• Bamum language

    Bamum: …West African people speaking a language that is often used as a lingua franca and belongs to the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo family. Their kingdom, with its capital at Foumban (q.v.) in the high western grasslands of Cameroon, is ruled over by a king (mfon) whose position is hereditary…

  • Bāmyān (Afghanistan)

    Bamiyan, town located in central Afghanistan. It lies about 80 miles (130 km) northwest of Kabul, the country’s capital, in the Bamiyan valley, at an elevation of 8,495 feet (2,590 meters). Bamiyan is first mentioned in 5th-century-ce Chinese sources and was visited by the Chinese Buddhist monks

  • ban (musical instrument)

    luogu: …thin plate), ling (handbells), and ban (woodblock) are sometimes added. Whatever the ensemble’s composition, the drummer is usually the leader.

  • ban (Hungarian official)

    ban, former Hungarian title denoting a governor of a military district (banat) and later designating a local representative of the Hungarian king in outlying possessions—e.g., Bosnia and Croatia. The etymology of the word ban has been contested. Some linguists argue that it was originally a Persian

  • ban (church discipline)

    The Protestant Heritage: Church discipline: …the established churches, and “the ban,” a form of excommunication, was used to enforce discipline by expelling members from the congregation of believers and the broader community. The ban was not merely punitive; brotherly admonition and discipline were to continue, with the hope that the wayward could be rescued.

  • bán (Hungarian official)

    ban, former Hungarian title denoting a governor of a military district (banat) and later designating a local representative of the Hungarian king in outlying possessions—e.g., Bosnia and Croatia. The etymology of the word ban has been contested. Some linguists argue that it was originally a Persian

  • Ban Biao (Chinese official)

    Ban Biao was an eminent Chinese official of the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) who is reported to have begun the famous Han shu (“Book of Han”), considered the Confucian historiographic model on which all later dynastic histories were patterned. Ban Biao intended the work to supplement the Shiji

  • Ban Chao (Chinese general)

    Ban Chao was a Chinese general and colonial administrator of the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) who reestablished Chinese control over Central Asia. The brother of the historian Ban Gu (32?–92), Ban Chao early tired of literary pursuits and turned to military affairs. In 73 he was dispatched with a

  • Ban Dainagon ekotoba (Japanese art)

    Japanese art: Calligraphy and painting: The Ban Dainagon ekotoba (“Story of the Courtier Ban Dainagon”) narrates the incidents surrounding the arson of a gate at the imperial palace in the mid-9th century. This work of the later 12th century is a masterful blend of technical styles. Movements of tension, suspense, thunderous…

  • Ban Don (Thailand)

    Surat Thani, city, southern Thailand, on the Malay Peninsula. Locally the city is called Ban Don. It is a port at the head of the Ta Pi River delta near the Gulf of Thailand and a station on the Bangkok-Singapore railway. The surrounding area is important for its production of tin, fish, rice, and

  • Ban Gu (Chinese historian)

    Ban Gu was a Chinese scholar-official of the Dong (Eastern), or Hou (Later), Han dynasty and one of China’s most noteworthy historians. His Han shu (translated as The History of the Former Han Dynasty) became the model most frequently used by later Chinese historians. Ban Gu was the son of Ban Biao

  • Ban Ki-Moon (South Korean statesman and secretary-general of the United Nations)

    Ban Ki-Moon is a South Korean diplomat and politician, who served as the eighth secretary-general (2007–16) of the United Nations (UN). At age 18 Ban won a competition that took him to the White House to meet U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy, a visit that Ban claimed inspired his public career. He

  • Ban Me Thuot (Vietnam)

    Buon Me Thuot, largest city in the central highlands of southern Vietnam. It lies at an elevation of 1,759 feet (536 metres) at the southern end of the Dac Lac Plateau, 55 miles (89 km) north-northwest of Da Lat. It has teacher-training and vocational schools, hospitals, and a commercial airport.

  • Ban on Love, The (opera by Wagner)

    Richard Wagner: Early life: …second opera, Das Liebesverbot (The Ban on Love), after Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, was a disaster.

  • Ban sheng yuan (novel by Zhang Ailing)

    Zhang Ailing: It was later republished as Half a Lifelong Romance (1966) and served as the basis for a film (1997) and a television series (2003).

  • ban sith (Celtic folklore)

    banshee, (“woman of the fairies”) supernatural being in Irish and other Celtic folklore whose mournful “keening,” or wailing screaming or lamentation, at night was believed to foretell the death of a member of the family of the person who heard the spirit. In Ireland banshees were believed to warn

  • Ban Zhao (Chinese scholar)

    Ban Zhao was a renowned Chinese scholar and historian of the Dong (Eastern) Han dynasty. The daughter of a prominent family, Ban Zhao married at age 14, but her husband died while she was still young. She never remarried, devoting herself instead to literature and the education of her son. Her

  • Ban, Shigeru (Japanese architect)

    Shigeru Ban is a Japanese architect who employs elements of both Japanese and American design in his projects and who is known for his pioneering use of cardboard tubes in building construction. In 2014 he was awarded the Pritzker Prize. In its citation the Pritzker jury noted his creatively

  • Bana (Indian writer)

    Bana was one of the greatest masters of Sanskrit prose, famed principally for his chronicle, Harshacharita (c. 640; “The Life of Harsha”), depicting the court and times of the Buddhist emperor Harsha (reigned c. 606–647) of northern India. Bana gives some autobiographical account of himself in the

  • Banaba (island, Kiribati)

    Banaba, coral and phosphate formation, part of Kiribati, in the west-central Pacific Ocean. It is located 250 miles (400 km) west of the nearest Gilbert Islands and has a circumference of about 6 miles (10 km). Banaba is the location of the highest point in Kiribati, reaching 285 feet (87 metres)

  • Banabakintu, Saint Luke (Ugandan saint)

    Martyrs of Uganda: Luke Banabakintu were martyred with them.

  • Banabhatta (Indian writer)

    Bana was one of the greatest masters of Sanskrit prose, famed principally for his chronicle, Harshacharita (c. 640; “The Life of Harsha”), depicting the court and times of the Buddhist emperor Harsha (reigned c. 606–647) of northern India. Bana gives some autobiographical account of himself in the

  • Banach space (mathematics)

    analysis: Functional analysis: …a Hilbert space and a Banach space, named after the German mathematician David Hilbert and the Polish mathematician Stefan Banach, respectively. Together they laid the foundations for what is now called functional analysis.

  • Banach, Stefan (Polish mathematician)

    Stefan Banach was a Polish mathematician who founded modern functional analysis and helped develop the theory of topological vector spaces. Banach was given the surname of his mother, who was identified as Katarzyna Banach on his birth certificate, and the first name of his father, Stefan Greczek.

  • Banach-Tarski paradox (mathematics)

    axiom of choice: …best-known of these is the Banach-Tarski paradox. This shows that for a solid sphere there exists (in the sense that the axioms assert the existence of sets) a decomposition into a finite number of pieces that can be reassembled to produce a sphere with twice the radius of the original…

  • banais righi (Celtic religion)

    Celtic religion: The impact of Christianity: …sovereignty: the sexual union, or banais ríghi (“wedding of kingship”), that constituted the core of the royal inauguration seems to have been purged from the ritual at an early date through ecclesiastical influence, but it remains at least implicit, and often quite explicit, for many centuries in the literary tradition.

  • Banana (Democratic Republic of the Congo)

    Banana, port on the Atlantic coast in far southwestern Democratic Republic of the Congo, central Africa, at the mouth of the Congo River. One of the nation’s older towns, it was known as a trading centre in the 19th century, mainly during the slaving era. In the 1970s and 1980s its port was

  • banana (fruit)

    banana, fruit of the genus Musa, of the family Musaceae, one of the most important fruit crops of the world. The banana is grown in the tropics, and, though it is most widely consumed in those regions, it is valued worldwide for its flavour, nutritional value, and availability throughout the year.

  • banana family (plant family)

    Musaceae, the banana family of plants (order Zingiberales), consisting of 2 genera, Musa and Ensete, with about 50 species native to Africa, Asia, and Australia. The common banana (M. sapientum) is a subspecies of the plantain (M. paradisiaca). Both are important food plants. The slender or conical

  • banana fish (fish)

    bonefish, (Albula vulpes), marine game fish of the family Albulidae (order Elopiformes). It inhabits shallow coastal and island waters in tropical seas and is admired by anglers for its speed and strength. Maximum length and weight are about 76 cm (30 inches) and 6.4 kg (14 pounds). The bonefish

  • Banana Massacre (massacre, Ciénaga, Colombia)

    Banana Massacre, the unprovoked killing of United Fruit Company workers and their supporters in Ciénaga, Magdalena department, Colombia, by federal troops under the command of Colombian Gen. Carlos Cortés Vargas on December 6, 1928. Estimates of the number of deaths range from fewer than 50 to more

  • banana order (plant order)

    Zingiberales, the ginger and banana order of flowering plants, consisting of 8 families, 92 genera, and more than 2,100 species. Members of Zingiberales are widely distributed in the tropics, particularly as shade plants in tropical regions. Several genera of the order are of major economic

  • banana republic (government)

    banana republic, derogatory term for a country that has an economy dependent solely on revenue from exporting a single product or commodity. As a result, such countries are typically controlled by foreign-owned companies or industries. Banana republics usually have a highly stratified socioeconomic

  • banana spider (arachnid)

    wandering spider: Brazilian wandering spiders: The Brazilian wandering spiders, Phoneutria fera and P. nigriventer, are sometimes also referred to as banana spiders because they are frequently found on banana leaves. They have an aggressive defense posture, in which they raise their front legs straight up into the air. Phoneutria are venomous,…

  • banana wilt (plant disease)

    Panama disease, a devastating disease of bananas caused by the soil-inhabiting fungus species Fusarium oxysporum forma specialis cubense. A form of fusarium wilt, Panama disease is widespread throughout the tropics and can be found wherever susceptible banana cultivars are grown. Notoriously

  • Bananal Island (island, Brazil)

    Bananal Island, island, Tocantins estado (state), central Brazil. The island is formed by the Araguaia River, which for 200 miles (320 km) divides into major (western) and minor (eastern) branches, with Bananal Island lying between them. The major branch of the Araguaia forms part of the boundary

  • Bananal, Ilha do (island, Brazil)

    Bananal Island, island, Tocantins estado (state), central Brazil. The island is formed by the Araguaia River, which for 200 miles (320 km) divides into major (western) and minor (eastern) branches, with Bananal Island lying between them. The major branch of the Araguaia forms part of the boundary

  • bananaquit (bird)

    bananaquit, (Coereba flaveola), bird of the West Indies (except Cuba) and southern Mexico to Argentina. It is sometimes placed with honeycreepers in the family Emberizidae (order Passeriformes); however, because of disagreements over its taxonomy, many authorities assign the bananaquit to its own

  • Bananas (film by Allen [1971])

    Woody Allen: The 1970s: Bananas (1971), the first of Allen’s directorial efforts for United Artists, starred him as a hapless, neurotic Manhattanite who is drawn into a revolution in a fictional Central American country. Though somewhat undisciplined, Bananas offered snatches of absurdist humour that rank among Allen’s funniest film…

  • Bananas, Joe (Italian-American criminal)

    Bonanno crime family: …appointments before his death was Joseph Bonanno (“Joe Bananas”), a young battle commander and enforcer who served under him. When Maranzano died, Bonanno took charge of the family that later came to bear his name. He remained in power for more than 30 years. Under his leadership, the family’s criminal…

  • Banaras (India)

    Varanasi, city, southeastern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is located on the left bank of the Ganges (Ganga) River and is one of the seven sacred cities of Hinduism. Pop. (2001) city, 1,091,918; urban agglom., 1,203,961; (2011) city, 1,198,491; urban agglom., 1,432,280. Varanasi is one of

  • Banaras Hindu University (university, Varanasi, India)

    India: The first partition of Bengal: …Malaviya (1861–1946) founded his private Banaras Hindu University in 1910.

  • Banaras, Second Treaty of (Great Britain-Oudh [1775])

    Treaties of Banaras: …is otherwise known as the Treaty of Faizabad. It was forced on the new vizier of Oudh by the company’s governing council after the death of Shujāʿ. The vizier had to pay a larger subsidy for the use of British troops and cede Banaras (now Varanasi) to the East India…

  • Banaras, Treaties of (British-Indian history)

    Treaties of Banaras, (1773 and 1775), two agreements regulating relations between the British government of Bengal and the ruler of the Muslim state of Oudh (Ayodhya). The defense of Oudh had been guaranteed in 1765 on the condition that the state’s ruler, Shujāʿ al-Dawlah, pay the cost of the

  • Banarjee, Bibhuti Bhusan (Bengali writer)

    Satyajit Ray: Early life: …the novel Pather Panchali by Bibhuti Bhushan Banarjee, the cinematic possibilities of which began to intrigue him. Ray had long been an avid filmgoer, and his deepening interest in the medium inspired his first attempts to write screenplays and his cofounding (1947) of the Calcutta Film Society. In 1949 Ray…

  • Banas River (river, India)

    Banas River, river in Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It rises near Kumbhalgarh and cuts its way tortuously through the Aravalli Range. It then flows in a northeasterly course onto the plains and joins the Chambal River, just north of Sheopur, after a course of 310 miles (500 km). The Banas is

  • Banat (historical region, Europe)

    Banat, ethnically mixed historic region of eastern Europe; it is bounded by Transylvania and Walachia in the east, by the Tisza River in the west, by the Mures River in the north, and by the Danube River in the south. After 1920 Banat was divided among the states of Romania, Yugoslavia, and

  • Banat Mountains (mountains, Europe)

    Romania: Relief: Among the massifs themselves, the Banat and Poiana Ruscăi mountains contain a rich variety of mineral resources and are the site of two of the country’s three largest metallurgical complexes, at Reșița and Hunedoara. The marble of Ruschița is well known. To the north lie the Apuseni Mountains, centred on…

  • Banat of Temesvár (historical region, Europe)

    Banat, ethnically mixed historic region of eastern Europe; it is bounded by Transylvania and Walachia in the east, by the Tisza River in the west, by the Mures River in the north, and by the Danube River in the south. After 1920 Banat was divided among the states of Romania, Yugoslavia, and

  • Banaue rice terraces (historical rice-terrace system, Luzon, Philippines)

    Banaue rice terraces, system of irrigated rice terraces in the mountains of north-central Luzon, Philippines, that were created more than 2,000 years ago by the Ifugao people. Although located in several villages, they are collectively known as the Banaue rice terraces. In 1995 various sections of

  • Banawali (archaeological site, India)

    India: Subsistence and technology: From Banawali and sites in the desiccated Sarasvati River valley came terra-cotta models of plows, supporting the earlier interpretation of the field pattern.

  • Banbalūnah (Spain)

    Pamplona, capital of both the provincia (province) and the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Navarra, northeastern Spain. It lies on the western bank of the Arga River in the fertile La Cuenca region. Situated in an irrigated cereal-producing area, Pamplona is a flourishing agricultural

  • Banbridge (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)

    Banbridge, town and former district (1973–2015) within the former County Down, now part of Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon district, southeastern Northern Ireland. Located on the River Bann, the town of Banbridge came into existence following the building of a stone bridge across the river in

  • Banbridge (former district, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)

    Banbridge: …roads connect the town of Banbridge with the towns of Lisburn to the north and Newry to the south.

  • Banbury (England, United Kingdom)

    Banbury, town (parish), Cherwell district, administrative and historic county of Oxfordshire, England. It lies along the River Cherwell and is the administrative centre for Cherwell district. For centuries Banbury was noted for its ale, cheese, and Banbury cakes, a spiced currant pastry. Part of

  • Banbury mixer (technology)

    plastic: Compounding: The Banbury mixer resembles a robust dough mixer in that two interrupted spiral rotors move in opposite directions at 30 to 40 rotations per minute. The shearing action is intense, and the power input can be as high as 1,200 kilowatts for a 250-kg (550-pound) batch…

  • Banc d’Arguin National Park (national park, Mauritania)

    Nouâdhibou: Also nearby is Banc d’Arguin National Park, which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1989. Pop. (2000) 72,337; (2005 est.) 94,700.

  • Banc One (bank)

    Bank One: and Banc One. Although the 1998 merger created one of the country’s largest banks, it performed poorly until Jamie Dimon, a former Citigroup executive, became chief executive officer and revamped operations. Based in Chicago, Bank One became a leading provider of personal banking services, business loans,…

  • Banca (island, Indonesia)

    Bangka, island, Bangka Belitung propinsi (or provinsi; province), Indonesia. The island is situated off the eastern coast of Sumatra across the Bangka Strait, which is only 9 miles (14 km) wide at its narrowest point. On the east, Gelasa Strait separates Bangka from Belitung island. The island has

  • Banca Romana (Italian bank)

    Italy: Domestic policies: The Banca Romana scandal of 1893 was the first of many famous Italian corruption scandals, and, like the others, it discredited the whole political system.

  • Banche Svizzere, Unione di (bank, Switzerland)

    Union Bank of Switzerland, former Swiss bank, one of the largest banks in Switzerland until its merger with the Swiss Bank Corporation in 1998. Headquarters were in Zürich. The bank was founded in 1912 in the merger of Bank in Winterthur (established 1862) and Toggenburger Bank (1863). It

  • Banchieri, Adriano (Italian composer)

    Adriano Banchieri was one of the principal composers of madrigal comedies, choral pieces that suggest plots and action to be imagined by the performers and listeners. He spent almost his whole life at the monastery of San Michele in Bosco, near Bologna, becoming abbot in 1620. Banchieri was second

  • Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (Spanish financial group)

    BBVA SA, Spanish financial group with its strength lying in the traditional business of retail banking, asset management, insurance, private banking, and wholesale banking. Headquarters are in Madrid. BBVA is the result of the 1999 merger of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya (BBV) and Banco Argentaria. BBV was

  • Banco Espirito Santo (bank, Portugal)

    Portugal: Sovereign debt crisis: …Portugal’s largest privately held bank, Banco Espírito Santo (BES), imploded in August 2014. Quick action by Portuguese officials restored calm, however; BES was nationalized, and its toxic assets were quarantined.

  • Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (international organization)

    Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), international organization founded in 1959 by 20 governments in North and South America to finance economic and social development in the Western Hemisphere. The largest charter subscribers were Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela, and the United States.

  • Banco National Park (national park, Côte d’Ivoire)

    Banco National Park, national park, southeastern Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast). It lies immediately north of Abidjan, the national capital. Declared a national park in 1953, Banco conserves both flora and fauna in some 116 square miles (300 square km). Tropical hardwood trees occupy most of the park;

  • Banco Santander Central Hispano, SA (Spanish company)

    Banco Santander, SA, leading financial group in Spain and one of the largest in Europe. It offers services in traditional commercial banking, private banking, investment banking, treasury, and asset management. Headquarters are in Madrid. BSCH was formed as a result of the 1999 merger of Banco

  • Banco Santander, SA (Spanish company)

    Banco Santander, SA, leading financial group in Spain and one of the largest in Europe. It offers services in traditional commercial banking, private banking, investment banking, treasury, and asset management. Headquarters are in Madrid. BSCH was formed as a result of the 1999 merger of Banco

  • Banco, El (Colombia)

    El Banco, city, northern Colombia, at the junction of the Magdalena and César rivers. The conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quezada arrived at the site in 1537 and found the Indian village of Sompallón; he called it Barbudo (“Bearded One”) because of its bearded chief. In 1544 Alonzo de San Martín

  • Banco, Parc National du (national park, Côte d’Ivoire)

    Banco National Park, national park, southeastern Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast). It lies immediately north of Abidjan, the national capital. Declared a national park in 1953, Banco conserves both flora and fauna in some 116 square miles (300 square km). Tropical hardwood trees occupy most of the park;

  • Bancroft (Zambia)

    Chililabombwe, mining town, north-central Zambia, east-central Africa. It is located just south of the international frontier with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The town lies at an elevation of 4,459 feet (1,360 metres) in Zambia’s rich highland copper belt. Chililabombwe is the northern

  • Bancroft (Ontario, Canada)

    Bancroft, town, Hastings county, in the highlands of southeastern Ontario, Canada. Bancroft lies 60 miles (95 km) northeast of Peterborough. It originated as a farming settlement called York River in 1855 but later became a lumbering community and was renamed in 1878 for Phoebe Bancroft, wife of

  • Bancroft, Ann (American explorer)

    Ann Bancroft is an American explorer who was the first woman to participate in and successfully finish several arduous expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic. Bancroft grew up in rural Minnesota in what she described as a family of risk takers. Although she struggled with a learning disability,

  • Bancroft, Anne (American actress)

    Anne Bancroft was an American actress whose half-century-long career was studded with renowned successes on stage, screen, and television. She won both a Tony Award and an Academy Award for best actress for one of her most physically and emotionally demanding roles, that of Helen Keller’s teacher,

  • Bancroft, Edward (British-American spy)

    Edward Bancroft was the secretary to the American commissioners in France during the American Revolution who spied for the British. Although he had no formal education, Bancroft assumed the title and style of “Doctor.” In 1769 he established his credentials as a scientist with the publication of

  • Bancroft, Effie Wilton (British actress)

    Sir Squire Bancroft: He married the theatre manager Marie Effie Wilton in 1867. At the Prince of Wales’s Theatre, they produced all the better-known comedies of Thomas William Robertson, among them Society (1865) and Caste (1867). These productions swept away the old crude methods of writing and staging. Later they produced new plays…

  • Bancroft, George (American historian)

    George Bancroft was an American historian whose comprehensive 10-volume study of the origins and development of the United States caused him to be referred to as the “father of American history.” Bancroft’s life presented a curious blend of scholarship and politics. Although he was educated at

  • Bancroft, George (American actor)

    John Cromwell: Early career: …was The Mighty (1929), starring George Bancroft; Cromwell played a small part in the film.

  • Bancroft, Hubert Howe (American historian)

    Hubert Howe Bancroft was a historian of the American West who collected and published 39 volumes on the history and peoples of western North America. His work remains one of the great sources of information on the West. Born into a sternly religious and hard-working family, Bancroft abandoned

  • Bancroft, Richard (archbishop of Canterbury)

    Richard Bancroft was the 74th archbishop of Canterbury (1604–10), notable for his stringent opposition to Puritanism, his defense of ecclesiastical hierarchy and tradition, and his efforts to ensure doctrinal and liturgical conformity among the clergy of the Church of England. He also played a

  • Bancroft, Sir Squire (British actor and manager)

    Sir Squire Bancroft was an English actor and manager whose espousal of careful craft in the writing and staging of plays did much to lay the foundations of modern theatrical production. Left fatherless at an early age, Bancroft was educated privately in England and France. He first appeared on the

  • Bancroft, Thomas Lane (Australian naturalist)

    dengue: Dengue through history: …the early 1900s Australian naturalist Thomas Lane Bancroft identified Aedes aegypti as a carrier of dengue fever and deduced that dengue was caused by an organism other than a bacterium or parasite. During World War II, dengue emerged in Southeast Asia and rapidly spread to other parts of the world,…

  • bancroftian filariasis (disease)

    filariasis: Types of filariasis: … is commonly used to designate Bancroftian filariasis, caused by Wuchereria bancrofti, organisms that are widely distributed in tropical and subtropical regions of the world and are transmitted to humans by mosquitoes, usually Culex quinquefasciatus (see also Culex mosquito). The nematode lives principally in the

  • band (kinship group)

    band, in anthropology, a notional type of human social organization consisting of a small number of people (usually no more than 30 to 50 persons in all) who form a fluid, egalitarian community and cooperate in activities such as subsistence, security, ritual, and care for children and elders. The

  • band (architecture)

    fascia, In architecture, a continuous flat band or molding parallel to the surface that it ornaments and either projecting from or slightly receding into it, as in the face of a Classical Greek or Roman entablature. Today the term refers to any flat, continuous band, such as that adjacent and

  • band (music)

    band, (from Middle French bande, “troop”), in music, an ensemble of musicians playing chiefly woodwind, brass, and percussion instruments, in contradistinction to an orchestra, which contains stringed instruments. Apart from this specific designation, the word band has wide vernacular application,

  • band (geology)

    Carboniferous Period: Pennsylvanian subsystem: …intervals, and marine horizons, called bands, are named either for their characteristic fossil occurrence (i.e., Listeri Marine Band) or for a geographic locality (i.e., Sutton Marine Band). This process is followed in most areas outside North America. Major Pennsylvanian coal fields occur throughout Europe, especially in the central Pennines (Lancashire…

  • band (collar)

    ruff, in dresswear, crimped or pleated collar or frill, usually wide and full, worn in Europe, especially from the mid-16th century into the 17th century, by both men and women. The beginnings of the ruff can be seen in the early years of the 16th century, when men allowed the top of the shirt to

  • band 3 (glycoprotein)

    blood group: Chemistry of the blood group substances: An abundant glycoprotein, band 3, contains ABO, Hh, and Ii antigens. Another integral membrane glycoprotein, glycophorin A, contains large numbers of sialic acid molecules and MN blood group structures; another, glycophorin B, contains Ss and U antigens.

  • Band Aid (musical group)

    Bob Geldof: …was marketed under the name Band Aid. It was the number-one Christmas hit that year and the best-selling British pop single for nearly 15 years. Over three million copies have been sold, with £0.96 (just over $1 in 2023) from each being donated to charity and all royalties going to…

  • band drive (mechanics)

    belt drive, in machinery, a pair of pulleys attached to usually parallel shafts and connected by an encircling flexible belt (band) that can serve to transmit and modify rotary motion from one shaft to the other. Most belt drives consist of flat leather, rubber, or fabric belts running on

  • band gap (physics)

    band gap, in solid-state physics, a range of energy levels within a given crystal that are impossible for an electron to possess. Generally, a material will have several band gaps throughout its band structure (the continuum of allowed and forbidden electron energy levels), with large band gaps

  • band machine (tool)

    saw: The vertical bandsaw blade is an endless narrow metal strip, with teeth along one edge, that runs around two large motorized pulleys or wheels that are mounted on a frame so that one is directly above the other. The blade passes through the table on which the…

  • Band of Angels (film by Walsh [1957])

    Raoul Walsh: Last films: In Band of Angels (1957) Gable and Walsh teamed again in a compromised version of Robert Penn Warren’s novel about the antebellum south. Dubbed “The Ghost of Gone with the Wind,” the film was a box-office failure. Walsh tackled his most-daunting literary source with The Naked…

  • Band of Brothers (American television miniseries)

    Ron Livingston: Band of Brothers, Sex and the City, and The Conjuring: … in the acclaimed HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, the account of a U.S. Army company during World War II; Livingston played Lewis Nixon. He was also cast as a district attorney in the sixth season (2001–02) of The Practice, a popular legal drama created by David E. Kelley. In 2002…

  • Band of Outsiders (film by Godard [1964])

    History of film: France: …1963; Bande à part [Band of Outsiders], 1964; Une Femme mariée [A Married Woman], 1964). With Masculin féminin (1966), Godard turned from narrative to cinema verité-style essay, and his later films became increasingly ideological and structurally random (Made in U.S.A., 1966; Deux ou trois choses que je sais d’elle…

  • band saw (tool)

    saw: The vertical bandsaw blade is an endless narrow metal strip, with teeth along one edge, that runs around two large motorized pulleys or wheels that are mounted on a frame so that one is directly above the other. The blade passes through the table on which the…

  • band spectrum (physics)

    spectrum: Band spectra is the name given to groups of lines so closely spaced that each group appears to be a band—e.g., nitrogen spectrum. Band spectra, or molecular spectra, are produced by molecules radiating their rotational or vibrational energies, or both simultaneously.

  • band theory (physics)

    band theory, in solid-state physics, theoretical model describing the states of electrons, in solid materials, that can have values of energy only within certain specific ranges. The behaviour of an electron in a solid (and hence its energy) is related to the behaviour of all other particles around

  • Band Wagon, The (film by Minnelli [1953])

    Fred Astaire: Later musicals: Easter Parade, Royal Wedding, and The Band Wagon: …films during this period was The Band Wagon (1953), often cited as one of the greatest of film musicals; it featured Astaire’s memorable duet with Cyd Charisse to the song “Dancing in the Dark.”