• CCS (military organization)

    World War II: Allied strategy and controversies, 1940–42: …created the machinery of the Combined Chiefs of Staff, where the British Chiefs of Staff Committee was to be linked continuously, through delegates in Washington, D.C., with the newly established U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Organization, so that all aspects of the war could be studied in concert. It was…

  • CCS (technology)

    carbon capture and storage (CCS), the process of recovering carbon dioxide from the fossil-fuel emissions produced by industrial facilities and power plants and moving it to locations where it can be kept from entering the atmosphere in order to mitigate global warming. Carbon capture and storage

  • CCTV (technology)

    closed-circuit television (CCTV), system that uses video cameras to send television signals to a specific limited viewership. Unlike broadcast television, closed-circuit television (CCTV) does not openly transmit its signal to the public but rather between set points that are decided by the

  • CCTV Building (building, Beijing, China)

    Rem Koolhaas: …the headquarters for Beijing’s state-owned China Central Television (CCTV; 2004–08). The CCTV building, noted for its angular-loop shape, is the centrepiece of a complex including the Koolhaas-designed CCTV Television Cultural Centre, which was under construction when it was severely damaged by fire in 2009. The building was restored and completed…

  • cd (SI unit of measurement)

    candela (cd), unit of luminous intensity in the International System of Units (SI), defined as the luminous intensity in a given direction of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 × 1012 hertz and has a radiant intensity in that same direction of 1683 watt per steradian (unit

  • CD (political party, Colombia)

    Iván Duque: …the presidential candidate of the Democratic Centre (Centro Democrático; CD), the political party Uribe founded in 2014.

  • CD (star catalog)

    Córdoba Durchmusterung (CD), star catalog giving positions and apparent magnitudes of 613,959 stars more than 22° south of the celestial equator. Compiled at the National Observatory of Argentina at Córdoba and completed in 1932, the catalog serves as a supplement to the Bonner Durchmusterung of

  • Cd (chemical element)

    cadmium (Cd), chemical element, a metal of Group 12 (IIb, or zinc group) of the periodic table. atomic number 48 atomic weight 112.414 melting point 321 °C (610 °F) boiling point 765 °C (1,409 °F) specific gravity 8.65 at 20 °C (68 °F) oxidation state +2 electron configuration [Kr]4d105s2

  • cd (measurement)

    cord, unit of volume for measuring stacked firewood. A cord is generally equivalent to a stack 4 × 4 × 8 feet (128 cubic feet), and its principal subdivision is the cord foot, which measures 4 × 4 × 1 feet. A standard cord consists of sticks or pieces 4 feet long stacked in a 4 × 8-foot rick. A

  • CD (behavioral disorder)

    conduct disorder (CD), behavior disorder characterized by a pattern of aggression toward others, a lack of concern for others, and a disregard for rules, laws, and social norms. Conduct disorder is most often diagnosed in preadolescents and adolescents ages 10 to 19, and it affects roughly 2 to 4

  • CD (finance)

    certificate of deposit (CD), a receipt from a bank acknowledging the deposit of a sum of money. Two common types are demand certificates of deposit and time certificates of deposit. Each bank sets its own CD interest rates and maturity dates (e.g., six months, one year, two years, five years), but

  • CD (recording)

    compact disc (CD), a molded plastic disc containing digital data that is scanned by a laser beam for the reproduction of recorded sound and other information. Since its commercial introduction in 1982, the audio CD has almost completely replaced the phonograph disc (or record) for high-fidelity

  • cD galaxy (astronomy)

    galaxy: Interactions between cluster members: …type of galaxy called a cD galaxy. These objects are somewhat similar in structure to S0 galaxies (see above S0 galaxies), but they are considerably larger, having envelopes that extend out to radii as large as one million light-years. Many of them have multiple nuclei, and most are strong sources…

  • CD investor? Tips and strategies to turbocharge your savings

    The Federal Open Market Committee has raised rates by five percentage points in its 2022–23 rate-hike regime, and expectations are that it’ll keep its benchmark rate relatively high for the foreseeable future. That’s good news for savers, and rates paid on certificates of deposit (CDs) have been

  • CD player (device)

    electronic dance music: Early 2000s: …Pioneer in 2001, was a compact-disc player that mimicked a vinyl turntable more closely and successfully than previous models had. FinalScratch, unveiled that year and on the market in early 2002, made it possible to play digital files on a traditional turntable through the use of a specially encoded record.…

  • CD-J 1000 (compact disc player)

    electronic dance music: Early 2000s: The CD-J 1000, issued by Pioneer in 2001, was a compact-disc player that mimicked a vinyl turntable more closely and successfully than previous models had. FinalScratch, unveiled that year and on the market in early 2002, made it possible to play digital files on a traditional…

  • CD-R disc (computing)

    CD-ROM: …type of CD became available: CD-Recordable, or CD-R. These discs differ from regular CDs in having a light-sensitive organic dye layer which can be “burned” to produce a chemical “dark” spot, analogous to an ordinary CD’s pits, that can be read by existing CD and CD-ROM players. Such CDs are…

  • CD-Recordable disc (computing)

    CD-ROM: …type of CD became available: CD-Recordable, or CD-R. These discs differ from regular CDs in having a light-sensitive organic dye layer which can be “burned” to produce a chemical “dark” spot, analogous to an ordinary CD’s pits, that can be read by existing CD and CD-ROM players. Such CDs are…

  • CD-ROM (computing)

    CD-ROM, type of computer memory in the form of a compact disc that is read by optical means. A CD-ROM drive uses a low-power laser beam to read digitized (binary) data that has been encoded in the form of tiny pits on an optical disk. The drive then feeds the data to a computer for processing. The

  • CD-ROM disc (computing)

    CD-ROM, type of computer memory in the form of a compact disc that is read by optical means. A CD-ROM drive uses a low-power laser beam to read digitized (binary) data that has been encoded in the form of tiny pits on an optical disk. The drive then feeds the data to a computer for processing. The

  • CD28 (biology)

    James P. Allison: …his laboratory there, he identified CD28 as a necessary costimulatory signaling molecule required for T-cell activation. He and colleagues also found that a molecule known as CTLA-4 opposed CD28 and played a critical role in the downregulation of immune responses. When injected into tumours in mice, CTLA-4 antibody, designed to…

  • CD2AP (gene)

    Alzheimer disease: Genetic variants: …cellular uptake of substances); and CD2AP, which encodes a protein that interacts with the cell membrane and may have a role in endocytosis.

  • CD3 (biochemistry)

    immune system: Function of the T-cell receptor: …group of molecules called the CD3 complex, or simply CD3, which is also necessary for T-cell activation. These molecules are agents that help transduce, or convert, the extracellular binding of the antigen and receptor into internal cellular signals; thus, they are called signal transducers. Similar signal transducing molecules are associated…

  • CD3 complex (biochemistry)

    immune system: Function of the T-cell receptor: …group of molecules called the CD3 complex, or simply CD3, which is also necessary for T-cell activation. These molecules are agents that help transduce, or convert, the extracellular binding of the antigen and receptor into internal cellular signals; thus, they are called signal transducers. Similar signal transducing molecules are associated…

  • CD33 (gene)

    Alzheimer disease: Genetic variants: Examples include CD33, which encodes a cell surface protein of the same name; PICALM, which encodes a protein involved in endocytosis (the cellular uptake of substances); and CD2AP, which encodes a protein that interacts with the cell membrane and may have a role in endocytosis.

  • CD4 (protein)

    AIDS: Life cycle of HIV: …their surfaces a protein called CD4. Helper T cells play a central role in normal immune responses by producing factors that activate virtually all the other immune system cells. Those include B lymphocytes, which produce antibodies needed to fight infection; cytotoxic T lymphocytes, which kill cells infected with a virus;…

  • CD4 count (medicine)

    AIDS: Life cycle of HIV: That measurement, called the CD4 count, provides a good indication of the status of the immune system. Physicians also measure the amount of virus in the bloodstream—i.e., the viral load—which provides an indication of how fast the virus is replicating and destroying helper T cells.

  • CD4+ T cell (cytology)

    helper T cell, type of white blood cell that serves as a key mediator of immune function. Helper T cells play a central role in normal immune responses by producing factors that activate virtually all the other immune system cells. These cells include B cells, which produce antibodies needed to

  • CD8 (biochemistry)

    immune system: Function of the T-cell receptor: …on their surfaces the coreceptor CD8, which recognizes class I MHC molecules. These accessory receptors add strength to the bond between the T cell and the target cell.

  • CDA (political party, Netherlands)

    Jaap de Hoop Scheffer: …a candidate for the right-of-centre Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) and was elected to the House of Representatives (Second Chamber) of the States General, the national legislature. He became the party’s spokesman on foreign policy as well as refugee policy and European justice matters.

  • CDA (United States [1996])

    Communications Decency Act (CDA), legislation enacted by the U.S. Congress in 1996 primarily in response to concerns about minors’ access to pornography via the Internet. In 1997 federal judges found that the indecency provisions abridged the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment to

  • CDC (United States agency)

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, headquartered in Atlanta, whose mission is centred on preventing and controlling disease and promoting environmental health and health education in the United States. Part of the Public

  • CDC (political party, Liberia)

    Liberia: Return to peace: …star George Weah of the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) in the second round of polling. She became the first woman to be elected head of state in Africa. Sirleaf focused on rebuilding the country’s economy and infrastructure, both of which had been devastated by decades of conflict and instability.…

  • CDC (American company)

    Sanford I. Weill: …the Commercial Credit division of Control Data Corporation in 1986. It was not an auspicious rebirth of an empire, as the small division was a faltering reject of its parent company. Weill, however, displayed a talent for rebuilding such organizations through cost cutting and employee motivation, and two years later…

  • CDC 1604 (computer)

    Seymour Cray: …led the design of the CDC 1604, one of the first computers to replace vacuum tubes with smaller transistors. He later helped create the CDC 6600, which, at the time of its debut in 1964, was the fastest computer in the world, able to execute three million floating-point operations per…

  • CDC 6600 (computer)

    supercomputer: Historical development: In 1964 Cray’s CDC 6600 replaced Stretch as the fastest computer on Earth; it could execute three million floating-point operations per second (FLOPS), and the term supercomputer was soon coined to describe it.

  • CDD (neurobiological disorder)

    childhood disintegrative disorder (CDD), a rare neurobiological disorder characterized by the deterioration of language and social skills and by the loss of intellectual functioning following normal development throughout at least the initial two years of life. The disorder was first described in

  • CDF (American organization)

    Children’s Defense Fund, nonprofit agency that advocates for children’s rights. The Children’s Defense Fund pursues policies and programs that provide health care to children, reduce the impact of poverty on children, protect children from abuse and neglect, and provide children with educational

  • CDG (pathology)

    metabolic disease: Congenital disorders of glycosylation: Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG; formerly known as carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome) are recently described diseases that affect the brain and many other organs. The primary biochemical defects of CDG are in the N-glycosylation pathway that occurs in the cytoplasm and endoplasmic…

  • CDI (disease)

    diabetes insipidus: Types and causes: …gland) for storage, is called central diabetes insipidus. This condition may be caused by trauma, such as brain or pituitary surgery, and diseases, such as brain tumours, pituitary tumours, or granulomatous infiltration (formation of grainlike lumps that are associated with certain diseases, including tuberculosis and sarcoidosis). When a result of…

  • CDK (biochemistry)

    Paul Nurse: …family of key enzymes, the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), which participate in many cell functions. By 2001 about a half dozen other CDKs were identified in humans.

  • CDK5 (biochemistry)

    post-traumatic stress disorder: …type of regulatory enzyme) called CDK5 (cyclin-dependent kinase 5). Normally, CDK5 works with other proteins in nerve cells to regulate brain development, and its absence has been shown to facilitate the elimination of memories associated with fear. In people with PTSD, the elevated levels of CDK5 may interfere with and…

  • CDKN2A (biochemistry)

    melanoma: Causes and symptoms: …tumour suppressor gene known as CDKN2A, which produces a kinase involved in regulating the cell cycle and cell division. CDKN2A variants have been associated with cutaneous malignant melanoma, an inherited form of the disease.

  • CDLR (Sunni Muslim group)

    Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights, Sunnite Muslim group opposed to the ruling Saud dynasty in Saudi Arabia. The group was founded in 1992 and consists largely of academics and lower-level Muslim clergy. It considers itself a pressure group for peaceful reform and for improving human

  • CDM (international program)

    Kyoto Protocol: Background and provisions: …the international program called the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), which encouraged developed countries to invest in technology and infrastructure in less-developed countries, where there were often significant opportunities to reduce emissions. Under the CDM, the investing country could claim the effective reduction in emissions as a credit toward meeting its…

  • CDMA

    mobile telephone: Development of cellular systems: …spectrum multiple access known as code-division multiple access (CDMA)—a technique that, like the original TIA approach, combined digital voice compression with digital modulation. (For more information on the techniques of information compression, signal modulation, and multiple access, see telecommunications.) The CDMA system offered 10 to 20 times the capacity of…

  • CDN

    livestreaming: Technological considerations: …distributed to viewers via a content delivery network (CDN; also called content distribution network). The CDN, which consists of a network of geographically dispersed proxy servers and data centres, caches (temporarily saves) the partitioned video segments on its network. Thus, rather than a network request from a viewer’s device having…

  • cDNA library

    recombinant DNA: Creating the clone: …type of library is a cDNA library. Creation of a cDNA library begins with messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) instead of DNA. Messenger RNA carries encoded information from DNA to ribosomes for translation into protein. To create a cDNA library, these mRNA molecules are treated with the enzyme reverse transcriptase, which…

  • CDO

    securitization: …an asset-backed security (ABS) or collateralized debt obligation (CDO). If the pool of debt instruments consists primarily of mortgages, the bond is referred to as a mortgage-backed security (MBS). The holders of such securities are entitled to the receipt of principal and interest payments on the debts underlying them.

  • CdO (chemical compound)

    cadmium: Compounds: …most important cadmium compound is cadmium oxide, CdO. It is a brown powder produced by burning cadmium vapor in air, and it provides a convenient starting material for the production of most other cadmium salts. Another compound of some economic value is cadmium sulfide, CdS. Generally produced by treating cadmium…

  • CDP (political party, Czech Republic)

    Václav Klaus: …1991, Klaus cofounded the centre-right Civic Democratic Party (CDP), serving as its leader until 2002. In 1992 Klaus became premier of the Czech Republic, then (with Slovakia) one of the two constituent republics of Czechoslovakia.

  • CDP-diacylglycerol (chemical compound)

    metabolism: Formation of lipids: A CDP-diglyceride is produced, and inorganic pyrophosphate is released ([77b]). CDP-diglyceride is the common precursor of a variety of phospholipids. In subsequent reactions, each catalyzed by a specific enzyme, CMP is displaced from CDP-diglyceride by one of three compounds—serine, inositol, or glycerol 1-phosphate—to form CMP and,…

  • CDP-diglyceride (chemical compound)

    metabolism: Formation of lipids: A CDP-diglyceride is produced, and inorganic pyrophosphate is released ([77b]). CDP-diglyceride is the common precursor of a variety of phospholipids. In subsequent reactions, each catalyzed by a specific enzyme, CMP is displaced from CDP-diglyceride by one of three compounds—serine, inositol, or glycerol 1-phosphate—to form CMP and,…

  • CDR (Cuban social organization)

    Havana: Government: …and neighbourhood groups called the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDRs), has led to a declining role for the city government, which, nevertheless, still provides such essential services as garbage collection and fire protection. The CDRs, which exist in virtually every street and apartment block, have two main…

  • CDR (political party, Romania)

    Romania: New constitution: …Constantinescu, the leader of the Democratic Convention of Romania (Convenția Democrată din România; CDR), whose party had formed a centre-right coalition with the Social Democratic Union (Uniunea Social Democrată; USD) and the Hungarian Democratic Union of Romania (Uniunea Democrată a Maghiarilor din România; UDMR). In 1997 the former monarch Michael,…

  • CdS (chemical compound)

    cadmium: Compounds: …of some economic value is cadmium sulfide, CdS. Generally produced by treating cadmium solution with a soluble sulfide, it is a bright yellow pigment known as cadmium yellow, which is used in high-grade paints and artist’s pigments because of its color stability and resistance to sulfur and oxidation. One other…

  • CDS (finance)

    credit default swap (CDS), a financial agreement that is used to transfer credit risk between two parties. A credit default swap (CDS) contract is bound to a loan instrument, such as municipal bonds, corporate debt, or a mortgage-backed security (MBS). The seller of the CDS agrees to compensate the

  • CdSe (chemical compound)

    cadmium: Compounds: One other compound of note, cadmium selenide (CdSe), is commonly precipitated by hydrogen selenide or alkaline selenides from solutions of cadmium salts. By varying the conditions of precipitation, stable colors ranging from yellow to bright red can be produced. On its own or mixed with cadmium sulfide, it is widely…

  • CDT (medicine)

    lymphedema: …treatment for lymphedema is complete decongestive therapy (CDT), which has a two-phase course The first phase lasts several weeks and consists of a combination of skin care, compressive bandaging, exercise, and a form of massage called manual lymph drainage. The second phase of CDT favours self-treatment and the use of…

  • CDU (political party, Germany)

    Christian Democratic Union (CDU), German center-right political party that supports a free-market economy and social welfare programs while maintaining conservative stances on social issues. The CDU has been a strong advocate of European integration and has cultivated close relations with the

  • Ce (chemical element)

    cerium (Ce), chemical element, the most abundant of the rare-earth metals. Commercial-grade cerium is iron-gray in colour, silvery when in a pure form, and about as soft and ductile as tin. It oxidizes in air at room temperature to form CeO2. The metal slowly reacts with water, and it quickly

  • CE (animal disease)

    sore mouth, viral disease of sheep and goats. The disease is characterized by the emergence of blisters, pustules, ulcers, and scabs on the lips especially but also on the face, the ears, and sometimes the legs. In severe cases, sores form inside the mouth. Sores may also appear on the teats of

  • CE (chronology)

    history of Europe: Chronology: …the modern notion of the Common Era. The new method superseded older traditions, which included dating by four-year Olympiads, by the number of years since the founding of Rome in 753 bce, by the years of Roman consuls, by the regnal years of emperors, and by the 15-year tax assessment…

  • CE (design method)

    aerospace industry: Design methods: …important, a new design method, concurrent engineering (CE), has been replacing the traditional cycle. CE simultaneously organizes many aspects of the design effort under the aegis of special teams of designers, engineers, and representatives of other relevant activities and processes. The method allows supporting activities such as stress analysis, aerodynamics,…

  • Ce Acatl (Mesoamerican god)

    Quetzalcóatl, (from Nahuatl quetzalli, “tail feather of the quetzal bird [Pharomachrus mocinno],” and coatl, “snake”), the Feathered Serpent, one of the major deities of the ancient Mexican pantheon. Representations of a feathered snake occur as early as the Teotihuacán civilization (3rd to 8th

  • CEA (French organization)

    nuclear weapon: France: …October 18, 1945, the French Atomic Energy Commission (Commissariat à l’Énergie Atomique; CEA) was established by Gen. Charles de Gaulle with the objective of exploiting the scientific, industrial, and military potential of atomic energy. The military application of atomic energy did not begin until 1951. In July 1952 the National…

  • CEA (United States government)

    Council of Economic Advisers, advisory body within the executive branch of the United States government comprising three professional members who are appointed by the president and subject to approval by the Senate. The duties of the Council of Economic Advisers include the collection and analysis

  • CEA (pathology)

    cancer: Molecular evaluation: …diagnostically useful tumor markers include carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), which is an indicator of carcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract, lung, and breast; CA 125, which is produced by ovarian cancers; CA 19-9, which is an indicator of pancreatic or gastrointestinal cancers; and alpha-fetoprotein and chorionic

  • Ceadda, Saint (English clergyman)

    Saint Chad ; feast day, March 2) was a monastic founder, abbot, and first bishop of Lichfield, who is credited with the Christianization of the ancient English kingdom of Mercia. With his brother St. Cedd, he was educated at the great abbey of Lindisfarne on Holy Island (off the coast of

  • Ceallach (Irish archbishop)

    St. Malachy: …vicar in Armagh by Archbishop Ceallach (Celsus) during the latter’s absence from Armagh to administer the bishopric of Dublin. For a short period Malachy received training under Máel-Ísu (Malchus) in Lismore, a center of church reform in Ireland.

  • Ceanannus Mór (Ireland)

    Ceanannus Mór, market town and urban district of County Meath, Ireland, on the River Blackwater. The town was originally a royal residence. In the 6th century it was granted to St. Columba and became a centre of learning. A bishopric was founded there about 807 and was united to that of Meath in

  • Ceanothus (plant genus)

    Ceanothus, genus of North American shrubs, of the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), comprising about 55 species. The leaves are alternate or opposite. The very small blue or white flowers are borne in profuse, erect clusters. Ceanothus americanus, commonly called New Jersey tea, occurs from Canada to

  • Ceanothus americanus (plant)

    Ceanothus: Ceanothus americanus, commonly called New Jersey tea, occurs from Canada to Florida. During the American Revolutionary War, its leaves were used as a tea substitute. The plant grows about 1 m (3 feet) tall and has deciduous, rather oval leaves. The white flowers grow in a flat-topped cluster.

  • Ceanothus arboreus (tree)

    Ceanothus: arboreus, called Catalina, or felt-leaf, ceanothus, an evergreen tree occurring on the islands off the coast of California, has leaves with a dark green upper surface and a dense white pubescence beneath. The tree, 5–8 m high, bears fragrant blue flowers in the early spring.

  • Ceará (state, Brazil)

    Ceará, estado (state) of northeastern Brazil. It is bounded on the north by the Atlantic Ocean, on the east by the Atlantic and the states of Rio Grande do Norte and Paraíba, on the south by the state of Pernambuco, and on the west by the state of Piauí. The capital, Fortaleza, is the principal

  • ceara wax

    carnauba wax, vegetable wax obtained from the fronds of the carnauba palm (Copernicia prunifera) of Brazil. Valued among the natural waxes for its hardness and high melting temperature, carnauba wax is employed as a vegan food-grade polish and as a hardening or gelling agent in a number of

  • Céard, Henry (French author)

    French literature: Naturalism: Maupassant, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Henry Céard, Léon Hennique, and Paul Alexis. The Naturalists purported to take a more scientifically analytic approach to the presentation of reality than had their predecessors, treating dissection as a prerequisite for description. Hence Zola’s attachment to the term naturalisme, borrowed from Hippolyte Taine, the…

  • cease-fire (international law)

    cease-fire, a total cessation of armed hostilities, regulated by the same general principles as those governing armistice. In contemporary diplomatic usage the term implies that the belligerents are too far apart in their negotiating positions to permit the conclusion of a formal armistice

  • Ceatharlach (Ireland)

    Carlow, urban district and county seat, County Carlow, Ireland, on the left bank of the River Barrow. An Anglo-Norman stronghold, the town received charters of incorporation in the 13th and 17th centuries. The keep (innermost citadel) of a 13th-century stronghold remains at the confluence of the

  • Ceatharlach (county, Ireland)

    Carlow, county in the province of Leinster, southeastern Ireland. The town of Carlow, in the northwest, is the county seat. One of the smallest Irish counties, Carlow is bounded by Counties Kildare (north), Wicklow and Wexford (east), and Kilkenny and Laoighis (west). In the east are the granitic

  • Ceauşescu, Elena (wife of Nicolae Ceauşescu)

    Nicolae Ceaușescu: In 1939 he married Elena Petrescu, a Communist activist. While in prison, Ceaușescu became a protégé of his cell mate, the Communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who would become the undisputed Communist leader of Romania beginning in 1952. Escaping prison in August 1944 shortly before the Soviet occupation of Romania,…

  • Ceaușescu, Nicolae (president of Romania)

    Nicolae Ceaușescu was a Communist official who was the leader of Romania from 1965 until he was overthrown and killed in a revolution in 1989. A member of the Romanian Communist youth movement during the early 1930s, Ceaușescu was imprisoned in 1936 and again in 1940 for his Communist Party

  • Ceawlin (king of Wessex)

    Ceawlin was the king of the West Saxons, or Wessex, from 560 to 592, who drove the Britons from most of southern England and carved out a kingdom in the southern Midlands. Ceawlin helped his father, King Cynric, defeat the Britons at Beranbyrg (Barbury) in 556. In 568, eight years after he assumed

  • CEBAF (accelerators, Newport News, Virginia, United States)

    particle accelerator: Linear electron accelerators: …to good effect at the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) in Newport News, Va. This consists of two 250-metre (820-foot) linear accelerators joined at each end by semicircular arcs to form an oval “racetrack.” Electrons are injected at 45 MeV and can be accelerated to energies of 4 GeV…

  • cebiche (food)

    ceviche, dish of South American origin comprising raw fish or shellfish marinated in citrus juice. The great fishing cultures of the world often consume raw fish, a culinary custom made possible by the freshness of the catch. So it is that in Norway salmon is often eaten straight from the fjord,

  • Cebidae (primate family)

    monkey: Classification: …Callitrichidae (marmosets and tamarins) and Cebidae (all others, including capuchins, titis, squirrel monkeys, and howler monkeys). Molecular evidence, together with reassessments of morphological evidence, now indicates that marmosets are more related to the capuchins, with spider monkeys and their relatives being more divergent. Recent classifications, therefore, tend to recognize additional…

  • Čeboksary (Russia)

    Cheboksary, city and capital, Chuvashia republic, Russia. It lies on the right bank of the middle Volga River, between Nizhny Novgorod and Kazan. Although Cheboksary is known to have existed since the mid-15th century, and a fortress was built there in 1555, the town remained unimportant until the

  • Ceboruco (volcano, Mexico)

    Ceboruco, dormant volcano, southeastern Nayarit estado (state), west-central Mexico. It is situated about 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Tepic, the state capital. The highest of Ceboruco’s three principal craters attains an elevation of 7,100 feet (2,164 metres) above sea level. Three periods of

  • Cebrionidae (insect family)

    coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Cebrionidae About 200 species; in mild regions; female often wingless. Family Cerophytidae About 12 species in Europe and America; in hollow trees. Family Drilidae About 80 species, mainly in Europe; larvae prey on snails.

  • Cebu (island, Philippines)

    Cebu, island, central Philippines. It is the centre of Visayan-Cebuano culture and has preserved a strong Spanish tradition in its cultural life. Attracted by the island’s focal position, the Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan landed there and converted the ruler and chiefs to Christianity. He

  • Cebu City (Philippines)

    Cebu City, city, Cebu Island, south-central Philippines. Located on Cebu Island’s eastern coast, it is protected by offshore Mactan Island and by the inland Cordillera Central. It is one of the country’s largest cities and is a bustling port. Its harbour is provided by the sheltered strait between

  • Cebu hemp (plant)

    abaca, (Musa textilis), plant of the family Musaceae, and its fibre, which is second in importance among the leaf fibre group. Abaca fibre, unlike most other leaf fibres, is obtained from the plant leaf stalks (petioles). Although sometimes known as Manila hemp, Cebu hemp, or Davao hemp, the abaca

  • Cebu maguey (plant)

    cantala, (Agave cantala), plant of the family Asparagaceae and its fibre, belonging to the leaf fibre group. Likely native to Mexico, the plant has been cultivated in the Philippines since 1783 and was growing in Indonesia and India by the early 1800s. Sometimes known as Manila maguey or Cebu

  • Cebuan (people)

    Cebuano, the second largest ethnolinguistic group (after Tagalog) in the Philippines, numbering roughly 16.5 million in the second decade of the 21st century. They speak an Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language and are sometimes grouped with the Hiligaynon and Waray-Waray under the generic name

  • Cebuano (people)

    Cebuano, the second largest ethnolinguistic group (after Tagalog) in the Philippines, numbering roughly 16.5 million in the second decade of the 21st century. They speak an Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language and are sometimes grouped with the Hiligaynon and Waray-Waray under the generic name

  • Cebuano language

    Cebuano language, member of the Western, or Indonesian, branch of the Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language family. It was spoken in the early 21st century by roughly 18.5 million people in the Philippines (speakers are spread over eastern Negros, Cebu, Bohol, western Leyte, the Camotes

  • Cebuella pygmaea (monkey)

    marmoset: The two species of pygmy marmosets (C. pygmaea and C. niveiventris) are the smallest “true” marmosets. They live in the rainforests of the Amazon River’s upper tributaries. The length of the head and body of these species is about 14 cm (6 inches), and the tail is somewhat longer.…

  • Cebus (primate)

    capuchin monkey, (genus Cebus), common Central and South American primate found in tropical forests from Nicaragua to Paraguay. Capuchins, considered among the most intelligent of the New World monkeys, are named for their “caps” of hair, which resemble the cowls of Capuchin monks. These monkeys

  • Cebus albifrons (monkey)

    capuchin monkey: capucinus), white-fronted (C. albifrons), and weeper (C. nigrivittatus) capuchins, in which the crown bears a smooth, dark, and more or less pointed cap. The name black-capped capuchin has been applied to both C. apella and C. nigrivittatus.The genus Cebus belongs to the family Cebidae.

  • Cebus apella (monkey)

    capuchin monkey: …or tufted, group includes the brown capuchin (C. apella), in which the crown bears a dark cap of long erect hairs that often form tufts or crests. The uncrested, or untufted, group includes the more lightly built white-throated (C. capucinus), white-fronted (C. albifrons), and weeper (C. nigrivittatus) capuchins, in which…