- Equisetum (plant genus)
horsetail, (genus Equisetum), fifteen species of rushlike conspicuously jointed perennial herbs, the only living genus of plants in the order Equisetales and the class Equisetopsida. Horsetails grow in moist, rich soils in all parts of the world except Australasia. Some species produce two kinds of
- Equisetum arvense (plant species)
horsetail: …America and Eurasia is the common horsetail (E. arvense), about 30 cm (1 foot) tall. The central cavity of each stem is about a quarter of its outside diameter. Fairly thick, solid branches arise from below the sheaths, circling the shoots like spokes on a wheel. Stems that bear terminal…
- Equisetum giganteum (plant species)
horsetail: …slender South American species (E. giganteum), which sometimes grows to 10 metres (about 32 feet) in height with a diameter of about 2 cm (less than 1 inch) and is supported by the tall grasses and shrubs around it.
- Equisetum hyemale (plant species)
horsetail: Common scouring rush (E. hyemale), occurring in moist woods and on riverbanks, reaches well over a metre in height. The evergreen shoots often were used for scouring pots and pans in earlier times.
- Equisetum sylvaticum (plant species)
horsetail: Wood horsetail (E. sylvaticum) grows in moist, cool woods and has many delicate branches that circle the shoots. Variegated horsetail (E. variegatum) is evergreen and has black markings on the sheaths. Common scouring rush (E. hyemale), occurring in moist woods and on riverbanks, reaches well…
- Equisetum telmateia (plant species)
horsetail: …giant horsetail of Europe (E. telmateia) is about the same height as common scouring rush. The tallest of all horsetails is a slender South American species (E. giganteum), which sometimes grows to 10 metres (about 32 feet) in height with a diameter of about 2 cm (less than 1…
- Equisetum variegatum (plant species)
horsetail: Variegated horsetail (E. variegatum) is evergreen and has black markings on the sheaths. Common scouring rush (E. hyemale), occurring in moist woods and on riverbanks, reaches well over a metre in height. The evergreen shoots often were used for scouring pots and pans in earlier…
- equitable lien (property law)
lien: …possessory liens, there are also equitable and statutory liens. Courts of equity will in certain situations recognize a creditor’s interest in a debtor’s property even though the property remains in the debtor’s possession. An example of a statutory lien in general use in the United States is the mechanic’s lien,…
- Equitable Life Assurance Company (American company)
Henry Baldwin Hyde: …was the founder of the Equitable Life Assurance Society.
- Equitable Life Assurance Society (American company)
Henry Baldwin Hyde: …was the founder of the Equitable Life Assurance Society.
- equitable ownership (trust law)
property law: Trusts: …basic distinction between legal and equitable ownership is quite simple. The legal owner of the property (trustee) has the right to possession, the privilege of use, and the power to convey those rights and privileges. The trustee thus appears by all counts to be the owner of the property—or so…
- equitable servitude (law)
property: …a homeowners’ association fee), and equitable servitudes (such as a promise to use the property for residential purposes only). The civil law does not have as many categories, the category of “servitudes” tending to cover for them all, and the civil law is a bit more restrictive. Most of the…
- equites (ancient Roman history)
eques, in ancient Rome, a knight, originally a member of the cavalry and later of a political and administrative class as well as of the equestrian order. In early Rome the equites were drawn from the senatorial class and were called equites equo publico (“horsemen whose mounts were provided for by
- Equites (play by Aristophanes)
Aristophanes: Knights: This play shows how little Aristophanes was affected by the prosecution he had incurred for Babylonians. Knights (424 bce; Greek Hippeis) consists of a violent attack on the same demagogue, Cleon, who is depicted as the favourite slave of the stupid and irascible Demos…
- equity (law)
equity, in Anglo-American law, the custom of courts outside the common law or coded law. Equity provided remedies in situations in which precedent or statutory law might not apply or be equitable. By the end of the 13th century, the English king’s common-law courts had largely limited the relief
- equity (accounting)
bank: The role of bank capital: …also comes from share owners’ equity, which means that bank managers must concern themselves with the value of the bank’s equity capital as well as the composition of the bank’s assets and liabilities. A bank’s shareholders, however, are residual claimants, meaning that they may share in the bank’s profits but…
- equity capital (accounting)
bank: The role of bank capital: …also comes from share owners’ equity, which means that bank managers must concern themselves with the value of the bank’s equity capital as well as the composition of the bank’s assets and liabilities. A bank’s shareholders, however, are residual claimants, meaning that they may share in the bank’s profits but…
- Equity crowdfunding: A bold new frontier for investors and entrepreneurs?
You’ve probably heard of at least one crowdfunding platform. Starting with ArtistShare in the 1990s, Kickstarter in the 2000s, and Patreon in the 2010s, crowdfunding platforms have become important business tools for creative types working in various fields. Now, anyone looking to raise capital in
- Equity Group Investments (American company)
Sam Zell: …Zell founded the predecessor of Equity Group Investments (EGI). It and its partners amassed the country’s largest collection of U.S. office space mostly by identifying opportunities that other investors had overlooked. Although Zell’s investments also included railroad rolling stock, radio stations, trailer parks, insurance companies, and a minority stake in…
- Equity League of Self-Supporting Women (American organization)
Harriot Eaton Stanton Blatch: …name was changed to the Women’s Political Union, and in 1916 it was merged with the Congressional Union (later the National Woman’s Party) under Alice Paul.
- equity, principle of (ethics)
ethics: Early intuitionists: Cudworth, More, and Clarke: …also responsible for a “principle of equity,” which, though derived from the Golden Rule so widespread in ancient ethics, was formulated with a new precision: “Whatever I judge reasonable or unreasonable for another to do for me, that by the same judgment I declare reasonable or unreasonable that I…
- equivalence (prosody)
equivalence, in classical prosody, the principle that one long syllable is equal to two short ones. The principle is used as the basis for substitution in quantitative
- equivalence (mathematics)
automata theory: Equivalence and reduction: The most natural classification is by equivalence. If two machines (finite transducers) share the same inputs, then representative states from each are equivalent if every sequence x belonging to the set of words on the alphabet causes the same output from the…
- equivalence (logic)
equivalence, in logic and mathematics, the formation of a proposition from two others which are linked by the phrase “if, and only if.” The equivalence formed from two propositions p and q also may be defined by the statement “p is a necessary and sufficient condition for
- equivalence (chemistry)
chemical compound: Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy: …hydrogens are said to be equivalent. The two hydrogens on the CH2 group are also equivalent. The chemical shift of hydrogen atoms is the most important piece of information provided by NMR spectroscopy, because it reveals a great deal about the nature of the bonds around the hydrogen.
- equivalence class (mathematics)
set theory: Relations in set theory: …form what is called the equivalence class of a. For example, the equivalence class of a line for the relation “is parallel to” consists of the set of all lines parallel to it.
- equivalence of propositions (logic)
equivalence, in logic and mathematics, the formation of a proposition from two others which are linked by the phrase “if, and only if.” The equivalence formed from two propositions p and q also may be defined by the statement “p is a necessary and sufficient condition for
- equivalence point (chemistry)
chemical analysis: …of the analyte is the equivalence point and can be used to calculate the amount or concentration of the analyte that was originally present.
- equivalence principle (physics)
equivalence principle, fundamental law of physics that states that gravitational and inertial forces are of a similar nature and often indistinguishable. In the Newtonian form it asserts, in effect, that, within a windowless laboratory freely falling in a uniform gravitational field, experimenters
- equivalence relation (mathematics and logic)
equivalence relation, In mathematics, a generalization of the idea of equality between elements of a set. All equivalence relations (e.g., that symbolized by the equals sign) obey three conditions: reflexivity (every element is in the relation to itself), symmetry (element A has the same relation
- equivalence transformation (logic)
formal logic: Validity in PC: …is said to make an equivalence transformation.
- equivalency (prosody)
equivalence, in classical prosody, the principle that one long syllable is equal to two short ones. The principle is used as the basis for substitution in quantitative
- equivalent canonization (Christianity)
St. Hildegard: …through the process of “equivalent canonization,” a papal proclamation of canonization based on a standing tradition of popular veneration.
- equivalent proportions, law of (chemistry)
equivalent weight, in chemistry, the quantity of a substance that exactly reacts with, or is equal to the combining value of, an arbitrarily fixed quantity of another substance in a particular reaction. Substances react with each other in stoichiometric, or chemically equivalent, proportions, and a
- equivalent proportions, law of (chemistry)
law of reciprocal proportions, in chemistry, the statement that if the same weight of one element combines separately with two other elements, then the weights of those two elements that combine with each other are related to the weights that combine with the first element by a multiple or a simple
- equivalent sound level (acoustics)
noise pollution: Measuring and perceiving loudness: Another unit, called equivalent sound levels (Leq), can be used to express an average SPL over any period of interest, such as an eight-hour workday. (Leq is a logarithmic average rather than an arithmetic average, so loud events prevail in the overall result.) A unit called day-night sound…
- equivalent tensile stress (physics)
mechanics of solids: Inelastic response: equivalent tensile stress. The definition is made so that, for a state of uniaxial tension, σ equals the tensile stress, and the stress-strain relation for general stress states is formulated in terms of data from the tensile test. In particular, a plastic strain εp in…
- equivalent weight (chemistry)
equivalent weight, in chemistry, the quantity of a substance that exactly reacts with, or is equal to the combining value of, an arbitrarily fixed quantity of another substance in a particular reaction. Substances react with each other in stoichiometric, or chemically equivalent, proportions, and a
- equivocation (logical fallacy)
fallacy: Verbal fallacies: …instances are as follows: (1) Equivocation occurs when a word or phrase is used in one sense in one premise and in another sense in some other needed premise or in the conclusion (example: “The loss made Jones mad [= angry]; mad [= insane] people should be institutionalized; so Jones…
- Equuleus (constellation)
Equuleus, constellation in the northern sky at about 21 hours right ascension and 10° north in declination. Its brightest star is Kitalpha (from the Arabic for “part of a horse”), with a magnitude of 3.9. Ptolemy referred to this constellation as the head and neck of a horse, but, unlike most other
- Equus (film by Lumet [1977])
Sidney Lumet: The 1970s: Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, and Network: …these back-to-back hits, Lumet made Equus (1977), which Peter Shaffer adapted from his Broadway hit about a psychiatrist who is asked to treat a young man who is obsessed with horses. Some complained that the film literalized the play’s highly stylized symbolism, robbing the drama of much of its impact.…
- Equus (play by Shaffer)
Equus, drama in two acts by Peter Shaffer, produced and published in 1973. It depicts a psychiatrist’s fascination with a disturbed teenager’s mythopoeic obsession with horses. The drama unfolds through the eyes of Martin Dysart, a psychiatrist and an amateur mythologist, who narrates the events of
- Equus (mammal genus)
horse: Evolution of the horse: …Pliohippus, the direct predecessor of Equus. Pliohippus fossils occur in the early to middle Pliocene beds of North America (the Pliocene Epoch lasted from about 5.3 million to 2.6 million years ago).
- Equus africanus (mammal)
ass: …horse family, Equidae, especially the African wild ass (Equus africanus) sometimes referred to as the true ass. The related Asiatic wild ass, sometimes called the Asian wild ass or the half-ass (E. hemionus), is usually known by the local names of its various races: e.g., kulan (E. hemionus kulan, Mongolia)…
- Equus asinus (mammal)
donkey, (Equus asinus), domestic ass belonging to the horse family, Equidae, and descended from the African wild ass (Equus africanus). It is known to have been used as a beast of burden since 4000 bce. The average donkey stands 101.6 cm (40 inches) at the shoulder and weighs about 250 kg (551
- Equus caballus (mammal)
horse, (Equus caballus), a hoofed herbivorous mammal of the family Equidae. It comprises a single species, Equus caballus, whose numerous varieties are called breeds. Before the advent of mechanized vehicles, the horse was widely used as a draft animal, and riding on horseback was one of the chief
- Equus caballus caballus (extinct wild horse)
tarpan, European wild horse that survived in small herds in remote parts of central Europe during the Middle Ages but became extinct early in the 20th century. It is likely that late survivors crossed with domesticated horses. The Munich Zoo produced a tarpan-like horse by selective breeding of
- Equus caballus przewalskii (wild horse subspecies)
Przewalski’s horse, (subspecies Equus caballus przewalskii or E. ferus przewalskii), last wild horse subspecies surviving in the 21st century. It was discovered in western Mongolia in the late 1870s by the Russian explorer N.M. Przhevalsky. Przewalski’s horse is yellowish or light red (sometimes
- Equus ferus przewalskii (wild horse subspecies)
Przewalski’s horse, (subspecies Equus caballus przewalskii or E. ferus przewalskii), last wild horse subspecies surviving in the 21st century. It was discovered in western Mongolia in the late 1870s by the Russian explorer N.M. Przhevalsky. Przewalski’s horse is yellowish or light red (sometimes
- Equus grevyi (mammal)
perissodactyl: Zebras: Grevy’s zebra (E. grevyi), which shares a narrow zone in northern Kenya with the plains zebra, is confined to sparsely wooded, semidesert plains and low hills in northern Kenya, southern and eastern Ethiopia, and western Somaliland. Its status appears to be generally satisfactory.
- Equus hemionus (mammal)
ass: The related Asiatic wild ass, sometimes called the Asian wild ass or the half-ass (E. hemionus), is usually known by the local names of its various races: e.g., kulan (E. hemionus kulan, Mongolia) and khur (E. hemionus khur, India and Pakistan). The Syrian wild ass (E. hemionus…
- Equus hemionus hemionus (mammal)
perissodactyl: The wild horse: The chigetia or kulan (E. hemionus hemionus), which was formerly widespread over an immense region of the Gobi, now occurs only in semidesert steppe country in central Mongolia. Hunting and competition for water by pastoral tribesmen are responsible for its decline. The kulan is slightly smaller than the…
- Equus hemionus kulan (mammal)
perissodactyl: The wild horse: The chigetia or kulan (E. hemionus hemionus), which was formerly widespread over an immense region of the Gobi, now occurs only in semidesert steppe country in central Mongolia. Hunting and competition for water by pastoral tribesmen are responsible for its decline. The kulan is slightly smaller than the…
- Equus kiang (mammal)
kiang, (Equus kiang), species of Asian wild ass found in the cold, arid highlands of Nepal, India, and Pakistan and in Qinghai and Gansu provinces and the western Tibet Autonomous Region in China at elevations above 4,000 metres (13,000 feet). The kiang’s coat is reddish in summer and brown, and it
- Equus onager (mammal)
onager, (Equus onager), species of Asian wild ass that ranges from northwest Iran to Turkmenistan. The onager is pale-coloured and has a short erect mane and fairly large ears. It stands 1.5 metres (4.5 feet) at the shoulder and weighs about 250 kg (550 pounds). The onager was domesticated in
- Equus quagga (mammal)
perissodactyl: Zebras: The plains zebra (E. quagga) formerly inhabited a great area of grassland and savanna from the Cape to South Sudan. The southernmost race (E. quagga quagga), which was only partly striped, became extinct in the 19th century. The populations of the other races have been much…
- Equus quagga boehmi (mammal)
zebra: quagga boehmi (Grant’s zebra), E. quagga chapmani (Chapman’s zebra), E. quagga burchellii (Burchell’s zebra), and E. quagga quagga (quagga, which is extinct). The mountain zebra is made up of two subspecies: E. zebra hartmannae (Hartmann’s mountain zebra) and E. zebra zebra (
- Equus quagga borensis (mammal)
zebra: quagga borensis (half-maned zebra), E. quagga boehmi (Grant’s zebra), E. quagga chapmani (Chapman’s zebra), E. quagga burchellii (Burchell’s zebra), and E. quagga quagga (quagga, which is extinct). The mountain zebra is made up of two subspecies: E. zebra hartmannae (
- Equus quagga burchellii (mammal)
zebra: quagga burchellii (Burchell’s zebra), and E. quagga quagga (quagga, which is extinct). The mountain zebra is made up of two subspecies: E. zebra hartmannae (Hartmann’s mountain zebra) and E. zebra zebra (Cape Mountain zebra).
- Equus quagga chapmani (mammal)
zebra: quagga chapmani (Chapman’s zebra), E. quagga burchellii (Burchell’s zebra), and E. quagga quagga (quagga, which is extinct). The mountain zebra is made up of two subspecies: E. zebra hartmannae (Hartmann’s mountain zebra) and E. zebra zebra (Cape Mountain zebra).
- Equus quagga crawshaii (mammal)
zebra: quagga crawshaii (Crawshay’s zebra), E. quagga borensis (half-maned zebra), E. quagga boehmi (Grant’s zebra), E. quagga chapmani (Chapman’s zebra), E. quagga burchellii (Burchell’s zebra), and E. quagga quagga (quagga, which is extinct). The mountain zebra is made up
- Equus quagga quagga (extinct mammal, Equus quagga quagga)
quagga, (subspecies Equus quagga quagga), subspecies of plains zebra (Equus quagga) formerly found in vast herds on the great plains of South Africa but now extinct. The colour of the head, neck, and upper parts of the body was reddish brown, irregularly banded, and marked with dark brown stripes,
- Equus zebra (mammal)
perissodactyl: Distribution, ecology, and conservation: By contrast, the mountain zebra (Equus zebra), Przewalski’s horse (Equus caballus przewalskii) and the half-ass, all living in semidesert areas, are reported to survive if they can drink once in three or four days. The ass too can manage with less water than the horse. The mountain zebra…
- Equus zebra hartmannae (mammal)
zebra: zebra hartmannae (Hartmann’s mountain zebra) and E. zebra zebra (Cape Mountain zebra).
- Equus zebra zebra (mammal)
zebra: zebra zebra (Cape Mountain zebra).
- Er (chemical element)
erbium (Er), chemical element, a rare-earth metal of the lanthanide series of the periodic table. Pure erbium is a silvery white metal that is relatively stable in air. It slowly reacts with water and quickly dissolves in diluted acids, except hydrofluoric acid (HF) because of formation of the
- ER (biology)
endoplasmic reticulum (ER), in biology, a continuous membrane system that forms a series of flattened sacs within the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells and serves multiple functions, being important particularly in the synthesis, folding, modification, and transport of proteins . All eukaryotic cells
- ER (American television drama)
ER, American television medical drama that aired on NBC from 1994 to 2009. The show, created by best-selling novelist Michael Crichton and producer John Wells, was one of the highest-rated programs on television. ER centred on the emergency room doctors, nurses, and staff of County General
- Er Hai (lake, China)
Lake Er, lake in western Yunnan province, China. It lies in a deep basin at the eastern foot of the snow-covered Diancang range (also called Cang Shan) between the upper waters of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), there called the Jinsha River, and the Mekong River. Lake Er is the last remnant of a
- Er, Lake (lake, China)
Lake Er, lake in western Yunnan province, China. It lies in a deep basin at the eastern foot of the snow-covered Diancang range (also called Cang Shan) between the upper waters of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), there called the Jinsha River, and the Mekong River. Lake Er is the last remnant of a
- Er, myth of (Platonism)
gnosticism: Apocryphon of John: …Platonic philosophy, illustrated in the myth of Er in Plato’s Republic, in which a slain warrior named Er is revived briefly on his funeral pyre and tells of what he has seen of the fate of souls after death. The lengthy account includes a description of reincarnation and of the…
- ERA (proposed United States legislation)
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would invalidate many state and federal laws that discriminate against women; its central underlying principle is that sex should not determine the legal rights of men or women. The text of the Equal Rights Amendment
- era (geologic time)
era, a very long span of geologic time; in formal usage, the second longest portions of geological time (eons are the longest). Ten eras are recognized by the International Union of Geological Sciences: the Eoarchean Era (4.0 billion to 3.6 billion years ago), the Paleoarchean Era (3.6 billion to
- era (time measurement)
calendar: The eras: Not before the 1st century bce is there any evidence that the years of events were recorded in well-defined eras, whether by cycles, as the Olympic Games in Greece and the tenures of consuls in Rome, or the Roman year dating from the…
- ERA (baseball statistic)
Mariano Rivera: …652 saves, with a career earned-run average (ERA) of 2.21. Moreover, when he retired in 2013, Rivera had a lifetime adjusted ERA (ERA+; an ERA adjusted for opponents and ballparks, with the average major-league pitcher set at 100) of 205, far and away the highest ERA+ ever.
- era name (Chinese chronology)
nianhao, system of dating that was adopted by the Chinese in 140 bce (retroactive to 841 bce). The nianhao system was introduced by the emperor Wudi (reigned 141–87 bce) of the Xi (Western) Han, and every emperor thereafter gave his reign a nianhao at the beginning of his accession (sometimes a new
- Era of Contracts (chronology)
chronology: Jewish: …onward, Jews used the Seleucid era (especially in dating deeds; hence its name Minyan Sheṭarot, or “Era of Contracts”). In vogue in the East until the 16th century, this was the only popular Jewish era of antiquity to survive. The others soon became extinct. These included, among others, national eras…
- era of good government of Zhenguan (Chinese history)
China: The era of good government: The reign of Taizong (626–649), known traditionally as the “era of good government of Zhenguan,” was not notable for innovations in administration. Generally, his policies developed and refined those of his father’s reign. The distinctive element was the atmosphere of his…
- Era of Spain (chronology)
chronology: Christian: The Era of Spain was based on an Easter cycle that began on January 1, 716 AUC (38 bc), marking the completion of the Roman conquest of Spain. First recorded in the 5th century, it was in general use in Visigothic Spain of the 6th and…
- Era of the Creation (chronology)
chronology: Jewish: …first to use the rabbinic Era of the Creation. His chronology extends from the creation to Bar Kokhba in the days of the Roman emperor Hadrian (2nd century ad); but the period from Nehemiah to Bar Kokhba (i.e., from Artaxerxes I or II to Hadrian) is compressed into one single…
- Era of the Incarnation (chronology)
chronology: Christian: …abolished, in favour of the Era of the Incarnation, in Catalonia in 1180, in Aragon in 1350, in Castile in 1383, and in Portugal in 1422. The Era of the Passion, commencing 33 years after that of the Incarnation, enjoyed a short vogue, mainly in 11th-century France.
- Era of the Passion (chronology)
chronology: Christian: The Era of the Passion, commencing 33 years after that of the Incarnation, enjoyed a short vogue, mainly in 11th-century France.
- Eracle (work by Gautier d’Arras)
Gautier d’Arras: His romance Eracle, a mythical life of the Byzantine emperor Heraclius, was begun in 1176–78 for Marie de Champagne and Thibaut V of Blois but was finished, perhaps in 1179–81, for the young Baldwin V of Hainaut. Ille et Galeron, a Breton romance, was written for Beatrix…
- Eraclius (medieval historian)
metalwork: Inlaying: …its application to silver were Eraclius and Theophilus, in or about the 12th century, and Benvenuto Cellini, during the 16th. According to each of these authors, niello is made by fusing together silver, copper, and lead and then mixing the molten alloy with sulfur. The black product (a mixture of…
- Eragrostis (plant)
love grass, (genus Eragrostis), genus of about 350 species of tufted annual and perennial grasses in the family Poaceae. Love grasses are native to tropical and temperate regions of the world, and several are cultivated as forage or as ornamentals. Love grasses are typically bunched or tufted with
- Eragrostis abyssinica (grain)
teff, (Eragrostis tef), annual cereal grass, grown for its tiny nutritious seeds. Teff is native to Ethiopia and Eritrea, where it is a staple food crop to millions of people, and has increased in popularity as a gluten-free health food elsewhere. The grains have a mild, nutty flavor and are a good
- Eragrostis cilianensis (grass)
love grass: Stink grass (E. cilianensis), a weedy, coarse annual, has a musty odour produced by glands on its leaves and can be poisonous to livestock if consumed in large amounts. Teff (E. tef) is a widely cultivated cereal grain in Ethiopia and neighbouring countries and has…
- Eragrostis curvula (grass)
love grass: trichodes), and weeping love grass (E. curvula) are forage species in southern North America. Weeping love grass, native to South Africa, was introduced elsewhere as an ornamental and later was used to reclaim abandoned or eroded areas formerly under cultivation. Stink grass (E. cilianensis), a weedy, coarse…
- Eragrostis cynosuroides (grass)
ceremonial object: Plants and plant representations: …sacred plants, such as the kusha plant (a sacred grass used as fodder) of the Vedic sacrifice and the Brahmanic puja (ritual), are used in rituals such as the Zoroastrian sprinkling (bareshnum), or great purification, rite, in which the notion of fertility and prosperity is combined with their sacred characters…
- Eragrostis intermedia (grass)
love grass: Plains love grass (Eragrostis intermedia), sand love grass (E. trichodes), and weeping love grass (E. curvula) are forage species in southern North America. Weeping love grass, native to South Africa, was introduced elsewhere as an ornamental and later was used to reclaim abandoned or eroded…
- Eragrostis tef (grain)
teff, (Eragrostis tef), annual cereal grass, grown for its tiny nutritious seeds. Teff is native to Ethiopia and Eritrea, where it is a staple food crop to millions of people, and has increased in popularity as a gluten-free health food elsewhere. The grains have a mild, nutty flavor and are a good
- Eragrostis trichodes (plant)
love grass: sand love grass (E. trichodes), and weeping love grass (E. curvula) are forage species in southern North America. Weeping love grass, native to South Africa, was introduced elsewhere as an ornamental and later was used to reclaim abandoned or eroded areas formerly under cultivation. Stink…
- Eranistēs (work by Theodoret of Cyrrhus)
Theodoret Of Cyrrhus: …works, On The Incarnation and Eranistēs (“The Beggar”), written about 431 and 446, respectively, attributed to Christ an integral human consciousness with a distinct psychological ego. To harmonize this view with the traditional orthodoxy of the earliest church writers, he distinguished the concepts of nature (i.e., the principle of action,…
- Eranos circle (scholars)
study of religion: Psychoanalytical studies: Thus, the Eranos circle, a group of scholars meeting around the leadership of Jung, contributed considerably to the history of religions. Associated with this circle of scholars have been Mircea Eliade, the eminent Romanian-French historian of religion, and the Hungarian-Swiss historian of religion Károly Kerényi (1897–1973). This…
- Eranthis (plant)
winter aconite, (genus Eranthis), genus of about seven species of perennial herbaceous plants of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae) native to temperate regions of Europe and widely planted for their early spring flowers. The solitary flowers consist of five to eight yellow or white sepals (petals
- Érard, Sébastien (French musical instrument maker)
Sébastien Érard was a French piano and harp maker whose improvements in both instruments were largely responsible for their modern forms. The son of a cabinetmaker, Érard was apprenticed to a harpsichord builder in Paris; there, about 1775, he invented a mechanical harpsichord and earned the
- Erarta Museum and Galleries of Contemporary Art (museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia)
St. Petersburg: Vasilyevsky Island: The Erarta Museum and Galleries of Contemporary Art, Russia’s largest private museum of contemporary art, opened in 2010, on the western edge of Vasilyevsky Island. On the opposite side of the island, Novy Muzei (“New Museum”) focuses on works from the second half of the 20th…
- erasable paper
Xerox: …in 2006 for photosensitive “erasable paper,” which produced prints with images lasting only a day, thus allowing for the continuous reuse of paper. The company acquired the technology sales and services company Global Imaging Systems (GIS) in 2007. The same year, Xerox received the U.S. National Medal of Technology…
- erasable programmable read-only memory (computer memory)
EPROM, form of computer memory that does not lose its content when the power supply is cut off and that can be erased and reused. EPROMs are generally employed for programs designed for repeated use but that can be upgraded with a later version of a program. EPROMs are erased with ultraviolet
- eraser
eraser, piece of rubber or other material used to rub out marks made by ink, pencil, or chalk. The modern eraser is usually a mixture of an abrasive such as fine pumice, a rubbery matrix such as synthetic rubber or vinyl, and other ingredients. The mixture is processed and extruded and, if made