- Bas Poitou (region, France)
Poitou: …of the Massif Armoricain and Bas (Low) Poitou about the periphery. The Vendée is a northern section of the region. Small farms predominate in the north; the population tends to be dispersed. The rural population in the south tends to cluster in small villages surrounded by open fields. The bourrine…
- Bas v. Tingy (law case)
Alfred Moore: Moore’s only opinion, Bas v. Tingy (1800), in which the court held that a “limited, partial war” existed with France, was welcomed by Federalists but criticized by Republicans. Moore retired in 1804 because of ill health.
- bas-relief (sculpture)
South Asian arts: Indian sculpture in the 2nd and 1st centuries bce: relief sculpture of western India: …earliest works are undoubtedly the bas-reliefs on a side wall of the porch of a small monastery at Bhaja. They are commonly interpreted as depicting the god Indra on his elephant and the sun god Surya on his chariot but are more probably illustrations of the adventures of the mythical…
- basal asterid (plant group)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Basal asterids Order Cornales Families: Cornaceae, Curtisiaceae, Grubbiaceae, Hydrangeaceae, Hydrostachyaceae, Loasaceae, Nyssaceae. Order Ericales
- basal body (biology)
protist: Features unique to protists: …with the basal bodies, or kinetosomes, of many ciliates and flagellates, and nonhomologous endoskeletal and exoskeletal structures have developed in many protists. Conspicuous food-storage bodies are often present, and pigment bodies apart from, or in addition to, chloroplasts are found in some species. In the cortex, just under the pellicle…
- basal cell carcinoma (pathology)
epithelioma: Common epitheliomas include basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma (cancerous epitheliomas are known as carcinomas), two types of skin cancer that involve the inner layers and scalelike outer cells of the skin, respectively; and parathyroid adenoma, a benign tumour of glandular tissue in the parathyroid gland that
- basal core eudicot (plant group)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Non-rosid, non-asterid core eudicots The following 6 orders. Order Berberidopsidales Families: Aextoxicaceae, Berberidopsidaceae. Order Caryophyllales Families: Achatocarpaceae,
- basal eudicot (plant group)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Basal eudicots The following 5 orders. Order Buxales Families: Buxaceae, Didymelaceae. Order Ceratophyllales Family: Ceratophyllaceae. Order
- basal ganglia (anatomy)
basal ganglia, group of nuclei (clusters of neurons) in the brain that are located deep beneath the cerebral cortex (the highly convoluted outer layer of the brain). The basal ganglia specialize in processing information on movement and in fine-tuning the activity of brain circuits that determine
- basal ganglia dysfunction (pathology)
basal ganglia: Basal ganglia dysfunction: Basal ganglia dysfunction leads to movement disorders and changes in behaviour. In some cases, degeneration of a specific population of neurons is the underlying pathology of neurological diseases. For example, a loss of more than 60 percent of dopamine neurons leads to…
- basal ganglion (anatomy)
basal ganglia, group of nuclei (clusters of neurons) in the brain that are located deep beneath the cerebral cortex (the highly convoluted outer layer of the brain). The basal ganglia specialize in processing information on movement and in fine-tuning the activity of brain circuits that determine
- basal ganglion disease (pathology)
basal ganglia: Basal ganglia dysfunction: Basal ganglia dysfunction leads to movement disorders and changes in behaviour. In some cases, degeneration of a specific population of neurons is the underlying pathology of neurological diseases. For example, a loss of more than 60 percent of dopamine neurons leads to…
- basal lamina (anatomy)
human cardiovascular system: The capillaries: A thin membrane, called a basement membrane, surrounds these cells and serves to maintain the integrity of the vessel.
- basal layer (anatomy)
epidermis: …layers of epidermis, the living basal layer, which is next to the dermis, and the external stratum corneum, or horny layer, which is composed of dead, keratin-filled cells that have migrated outward from the basal layer. The melanocytes, responsible for skin colour, are found in the basal cells. The epidermis…
- basal metabolic rate (bmr)
basal metabolic rate (bmr), index of the general level of activity of an individual’s body metabolism, determined by measuring his oxygen intake in the basal state—i.e., during absolute rest, but not sleep, 14 to 18 hours after eating. The higher the amount of oxygen consumed in a certain time
- basal nucleus (anatomy)
basal ganglia, group of nuclei (clusters of neurons) in the brain that are located deep beneath the cerebral cortex (the highly convoluted outer layer of the brain). The basal ganglia specialize in processing information on movement and in fine-tuning the activity of brain circuits that determine
- basal placentation (botany)
placenta: …central column bearing the ovules; basal, with ovules positioned on a low column at the base of the ovary; or laminar, with ovules scattered over the inner surfaces of carpels.
- basal plate (botany)
corm: …the base known as the basal plate. Corms store starches to fuel growth and to help plants survive unfavourable conditions, and many produce offshoots known as daughter corms or cormels that are used for vegetative reproduction. Typical corms are those of the crocus, gladiolus, and taro. The largest corm is…
- basal rot (plant disease)
basal rot, widespread plant disease caused by a variety of fungi and bacteria that can infect all flower and crop bulbs. Shoots fail to emerge or are stunted, leaves are yellow to reddish or purplish, and they later wilt and die. Roots, usually few, are discoloured and decayed. The rot often starts
- basal sliding (glacial process)
glacial landform: Glacial erosion: …slide on the bed (basal sliding) is inhibited by the adhesion of the basal ice to the frozen bed beneath. Basal sliding is also diminished by the greater rigidity of polar ice: this reduces the rate of creep, which, in turn, reduces the ability of the more rigid ice…
- basal till (geology)
glacial landform: Glacial deposition: …type of deposit is called lodgment till. By definition, till is any material laid down directly or reworked by a glacier. Typically, it is a mixture of rock fragments and boulders in a fine-grained sandy or muddy matrix (non-stratified drift). The exact composition of any particular till, however, depends on…
- basal transcription factor (biology)
transcription factor: Basal, or general, transcription factors are necessary for RNA polymerase to function at a site of transcription in eukaryotes. They are considered the most basic set of proteins needed to activate gene transcription, and they include a number of proteins, such as TFIIA (transcription factor…
- basalmost angiosperm (plant)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Basalmost angiosperms The first three groups listed below are those that appear at the base of the angiosperm tree, although the relationships among them are still somewhat unclear. Claims of having identified the “most basal” living angiosperm have been put forth and emended repeatedly, but…
- basalt (rock)
basalt, extrusive igneous (volcanic) rock that is low in silica content, dark in colour, and comparatively rich in iron and magnesium. Some basalts are quite glassy (tachylytes), and many are very fine-grained and compact. It is more usual, however, for them to exhibit porphyritic structure, with
- basalt ware (pottery)
basaltes ware, hard black vitreous stoneware, named after the volcanic rock basalt and manufactured by Josiah Wedgwood at Etruria, Staffordshire, Eng., from about 1768. Wedgwood’s black basaltes ware was an improvement on the stained earthenware known as “Egyptian black” made by other Staffordshire
- basaltes ware (pottery)
basaltes ware, hard black vitreous stoneware, named after the volcanic rock basalt and manufactured by Josiah Wedgwood at Etruria, Staffordshire, Eng., from about 1768. Wedgwood’s black basaltes ware was an improvement on the stained earthenware known as “Egyptian black” made by other Staffordshire
- basaltic eucrite (meteorite)
meteorite: Achondrites: …subdivided into cumulate eucrites and basaltic eucrites. Cumulate eucrites are like terrestrial gabbros in that they seem to have formed at depth in Vesta and crystallized quite slowly. By contrast, basaltic eucrites are similar to terrestrial basalts, apparently having formed at or near Vesta’s surface and cooled relatively fast. The…
- basaltic lava (geology)
lava: … (ferromagnesian, dark-coloured) lavas such as basalt characteristically form flows known by the Hawaiian names pahoehoe and aa (or a’a). Pahoehoe lava flows are characterized by smooth, gently undulating, or broadly hummocky surfaces. The liquid lava flowing beneath a thin, still-plastic crust drags and wrinkles it into tapestry-like folds and rolls…
- basaltic magma (geology)
igneous rock: Origin of magmas: Basaltic magmas that form the oceanic crust of Earth are generated in the asthenosphere at a depth of about 70 kilometres. The mantle rocks located at depths from about 70 to 200 kilometres are believed to exist at temperatures slightly above their melting point, and…
- Basanavičius, Jonas (Lithuanian physician)
Jonas Basanavičius was a physician, folklorist, and a leader of the Lithuanian national movement. In 1873 Basanavičius went to Moscow to study history and archaeology but after a year changed to medicine. He was graduated in 1879 and spent most of the next 25 years practicing medicine in Bulgaria.
- basanite (rock)
basanite, extrusive igneous rock that contains calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar (usually labradorite or bytownite), feldspathoid (usually nepheline or leucite), olivine, and pyroxene (titanaugite). Basanite grades into tephrite, which contains no olivine. In basanites and tephrites, the
- Basano, Manuel de Godoy Álvarez de Faria Ríos Sánchez Zarzosa, príncipe de la Paz y de, duque de Alcudia y de Succa (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
- Basant Panchami (Hindu festival)
Vasant Panchami, Hindu festival that celebrates the onset of spring in India. The term vasant means “spring” in Hindi, and since the festival is observed on the fifth day (panchami) of the season, it is named Vasant Panchami. The day is usually marked by people dressing in yellow and worshipping
- Basarab I (ruler of Walachia)
Walachia: Basarab I (reigned c. 1330–52) defeated the Hungarian king Charles Robert in 1330 and secured Walachian independence.
- Basarab, Matei (prince of Walachia)
Matthew Basarab was an enlightened prince of Walachia (in present Romania) whose reign (1632–54) was marked by cultural development and advances in government. A last scion of the ancient Basarab dynasty, Matthew spent much of his reign combating the designs of the rival prince of Moldavia, Basil
- Basarab, Matthew (prince of Walachia)
Matthew Basarab was an enlightened prince of Walachia (in present Romania) whose reign (1632–54) was marked by cultural development and advances in government. A last scion of the ancient Basarab dynasty, Matthew spent much of his reign combating the designs of the rival prince of Moldavia, Basil
- Basarab, Mihai (prince of Walachia)
Michael was a Romanian national hero, prince of Walachia, who briefly united much of the future national patrimony under his rule. Acceding to the princely throne of Walachia in 1593, Michael submitted in May 1595 to the suzerainty of the prince of Transylvania, Sigismund Báthory, in order to
- Basarabia (region, Eastern Europe)
Bessarabia, region in eastern Europe that passed successively, from the 15th to 20th century, to Moldavia, the Ottoman Empire, Russia, Romania, the Soviet Union, and Ukraine and Moldova. It is bounded by the Prut River on the west, the Dniester River on the north and east, the Black Sea on the
- Basari (people)
Senegal: Ethnic groups: …often wealthy landowners; and the Basari, an ancient people who are found in the rocky highlands of Fouta Djallon.
- Basarwa (people)
San, an indigenous people of southern Africa, related to the Khoekhoe (Khoikhoi). They live chiefly in Botswana, Namibia, and southeastern Angola. Bushmen is an Anglicization of boesman, the Dutch and Afrikaner name for them; saan (plural) or saa (singular) is the Nama word for “bush dweller(s),”
- Basāsīrī, Arslān al-Muẓaffar al- (Islamic military leader)
Arslān al-Muẓaffar al-Basāsīrī was an Islamic military leader. Al-Basāsīrī was born a Turkish slave, and his activities were first mentioned about 1025. At the time, the weakened ʿAbbāsid caliphs at Baghdad, who represented Sunnite Islām, were under continuous pressure from the Fāṭimid caliphs of
- Basava (Hindu religious leader)
Basava was a Hindu religious reformer, teacher, theologian, and administrator of the royal treasury of the Kalachuri-dynasty king Bijjala I (reigned 1156–67). Basava is the subject of the Basava-purana, one of the sacred texts of the Hindu Lingayat sect. According to South Indian oral tradition, he
- Basava-purana (Hindu text by Bhima Kavi)
Basava: …is the subject of the Basava-purana, one of the sacred texts of the Hindu Lingayat sect.
- Basavan (Mughal painter)
Basavan was an outstanding Mughal painter, renowned as a superb colourist and as a sensitive observer of human nature. His name indicates that he may have been a member of the Ahir, or cow-herding caste, in the region of modern Uttar Pradesh. He was most active between about 1580 and 1600, and his
- Basayev, Shamil (terrorist)
Beslan school attack: …by the notorious rebel warlord Shamil Basayev, who previously had been blamed for the takeover of a Moscow theatre in 2002 that ended in the deaths of some 130 hostages; the assassination of Akhmad Kadyrov, the pro-Moscow president of Chechnya, in May 2004; and countless other acts of terrorism and…
- Baščanska Ploča
Krk: …of Croatian influence, comes the Baška Tablet (Bašćanska Ploča), which was found on the island. It is a stone monument inscribed with Glagolitic script, one of the old Slav alphabets and a cornerstone of Croatian literary development. Ruled by Venice until 1797, Krk then passed to Austria, which held it…
- Basch, Karl Samuel Ritter von (Austrian physician)
sphygmomanometer: …in 1881 by Austrian physician Karl Samuel Ritter von Basch. Von Basch introduced the aneroid manometer, which uses a round dial that provides a pressure reading. The pressure is indicated by a needle, which is deflected by air from an inflation device (e.g., a diaphragm or Bourdon tube).
- Bascio, Matteo da (Italian friar and preacher)
Matteo (serafini) Da Bascio was the founder of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, commonly called Capuchins, the chief order of friars among the permanent offshoots of the Franciscans. After entering the Observant Franciscans about 1511 at Montefalcone, Matteo was ordained priest about 1520. Eager
- Bascom, Florence (American educator and scientist)
Florence Bascom was an educator and geological survey scientist who is considered to be the first American woman geologist. Bascom earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees at the University of Wisconsin, and she later received the first Ph.D. awarded to a woman at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
- Bascom, William R. (American anthropologist)
William R. Bascom was an American anthropologist who was one of the first to do extensive fieldwork in West Africa. He served as chairman (1956–57) of the anthropology department and acting director of African studies (1953, 1957) at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. After completing a period
- Bascom, William Russell (American anthropologist)
William R. Bascom was an American anthropologist who was one of the first to do extensive fieldwork in West Africa. He served as chairman (1956–57) of the anthropology department and acting director of African studies (1953, 1957) at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. After completing a period
- bascule bridge (engineering)
movable bridge: >drawbridge, or bascule, is the best known; it may be single- or double-leafed. It originated in medieval Europe, probably Normandy, as a defensive feature of castles and towns. It was operated by a counterweight and winch. The drawbridge that formed one span of Old London…
- base (gem)
brilliant cut: …girdle and those of the pavilion (below the girdle) an angle of 41°, the maximum amount of light entering the crown will be reflected back through the crown by the pavilion, and the diamond will possess its maximum brilliance and a high degree of fire.
- base (agricultural technology)
agricultural technology: Primary tillage equipment: …the soil is called the bottom or base; it is composed of the share, the landside, and the moldboard.
- base (transistor terminal)
semiconductor device: Bipolar transistors: …central n region is the base, and the p region is the collector. The circuit arrangement in Figure 4B is known as a common-base configuration. The arrows indicate the directions of current flow under normal operating conditions—namely, the emitter-base junction is forward-biased and the base-collector junction is reverse-biased. The complementary…
- base (number systems)
base, in mathematics, an arbitrarily chosen whole number greater than 1 in terms of which any number can be expressed as a sum of that base raised to various powers. The decimal number system that is commonly used expresses all numbers in base 10. For example, 354.76 = (3 × 102) + (5 × 101) + (4 ×
- base (nucleic acid)
nucleic acid: Basic structure: …four of five possible nitrogen-containing bases: adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), thymine (T), and uracil (U). A and G are categorized as purines, and C, T, and U are collectively called
- base (chemical compound)
base, in chemistry, any substance that in water solution is slippery to the touch, tastes bitter, changes the colour of indicators (e.g., turns red litmus paper blue), reacts with acids to form salts, and promotes certain chemical reactions (base catalysis). Examples of bases are the hydroxides of
- base (baseball)
baseball: Play of the game: …diamond, which has four white bases, one on each corner. The bases are 90 feet (27.4 meters) apart.
- base (architecture)
order: …the lowest part of the base. Atop the plinth and forming the remainder of the base are one or more circular moldings that have varying profiles; these may include a torus (a convex molding that is semicircular in profile), a scotia (with a concave profile), and one or more fillets,…
- base (game)
prisoner’s base, children’s game in which players of one team seek to tag and imprison players of the other team who venture out of their home territory, or base. Under the name of barres, this game is mentioned in 14th-century French writings and may have been one of the most popular games in
- base community (Latin American group)
liberation theology: History: …build this church, they established communidades de base, (“base communities”), which were local Christian groups, composed of 10 to 30 members each, that studied the Bible and attempted to meet their parishioners’ immediate needs for food, water, sewage disposal, and electricity. A great number of base communities, led mostly by…
- base course (pavement)
road: Pavement: The base course provides the required supplement to the strength, stiffness, and durability of the natural formation. Its thickness ranges from 4 inches (10 cm) for very light traffic and a good natural formation to more than 40 inches (100 cm) for heavy traffic and a…
- base excision repair (biochemistry)
base excision repair, pathway by which cells repair damaged DNA during DNA replication. Base excision repair helps ensure that mutations are not incorporated into DNA as it is copied. Single bases of DNA (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine) are susceptible to damage by spontaneous alkylation
- base flow
runoff: …entirely of groundwater is termed base flow, or fair-weather runoff, and it occurs where a stream channel intersects the water table.
- base level (hydrology)
baselevel, in hydrology and geomorphology, limit below which a stream cannot erode. Upon entering a still body of water, a stream’s velocity is checked and thus it loses its eroding power; hence, the approximate level of the surface of the still water body is the stream’s baselevel. If a stream
- base metal
automotive ceramics: Catalytic converter substrates: …are either platinum-group metals or base metals such as chromium, nickel, and copper. In base-metal catalysts the active surfaces are actually ceramic oxides of the metals. Because platinum metals are extremely expensive, they are deposited on ceramic catalyst supports as salts and then reduced to finely divided metal particles.
- base of a number (number systems)
base, in mathematics, an arbitrarily chosen whole number greater than 1 in terms of which any number can be expressed as a sum of that base raised to various powers. The decimal number system that is commonly used expresses all numbers in base 10. For example, 354.76 = (3 × 102) + (5 × 101) + (4 ×
- base of the pyramid (economics)
bottom of the pyramid (BOP), term in economics that refers to the poorest two-thirds of the economic human pyramid, a group of more than four billion people living in abject poverty. More broadly, BOP refers to a market-based model of economic development that promises to simultaneously alleviate
- base on balls (baseball)
Rickey Henderson: …Babe Ruth’s lifetime record for bases on balls (walks). When Ruth retired from baseball in 1935, he had 2,062 bases on balls, a testament to his ability to judge pitches and intimidate pitchers, and it was thought that the record would never be broken. Ted Williams (with 2,019) had been…
- base pair (molecular biology)
base pair, in molecular biology, two complementary nitrogenous molecules that are connected by hydrogen bonds. Base pairs are found in double-stranded DNA and RNA, where the bonds between them connect the two strands, making the double-stranded structures possible. Base pairs themselves are formed
- base peak (mass spectrometry)
chemical compound: Mass spectrometry: …spectrum is known as the base peak, and its intensity is arbitrarily set at a value of 100. The peak at m/z= 72 is the molecular ion and as such gives the molecular mass of the molecule. In high-resolution mass spectrometry, the mass of the molecular ion can be measured…
- base stealing (baseball)
baseball: Advancing base runners and scoring: …plays in baseball is the stolen base. A base runner may advance at his own risk on the bases at any time the ball is in play by stealing a base. To steal a base, a batter will take a “lead”—that is, advance a few steps off the base and…
- base substitution (genetics)
point mutation, change within a gene in which one base pair in the DNA sequence is altered. Point mutations are frequently the result of mistakes made during DNA replication, although modification of DNA, such as through exposure to X-rays or to ultraviolet radiation, also can induce point
- base-10 number system (numeral system)
decimal system, in mathematics, positional numeral system employing 10 as the base and requiring 10 different numerals, the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. It also requires a dot (decimal point) to represent decimal fractions. In this scheme, the numerals used in denoting a number take
- base-12 number system (mathematics)
numerals and numeral systems: Number bases: …is otherwise combined with the duodecimal, or base 12, system.
- base-2 number system (mathematics)
binary number system, in mathematics, positional numeral system employing 2 as the base and so requiring only two different symbols for its digits, 0 and 1, instead of the usual 10 different symbols needed in the decimal system. The numbers from 0 to 10 are thus in binary 0, 1, 10, 11, 100, 101,
- base-20 number system (mathematics)
numerals and numeral systems: Number bases: …with the decimal or the vigesimal system, where the base is 20. Similarly, the pure base six scale seems to occur only sparsely in northwest Africa and is otherwise combined with the duodecimal, or base 12, system.
- base-5 number system (mathematics)
numerals and numeral systems: Number bases: The quinary scale, or number system with base five, is very old, but in pure form it seems to be used at present only by speakers of Saraveca, a South American Arawakan language; elsewhere it is combined with the decimal or the vigesimal system, where the…
- base-60 number system (mathematics)
mathematics: The numeral system and arithmetic operations: …the base of 60 (sexagesimal). The reasons for the choice of 60 are obscure, but one good mathematical reason might have been the existence of so many divisors (2, 3, 4, and 5, and some multiples) of the base, which would have greatly facilitated the operation of division. For…
- base-pair substitution (genetics)
mutation: …to single base pairs, called base-pair substitutions. Many of these substitute an incorrect amino acid in the corresponding position in the encoded protein, and of these a large proportion result in altered protein function. Some base-pair substitutions produce a stop codon. Normally, when a stop codon occurs at the end…
- Baseball (film by Burns)
Doris Kearns Goodwin: …consultant for Ken Burns’s documentary Baseball (1994).
- baseball (sport)
baseball, game played with a bat, a ball, and gloves between two teams of nine players each on a field with four white bases laid out in a diamond (i.e., a square oriented so that its diagonal line is vertical). Teams alternate positions as batters (offense) and fielders (defense), exchanging
- baseball (billiards)
baseball, pocket-billiards game, named for the similarity in its scoring system to the American game played with bat and ball, in which players attempt to score runs by pocketing 21 consecutively numbered object balls, the number of runs scored corresponding to the total of the numbers on the balls
- baseball (ball)
baseball: The ball and bat: The ball has a cork-and-rubber core, around which yarn is tightly wrapped; the cover consists of two snugly fitted pieces of white leather sewn together. The circumference is 9 to 9.25 inches (23 to 23.5 cm) and the weight between 5 and 5.25 ounces (142 and…
- Baseball Abstract (work by James)
sabermetrics: Bill James and the advent of sabermetrics: …1977 James self-published his first Baseball Abstract, which was filled with original studies based on information James had gleaned from The Baseball Encyclopedia and box scores in The Sporting News. A few years later a profile of James in Sports Illustrated made him famous, and in 1982 the first mass-marketed…
- Baseball and Lesser Sports (essays by Sheed)
Wilfrid Sheed: …Essays in Disguise (1990), and Baseball and Lesser Sports (1991). In 1995 Sheed published In Love with Daylight: A Memoir of Recovery, about his battle with alcoholism and cancer of the tongue and his disappointment with the professionals who treated him. His last work, the best-selling The House That George…
- baseball bat (sports)
baseball: The ball and bat: The bat is a smooth rounded stick of solid or laminated wood, not longer than 42 inches (107 cm) or thicker at the barrel end than 2.75 inches (7 cm), tapering to the handle end. (Usually, however, in major league baseball, players prefer a bat no…
- baseball diamond (baseball)
baseball: Play of the game: …a square area called the diamond, which has four white bases, one on each corner. The bases are 90 feet (27.4 meters) apart.
- Baseball Encyclopedia, The (sports reference work)
sabermetrics: Early analytic efforts: In 1969 The Baseball Encyclopedia, the first comprehensive compendium of major-league baseball statistics that reached all the way back to 1871, was published. An immediate sensation, The Baseball Encyclopedia—or “Big Mac,” as aficionados called it in honour of its publisher, Macmillan—was not really sabermetrics, but countless inspired…
- baseball field (baseball)
baseball: Play of the game: …a square area called the diamond, which has four white bases, one on each corner. The bases are 90 feet (27.4 meters) apart.
- baseball glove (sport equipment)
baseball: Gloves: Baseball was originally played bare-handed. Beginning in 1860, catchers, who attempt to catch every pitch not hit, became the first to adopt gloves. First basemen, who take many throws for putouts from the infielders, soon followed, and finally all players adopted gloves. All gloves…
- Baseball Hall of Fame (museum, Cooperstown, New York, United States)
Baseball Hall of Fame, museum and honorary society, Cooperstown, New York, U.S. The origins of the hall can be traced to 1935, when plans were first put forward for the 1939 celebration of the supposed centennial of baseball (it was then believed that the American army officer Abner Doubleday had
- baseball mitt (sport equipment)
baseball: Gloves: Baseball was originally played bare-handed. Beginning in 1860, catchers, who attempt to catch every pitch not hit, became the first to adopt gloves. First basemen, who take many throws for putouts from the infielders, soon followed, and finally all players adopted gloves. All gloves…
- baseball park (baseball)
baseball: A national pastime: Baseball parks became important local civic monuments and repositories of collective memories. The first parks had been jerry-built, flimsy wooden structures, but between 1909 and 1923 some 15 major league clubs constructed new, more permanent parks of steel and concrete. These edifices were akin to…
- baseball pitch clock (sports)
The pitch clock, an attempt to speed up Major League Baseball (MLB) games, was implemented for the first time in the 2023 season. It was one of several rule changes that sought to address the reality that baseball, once heralded as America’s “national pastime,” was losing fans because
- baseball player (athlete)
baseball: …between two teams of nine players each on a field with four white bases laid out in a diamond (i.e., a square oriented so that its diagonal line is vertical). Teams alternate positions as batters (offense) and fielders (defense), exchanging places when three members of the batting team are “put…
- Baseball Players’ Fraternity (American organization)
baseball: Labor issues: In 1912 came the Baseball Players’ Fraternity, which included most professional players. It was organized after the suspension of Ty Cobb for punching a fan. Later a threatened strike was settled the day before it was to begin.
- Baseball Positions and Roles
In baseball, teams alternate between being fielders (defense) and batters (offense). On defense, nine players take up assigned positions on the field with the primary objective of preventing the opposing offense from scoring. The defense is tasked with collecting outs (also called putouts), which
- Baseball Writers Association of America (American organization)
baseball: Awards: …have been chosen by the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA). There are also MVP awards for the League Championship Series, the World Series, and the All-Star Game.