nests farther north, to Ellesmere Island and other islands within the Arctic Circle, where the common murre is absent. There is some overlap in breeding grounds, however, and the two species nest in…

  • Brünnich’s murre (bird)

    murre: The thick-billed, or Brünnich’s, murre (U. lomvia), with a somewhat heavier beak, often nests farther north, to Ellesmere Island and other islands within the Arctic Circle, where the common murre is absent. There is some overlap in breeding grounds, however, and the two species nest in…

  • Brüno (fictional character)

    Sacha Baron Cohen: …homophobic, sexist Kazakh reporter, and Brüno, a gay Austrian fashion reporter. In 2001 both the show and Baron Cohen earned British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Awards. After making his film debut in Ali G Indahouse (2002), Baron Cohen sought new unwitting subjects, and in 2003–04 Da Ali…

  • Bruno of Carinthia (pope)

    Gregory V was the first German pope, whose pontificate from 996 to 999 was among the most turbulent in history. Grandson of the Holy Roman emperor Otto I the Great, he was the young cousin and chaplain to Otto III, who named him pope (consecrated May 3, 996). On May 21, 996, Gregory crowned Otto

  • Bruno of Cologne, Saint (German priest)

    Saint Bruno the Carthusian ; canonized 1514; feast day October 6) was the founder of the Carthusian order who was noted for his learning and for his sanctity. Ordained at Cologne, in 1057 Bruno was called to Reims, Fr., by Archbishop Gervase to become head of the cathedral school and overseer of

  • Bruno of Olomouc (Bohemian bishop)

    Ostrava: …as a fortified town by Bruno, bishop of Olomouc, to protect the entry to Moravia from the north. Its castle was demolished in 1495. Historic buildings include the 13th-century Church of St. Wenceslas and the Old Town Hall tower (1687). There are several theaters, including a fine opera house, a…

  • Bruno of Querfurt, Saint (Saxon bishop)

    Saint Bruno of Querfurt ; feast day June 19) was a missionary to the Prussians, bishop, and martyr. A member of the family of the counts of Querfurt, Bruno was educated at the cathedral school at Magdeburg, Saxony, and at the age of 20 he was attached to the clerical household of the Holy Roman

  • Bruno the Carthusian, Saint (German priest)

    Saint Bruno the Carthusian ; canonized 1514; feast day October 6) was the founder of the Carthusian order who was noted for his learning and for his sanctity. Ordained at Cologne, in 1057 Bruno was called to Reims, Fr., by Archbishop Gervase to become head of the cathedral school and overseer of

  • Bruno the Great, Saint (archbishop of Cologne)

    Saint Bruno the Great ; feast day October 11) was the archbishop of Cologne and coregent of the Holy Roman Empire. The youngest son of King Henry I the Fowler of Germany and St. Matilda, and brother of Emperor Otto I the Great, Bruno was educated at the cathedral school of Utrecht and the court

  • Bruno, Filippo (Italian philosopher)

    Giordano Bruno was an Italian philosopher, astronomer, mathematician, and occultist whose theories anticipated modern science. The most notable of these were his theories of the infinite universe and the multiplicity of worlds, in which he rejected the traditional geocentric (Earth-centred)

  • Bruno, Giordano (Italian philosopher)

    Giordano Bruno was an Italian philosopher, astronomer, mathematician, and occultist whose theories anticipated modern science. The most notable of these were his theories of the infinite universe and the multiplicity of worlds, in which he rejected the traditional geocentric (Earth-centred)

  • Brunonia (plant genus)

    Brunonia, a genus in the family Goodeniaceae, containing one species (Brunonia australis) native to Australia and Tasmania. Brunonia, commonly known as blue pincushion, is a perennial herb that grows 30 cm (1 foot) tall with spade-shaped leaves arranged in rosettes at the base of the stem. The

  • Brunonia australis (plant)

    Brunonia: Brunonia, commonly known as blue pincushion, is a perennial herb that grows 30 cm (1 foot) tall with spade-shaped leaves arranged in rosettes at the base of the stem. The plant produces heads of blue five-lobed flowers, and seeds are borne singly in small dry fruits.

  • Brunowski, Jan (Polish astronomer)

    Kepler’s Nova: Jan Brunowski, Johannes Kepler’s assistant, first observed the phenomenon in October 1604; Kepler studied it until early 1606, when the supernova was no longer visible to the unaided eye. At its greatest apparent magnitude (about -2.5), the exploding star was brighter than Jupiter. No stellar…

  • Brunoy, Hôtel de (building, Paris, France)

    Western architecture: France: … of about 1770 and the Hôtel de Brunoy of 1772 deserve mention. The former has a central facade featuring giant Ionic pilasters divided by sculptured panels and the latter a giant Ionic colonnade flanked by arcaded wings forming the three-sided court (cour d’honneur). Boullée’s project for a cenotaph to Sir…

  • Bruns, Axel (Australian media scholar)

    media convergence: Social media: Australian media scholar Axel Bruns referred to the rise of the “produser,” or the Internet user who is both a user and a creator of online content, while British author Charles Leadbeater discussed the “pro-am revolution” and “mass collaboration,” where the tools of content creation become cheaper and…

  • Brunschvicg, Léon (French philosopher)

    Léon Brunschvicg was a French Idealist philosopher who regarded mathematical judgment as the highest form of human thought. After cofounding the Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale (1893) and the Société Française de Philosophie (1901), Brunschvicg became professor of general philosophy in 1909 at

  • Brunson Harbor (Michigan, United States)

    Benton Harbor, city, Berrien county, southwestern Michigan, U.S. It lies on Lake Michigan near the mouth of the St. Joseph River, opposite its twin city of St. Joseph, 50 miles (80 km) west-southwest of Kalamazoo. Originally called Brunson Harbor and a part of St. Joseph, it was renamed for Thomas

  • Brunson, Jalen (American basketball player)

    Jalen Brunson is a star point guard for the New York Knicks of the NBA who is known for his strength and speed. Brunson played college basketball at Villanova, where he helped win NCAA national championships in 2016 and 2018. Brunson is the elder of two children born to Rick Brunson, an NBA player

  • Brunson, Jalen Marquis (American basketball player)

    Jalen Brunson is a star point guard for the New York Knicks of the NBA who is known for his strength and speed. Brunson played college basketball at Villanova, where he helped win NCAA national championships in 2016 and 2018. Brunson is the elder of two children born to Rick Brunson, an NBA player

  • Brunson, Quinta (American actress, writer, and producer)

    Quinta Brunson is an American actress, writer, and producer known for creating the comedy series Abbott Elementary (2021– ) on ABC, in which she stars as the dedicated, optimistic elementary school teacher Janine Teagues. Brunson, the fifth and youngest child of Norma Jean and Rick Brunson, grew up

  • Brunson, Rick (American basketball player and coach)

    Jalen Brunson: Early life and high school: …of two children born to Rick Brunson, an NBA player who later became an assistant coach with the New York Knicks, and Sandra Brunson, a former college volleyball player. The family lived in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and basketball was a major part of Brunson’s life from an early age.…

  • Brunswick (Maine, United States)

    Brunswick, town, Cumberland county, southwestern Maine, U.S., at the falls of the Androscoggin River, 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Portland. First known as Pejepscot, the town originated in 1628 as a trading post, but Indian hostility retarded its early development. Growth began with its

  • Brunswick (American editor and writer)

    Jeannette Leonard Gilder was an American editor and writer, a prolific and influential figure in popular journalism, particularly in the arts, in the latter half of the 19th century. Gilder grew up in Flushing, New York, and Bordentown, New Jersey. In 1864 she went to work to help support her large

  • Brunswick (historical duchy, Germany)

    Germany: Northern Germany: …northern Germany the dukes of Brunswick dissipated their strength by frequent divisions of their territory among heirs. Farther east the powerful duchy of Saxony was also split by partition between the Wittenberg and Lauenburg branches; the Wittenberg line was formally granted an electoral vote by the Golden Bull of 1356.…

  • Brunswick (Georgia, United States)

    Brunswick, city, seat (1777) of Glynn county, southeastern Georgia, U.S. It lies on St. Simons Sound and the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, about 75 miles (120 km) southwest of Savannah. Mark Carr, a friend of Georgia colony founder James Edward Oglethorpe, established a tobacco plantation in the

  • Brunswick (Germany)

    Braunschweig, city, Lower Saxony Land (state), northern Germany. It lies on the Oker River, some 40 miles (65 km) southeast of Hannover. Legend says that it was founded about 861 by Bruno, son of Duke Ludolf of Saxony, but it probably originated at a much later date. It was chartered and improved

  • Brunswick black (varnish)

    Brunswick black, quick-drying black varnish used for metal, particularly iron, stoves, fenders, and surfaces of indoor equipment. Because of its bitumen content, the coating is highly protective and the finish is attractive and reasonably durable. Melted bitumen, or natural asphalt, is dissolved in

  • Brunswick stew (food)

    stew: Two American stews deserve mention: Brunswick stew (originating in Brunswick County, Virginia) combines squirrel, rabbit—more commonly today, chicken—sweet corn, lima beans, tomatoes, okra, and onions; Kentucky’s burgoo is similar, adding beef and potatoes, carrots, turnips, and other vegetables.

  • Brunswick, Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of (Austrian commander)

    Battle of Valmy: …under the command of the Duke of Brunswick, invaded eastern France in August, capturing the fortress cities of Longwy and Verdun as a preliminary act to a march on Paris itself.

  • Brunswick, Ruth Jane Mack (American psychoanalyst)

    Ruth Jane Mack Brunswick was an American psychoanalyst, a student of Sigmund Freud whose work significantly explored and extended his theories. Ruth Mack graduated from Radcliffe College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1918 and, having been refused admission to Harvard Medical School because of her

  • Brunswick-Lüneburg, House of (German history)

    Hanover: …of territories of the Welf house of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Created in 1638 as the principality of Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen, it came to be named after its principal town, Hanover. Ernest Augustus I (1630–98), duke from 1680, united the principality with that of Lüneburg, marrying his son George Louis to Sophia Dorothea of Celle,…

  • Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Louis Ernest, duke of (German noble)

    William V: Duke Louis Ernest of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1718–88) acted as William’s guardian and gained such influence that when William was declared of age in 1766, he asked the duke to remain as his adviser. On Oct. 4, 1767, William married Wilhelmina of Prussia, sister of the future Frederick William II.

  • Brunswik, Egon (American psychologist)

    perception: Effects of perceptual assumptions: , and Egon Brunswik proposed that one perceives under the strong influence of his learned assumptions and inferences, these providing a context for evaluating sensory data (inputs). In keeping with enrichment theory, Brunswik and Ames contended that sensory stimuli alone inherently lack some of the information needed…

  • Brunt, Henry Van (American architect)

    Western architecture: United States: …Robert Ware and his partner Henry Van Brunt who were to become its most fashionable exponents. In 1859 Ware built St. John’s Chapel at the Episcopal Theological Seminary on Brattle Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts; six years later he and his partner started the First Church (Unitarian) in Boston, and in…

  • Brunton, Ann (American actress)

    Ann Brunton Merry was an Anglo-American actress, the leading tragedienne of her day. Ann Brunton grew up in London and in Norwich, where her father later managed the Theatre Royal. Under his management she made her stage debut in Bath in The Grecian Daughter (1785). Her subsequent highly successful

  • Brunton, Sir Thomas Lauder, 1st Baronet (British physician)

    Sir Thomas Lauder Brunton, 1st Baronet played a major role in establishing pharmacology as a rigorous science. He is best known for his discovery that amyl nitrite relieves the pain of angina pectoris. Brunton studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh and for three years abroad. He returned

  • Bruny Island (island, Tasmania, Australia)

    Bruny Island, island in the Tasman Sea, lying off the southeastern coast of Tasmania, Australia, from which it is separated by the D’Entrecasteaux Channel (west) and Storm Bay (northeast). With an area of 140 sq mi (362 sq km) the 35-mi- (55-km-) long island is divided into northern and southern

  • Brus Laguna (Honduras)

    Brus Laguna, town, northeastern Honduras. It lies in the coastal lowlands near the Sicre River, which empties into Brus Lagoon. Brus Laguna is the commercial centre for the large but sparsely populated department. Coconuts are gathered and livestock are raised in the vicinity; there is some

  • Brus, Louis (American chemist)

    Louis Brus is an American physical chemist who was awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in discovering and producing quantum dots, which are very small particles whose unusual quantum properties depend on their size. He shared the prize with Russian-born American physicist Alexei

  • Brusa (Turkey)

    Bursa, city, northwestern Turkey. It is situated along the northern foothills of Ulu Dağ (the ancient Mysian Olympus). Probably founded by a Bithynian king in the 3rd century bce, it prospered during Byzantine times after the emperor Justinian I (reigned 527–565 ce) built a palace there. The city

  • Brusati, Franco (Italian screenwriter and director)

    Anna Karina: …her last important film, director Franco Brusati’s Pane e cioccolata (Bread and Chocolate), though she continued to act into the 2000s.

  • Brusciotto, Giacinto (Italian missionary)

    Kongo language: …and Italian was produced by Giacinto Brusciotto, also an Italian; however, material proof of the dictionary does not exist. In 1652 a 7,000-word dictionary of Kongo was produced, and in 1659 Brusciotto wrote the first grammatical analysis of Kongo. Brusciotto’s work is still praised for its accurate understanding of the…

  • Bruselas (Costa Rica)

    Puntarenas, city and port, western Costa Rica. It is located on a long spit of land protruding into the Gulf of Nicoya of the Pacific Ocean and enclosing Estero Lagoon. First known as Bruselas, in colonial times it linked Costa Rican commerce with Panama and South America. A royal order of 1814

  • Brusewitz, Axel (Swedish political scientist)

    Axel Brusewitz was a leading Swedish political scientist who was known for authoritative studies of Swedish constitutional history and Swiss popular democracy. Brusewitz resettled in Sweden from Finland with his parents, who were Swedish, and, having studied at Uppsala University, became lecturer

  • Brusewitz, Axel Karl Adolf (Swedish political scientist)

    Axel Brusewitz was a leading Swedish political scientist who was known for authoritative studies of Swedish constitutional history and Swiss popular democracy. Brusewitz resettled in Sweden from Finland with his parents, who were Swedish, and, having studied at Uppsala University, became lecturer

  • brush (art)

    brush, device composed of natural or synthetic fibres set into a handle that is used for cleaning, grooming, polishing, writing, or painting. Brushes were used by man as early as the Paleolithic Period (began about 2,500,000 years ago) to apply pigment, as shown by the cave paintings of Altamira in

  • Brush Back (novel by Paretsky)

    Sara Paretsky: Brush Back (2015) saw Warshawski digging into a decades-old murder case at the behest of a high-school boyfriend. Later books in the series included Fallout (2017), Shell Game (2018), and Dead Land (2020).

  • brush border (anatomy)

    microvillus: …specialized plasma membranes known as brush borders, where they increase cell surface area and thereby facilitate the absorption of ingested food and water molecules. Other types of microvilli are involved in the detection of sound in the ear, where their movement, caused by sound waves, sends an electrical signal to…

  • brush drawing

    brush drawing, in the visual arts, technique in which a brush, usually round and pointed (in contrast to the flat and even-edged ones used for oil painting), is used to make drawings in ink or watercolour, although some artists (e.g., Degas) have used oil paint heavily diluted with turpentine. The

  • brush fire

    brush fire, fire in vegetation that is less than 1.8 metres (6 feet) tall, such as grasses, grains, brush, and saplings. See wildfire. Many grassland and scrubland ecosystems are specifically fire-adapted: the species of plants and animals native to those ecosystems are enhanced by or dependent on

  • brush turkey (bird)

    megapode: …of three kinds: scrub fowl; brush turkeys (not true turkeys); and mallee fowl, or lowan (Leipoa ocellata), which frequent the mallee, or scrub, vegetation of southern interior Australia. The mallee fowl, the best known of the group, is 65 cm (25.5 inches) long and has white-spotted, light brown plumage. The…

  • brush wallaby (marsupial)

    wallaby: …species of brush wallabies (genus Macropus, subgenus Protemnodon) are built like the big kangaroos but differ somewhat in dentition. Their head and body length is 45 to 105 cm (18 to 41 inches), and the tail is 33 to 75 cm long. A common species is the red-necked wallaby (M.…

  • brush wolf (mammal)

    coyote, (Canis latrans), New World member of the dog family (Canidae) that is smaller and more lightly built than the wolf (Canis lupus). The coyote, whose name is derived from the Aztec coyotl, is found from Alaska southward into Central America but especially on the Great Plains. Historically,

  • Brush, Charles Francis (American inventor and industrialist)

    Charles Francis Brush was a U.S. inventor and industrialist who devised an electric arc lamp and a generator that produced a variable voltage controlled by the load and a constant current. He installed his lamps in Wanamaker’s Department Store, Philadelphia, in 1878. The following year he installed

  • Brush, George de Forest (American painter)

    George de Forest Brush was an American painter noted for his penetrating representations of family groups. Brush was a pupil of Jean-Léon Gérôme in Paris and became a member of the National Academy of Design, New York, and of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. From 1883 onward he attracted

  • brush-footed butterfly (insect)

    brush-footed butterfly, (family Nymphalidae), any of a group of butterflies (order Lepidoptera) that are named for their characteristically reduced forelegs, which are frequently hairy and resemble brushes. The insects’ alternative name derives from the fact that there are only four functional, or

  • brush-furred rat (mammal)

    African spiny mouse: …forest mouse (Deomys ferrugineus), and brush-furred rats (genus Lophuromys).

  • brush-tailed bettong (marsupial)

    rat kangaroo: The brush-tailed bettong, or woylie (B. penicillata), has a similar crest, but the tail tip is not white; it is found in several small isolated pockets in Western Australia. The burrowing rat kangaroo, or boodie (B. lesueur), which has a thicker, non-crested tail, is the only member of the…

  • brush-tailed marsupial mouse (mammal)

    marsupial mouse: …marsupial mice, or tuans (Phascogale), are grayish above and whitish below in colour; the distal half of the long tail is thickly furred and resembles a bottle brush when the hairs are erected. Tuans are arboreal but may raid poultry yards. In both appearance and behaviour the flat-skulled marsupial…

  • brush-tailed porcupine (rodent)

    porcupine: Old World porcupines (family Hystricidae): Brush-tailed porcupines (genus Atherurus) move swiftly over the ground and can climb, jump, and swim. They sometimes congregate to rest and feed. Brush- and long-tailed species shelter in tree roots, hollow trunks, rocky crevices, termite mounds, caves, abandoned burrows, and eroded cavities along stream banks.

  • brushed slip (Japanese pottery technique)

    pottery: Korea: …Japanese technique, “brush” (hakeme), or brushed slip, is used in conjunction with painted decoration in the early part of the dynasty, but later it is used alone. Korean influence on Japanese pottery was probably at its strongest during the ascendancy of the Japanese warrior Hideyoshi (1536–98), who invaded Korea. It…

  • brushing (agriculture)

    agricultural technology: Frost: Brushing is a frost-protection technique in which shields of paper or aluminum foil are set up to reduce radiation loss to the sky; it has been used with fair success for tomato culture in California.

  • brushite (mineral)

    brushite, rare mineral, a hydrated calcium phosphate (CaHPO4·2H2O), that forms colourless to pale-yellow, transparent to translucent efflorescences or tiny crystals. It occurs in small quantities in many phosphate deposits, particularly as an incrustation on ancient bones and as a decomposition

  • brushtail possum (marsupial)

    marsupial: Paleontology and recent history: In Australia the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) is an example of a marsupial that has readily adapted to changing conditions brought about by people and is even plentiful in some urban centres. Its adaptability to different locales is attributed to its tolerance for a variety of food, including…

  • brushwork (art)

    brush, device composed of natural or synthetic fibres set into a handle that is used for cleaning, grooming, polishing, writing, or painting. Brushes were used by man as early as the Paleolithic Period (began about 2,500,000 years ago) to apply pigment, as shown by the cave paintings of Altamira in

  • Brushy Bill (American outlaw)

    Billy the Kid was an American outlaw who was one of the most notorious gunfighters of the American West. Although he claimed to have killed 21 men, the actual number is likely less than 10. At about age 21, Billy the Kid was gunned down by Sheriff Pat Garrett. Born on New York City’s East Side,

  • Brusilov Offensive (World War I [1916])

    Brusilov Offensive, the largest Russian assault during World War I, and one of the deadliest in history. It occurred from June 4 to August 10, 1916. Following several stinging defeats, including the Battle of Tannenberg, the Russians found a capable commander, General Aleksey Brusilov. Leading the

  • Brusilov, Aleksey Alekseyevich (Russian general)

    Aleksey Alekseyevich Brusilov was a Russian general distinguished for the “Brusilov breakthrough” on the Eastern Front against Austria-Hungary (June–August 1916), which aided Russia’s Western allies at a crucial time during World War I. Brusilov was educated in the Imperial Corps of Pages, and he

  • Brusoni, Girolami (Italian author)

    Italian literature: Poetry and prose: The Venetian novels of Girolamo Brusoni are still of interest, as are the travels of Pietro della Valle and the tales of the Neapolitan Giambattista Basile. All the restless energy of this period reached its climax in the work of Galileo, a scientist who laid the foundations of mathematical…

  • Brusque (Brazil)

    Santa Catarina: …cities of Blumenau, Joinvile, and Brusque. Many Italians immigrated after 1875, and Poles, Ukrainians, and Russians arrived in the 1880s. African slaves composed about 10 percent of the population in the 1870s; they were emancipated in 1888. Santa Catarina became a state of Brazil when, in 1889, a republic was…

  • Brussel (national capital, Belgium)

    Brussels, city, capital of Belgium. It is located in the valley of the Senne (Flemish: Zenne) River, a small tributary of the Schelde (French: Escaut). Greater Brussels is the country’s largest urban agglomeration. It consists of 19 communes, or municipalities, each with a large measure of

  • Brussel, James A. (American psychiatrist and criminologist)

    George Metesky: …Police’s crime lab turned to James A. Brussel, a private psychiatrist who had performed counterintelligence profiling work during World War II and the Korean War. Brussel developed an elaborate profile in December 1956 and predicted that the Mad Bomber was (1) a foreign-born male of eastern European descent; (2) between…

  • Brussels (national capital, Belgium)

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    Brussels Airlines, Belgian airline whose predecessor, SN Brussels Airlines, was formed in 2001 following the bankruptcy of SABENA (Société Anonyme Belge d’Exploitation de la Navigation Aérienne; Belgian Limited-Liability Company for the Development of Aerial Navigation). The airline serves cities

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    carriage of goods: Mixed-carrier transportation: …of the rules of the Brussels Convention of 1924 to goods carried under through bills of lading by rail and sea. The rules of the Warsaw Convention for carriage of goods by air apply always to the portion of air carriage and to that portion only, but the International Air…

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