- erythema pernio (pathology)
chilblain, an inflammatory swelling of the skin of the hands or feet, resulting from exposure to cold. The condition is believed to result from cold hypersensitivity of small vessels of the skin. Tissue damage is less severe with chilblains than with frostbite, where the skin is actually frozen.
- erythermalgia (pathology)
erythromelalgia , rare disease in which the blood vessels of the hands and feet go through spasms of dilation associated with burning pain, increased skin temperature, and redness. The disease may be primary (in which case the cause is unknown), or secondary (caused by underlying disorders of the
- Erythrae (ancient city, Turkey)
Erythrae, ancient Ionic city on the Mimas (now Kara Burun) peninsula in western Turkey. The original site of traditionally Cretan and later Ionian settlement is uncertain, but from the 4th century bc the city was located at modern Ildir, where traces of the wall circuit, theatre, and citadel are
- Erythrae decree (Greek history)
ancient Greek civilization: Political and legal sources of resentment: …attested as early as the Erythrae decree of 453. The same decree imposed a “democratic” constitution, according to a principle that the literary sources say was general Athenian policy. Yet it would be simplistic to think that such Athenian-influenced constitutions were necessarily a significant upholding of human rights. One must…
- Erythraean languages
Afro-Asiatic languages, languages of common origin found in the northern part of Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and some islands and adjacent areas in Western Asia. About 250 Afro-Asiatic languages are spoken today by a total of approximately 250 million people. Numbers of speakers per language
- erythralgia (pathology)
erythromelalgia , rare disease in which the blood vessels of the hands and feet go through spasms of dilation associated with burning pain, increased skin temperature, and redness. The disease may be primary (in which case the cause is unknown), or secondary (caused by underlying disorders of the
- erythrasma (dermatology)
erythrasma, a superficial skin infection marked by reddish brown scaly patches and attributed to the bacterium Corynebacterium minutissimum. The lesions are generally seen on the inner sides of the thighs, in the scrotum, in the toe webs, and in the armpits. Erythrasma is more likely to occur in a
- erythremia (pathology)
bloodletting: Bloodletting in the modern world: Polycythemia vera is a condition marked by the overproduction of platelets as well as red and white blood cells; blood is drawn in such cases to prevent the formation of blood clots. Leech therapy continues to be used to reduce blood congestion in veins and prevent tissue necrosis, especially…
- Erythrinidae (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Erythrinidae (trahiras) Large mouths, canine teeth. Adipose fin; absent. Carnivorous. Food fishes. Size to 1.2 metres (4 feet). South America. 3 genera, 14 species. Family Ctenoluciidae (pike-characids) Elongate, pikelike body. Large mouth, canine teeth, scales ciliated, carnivorous, food fishes. Panama and South America. To 67.5 cm
- erythrite (mineral)
erythrite, arsenate mineral in the vivianite group, hydrated cobalt arsenate [Co3(AsO4)2·8H2O]. Erythrite, which is used as a guide to the presence of cobalt-nickel-silver ores because of its crimson or peach-red colour, occurs as radiating crystals, concretions, or earthy masses in the oxidized
- Erythrobalanus (plant subgenus)
red oak, any member of a group or subgenus (Erythrobalanus) of North American ornamental and timber shrubs and trees of the genus Quercus, in the beech family (Fagaceae), that have bristle-tipped leaves, acorns with hairy shell linings, and bitter seeds that mature in two seasons. Black oak, live
- Erythrobasidiales (order of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Order Erythrobasidiales Some are pathogenic in humans and animals, others are saprotrophic in soil or found in the air; yeastlike cells may be spherical or elongate; example genera include Erythrobasidium, Sporobolomyces, and Bannoa. Order Naohideales Mycoparasitic; auricularoid basidia may contain mitospores; example genus is
- erythroblast (biology)
erythroblast, nucleated cell occurring in red marrow as a stage or stages in the development of the red blood cell, or erythrocyte. See also
- erythroblastosis fetalis (pathology)
erythroblastosis fetalis, type of anemia in which the red blood cells (erythrocytes) of a fetus are destroyed in a maternal immune reaction resulting from a blood group incompatibility between the fetus and its mother. This incompatibility arises when the fetus inherits a certain blood factor from
- Erythrocebus patas (primate)
patas monkey, (Erythrocebus patas), long-limbed and predominantly ground-dwelling primate found in the grass and scrub regions of West and Central Africa and southeast to the Serengeti plains. The adult male patas monkey has shaggy fur set off by a white mustache and white underparts, and its build
- erythrocyte (biology)
red blood cell, cellular component of blood, millions of which in the circulation of vertebrates give the blood its characteristic colour and carry oxygen from the lungs to the tissues. The mature human red blood cell is small, round, and biconcave; it appears dumbbell-shaped in profile. The cell
- erythrocyte sedimentation rate (biochemistry)
blood analysis: Sedimentation and compatibility tests: The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is the rate at which red blood cells settle in a column of blood in one hour. It is a nonspecific indicator of inflammatory disease that is also increased in anemia. When blood cells clump together, owing to the presence of…
- erythrocythemia (pathology)
blood disease: Thalassemia and hemoglobinopathies: …abnormal hemoglobin may result in erythrocythemia, or overproduction of red cells. In these cases there is increased oxygen affinity, limiting proper delivery of oxygen to tissues and thereby stimulating the bone marrow to increase red cell production. In other cases the iron in heme may exist in the oxidized, or…
- erythrocytosis (pathology)
polycythemia: Types of polycythemia: …cause is known, is called erythrocytosis.
- erythrodermic psoriasis (skin disorder)
psoriasis: pustular, inverse (or flexular), and erythrodermic.
- erythromelalgia (pathology)
erythromelalgia , rare disease in which the blood vessels of the hands and feet go through spasms of dilation associated with burning pain, increased skin temperature, and redness. The disease may be primary (in which case the cause is unknown), or secondary (caused by underlying disorders of the
- erythromycin (drug)
erythromycin, drug synthesized by the soil bacterium Streptomyces erythraeus and used in the treatment of throat infections, pneumonia, and other diseases. Erythromycin, an antibiotic that inhibits the synthesis of vital proteins in susceptible bacteria, may be either bacteriostatic (i.e.,
- Erythroneura (insect)
leafhopper: The grape leafhopper (Erythroneura) is a slender yellow-coloured insect with red markings and is about 3 mm long. It feeds on developing leaves and overwinters among fallen grape leaves. It is found on the grapevine, Virginia creeper, and apple tree and is controlled by spraying or…
- erythronium (chemical element)
vanadium (V), chemical element, silvery white soft metal of Group 5 (Vb) of the periodic table. It is alloyed with steel and iron for high-speed tool steel, high-strength low-alloy steel, and wear-resistant cast iron. Vanadium was discovered (1801) by the Spanish mineralogist Andrés Manuel del Río,
- Erythronium (plant)
Erythronium, genus of about 20 species of spring-blooming plants of the family Liliaceae, commonly known as dog’s tooth violet. All the species are native to North America except for the purple- or pink-flowered dog’s tooth violet of Europe (E. dens-canis). The nodding flowers, usually one to a
- Erythronium americanum (plant)
Erythronium: The common dog’s tooth violet, or adder’s tongue, of North America is E. americanum. It has yellow flowers and brown-mottled leaves. Several species of Erythronium are grown as rock-garden ornamentals.
- Erythronium dens-canis (plant)
Erythronium: …tooth violet of Europe (E. dens-canis). The nodding flowers, usually one to a plant or in small clusters, range in colour from white to purple. The two leaves, borne at the base of the plant, often are covered with white or brown spots. The fruit is a pod. The…
- erythrophore (biology)
chromatophore: …chromatophores are termed melanophores (black), erythrophores (red), xanthophores (yellow), or leucophores (white). The distribution of the chromatophores and the pigments they contain determine the colour patterns of an organism.
- erythropoiesis (biology)
blood disease: Disorders affecting red blood cells: …person, red cell production (erythropoiesis) is so well adjusted to red cell destruction that the levels of red cells and hemoglobin remain constant. The rate of production of red cells by the bone marrow normally is controlled by a physiological feedback mechanism analogous to the thermostatic control of temperature…
- erythropoietic porphyria (pathology)
porphyria: …of porphyria are recognized: (1) erythropoietic and (2) hepatic. In the first, the overproduction occurs in relation to hemoglobin synthesis by cells in the bone marrow; in the second, the disturbance is in the liver.
- erythropoietic protoporphyria (pathology)
porphyria: (2) In erythropoietic protoporphyria, the skin becomes inflamed and itchy after short exposures to sunlight, but usually there are no other impairments, and this form of porphyria, which is transmitted as a dominant trait, is compatible with normal life expectancy.
- erythropoietin (hormone)
erythropoietin, hormone produced largely in the kidneys that influences the rate of production of red blood cells (erythrocytes). When the number of circulating red cells decreases or when the oxygen transported by the blood diminishes, an unidentified sensor detects the change, and the production
- Erythrostemon gilliesii (plant)
bird-of-paradise flower: Other species: The desert bird-of-paradise, or bird-of-paradise bush (Erythrostemon gilliesii), is an unrelated shrub of the pea family (Fabaceae) native to South America and naturalized elsewhere. The dwarf poinciana (Caesalpinia pulcherrima), a showy tree grown throughout the American tropics and subtropics, is sometimes known as the Mexican bird-of-paradise…
- Erythrotriorchis radiatus (bird)
goshawk: …genera also called goshawks: the red goshawk (Erythrotriorchis radiatus), a rare Australian bird, brown with relatively long wings and short tail; the chanting goshawks of Africa (two species of Melierax), named for their piping calls during breeding season, large, long-winged, strongly patterned birds of open country that forage on the…
- Erythroxylaceae (plant family)
Malpighiales: Erythroxylaceae and Rhizophoraceae: Erythroxylaceae and Rhizophoraceae are very close, having similar distinctive chemistry and cell microstructure.
- Erythroxylon (plant genus)
Malpighiales: Erythroxylaceae and Rhizophoraceae: Erythroxylum (230 species) is by far the largest genus in the family and has stamens that are usually joined at the base and of two different lengths. The fruits are fleshy drupes. The dried leaves of E. coca and E. novogranatense are still chewed by…
- Erythroxylum (plant genus)
Malpighiales: Erythroxylaceae and Rhizophoraceae: Erythroxylum (230 species) is by far the largest genus in the family and has stamens that are usually joined at the base and of two different lengths. The fruits are fleshy drupes. The dried leaves of E. coca and E. novogranatense are still chewed by…
- Erythroxylum coca (plant)
coca, (Erythroxylum coca), tropical shrub, of the family Erythroxylaceae, the leaves of which are the source of the drug cocaine. The plant, cultivated in Africa, northern South America, Southeast Asia, and Taiwan, grows about 2.4 metres (8 feet) tall. The branches are straight, and the lively
- Erythrurini (bird)
grass finch, any of several small finchlike birds of Australasia that constitute the tribe Erythrurini of the songbird family Estrildidae. Their tails are long and pointed, their bills stoutly conical. Grass finches live chiefly in hot open country near rivers. Several grass finches are well-known
- Eryx (snake)
boa: …Indian, and African species of sand boa (genus Eryx) and the West African earth python (Charina reinhardtii), in addition to two North American species. Erycines are live-bearers (as opposed to egg layers) that have stout cylindrical bodies, blunt heads, and short tails. Most measure less than 70 cm (28 inches).…
- Eryx (Italy)
Erice, town, northwestern Sicily, Italy; it lies at 2,464 feet (751 m) above sea level on the top of Monte San Giuliano (also called Monte Erice), just northeast of Trapani city. The town originated as a settlement of the Elyrir (an ancient Sicilian tribe) and was fortified by the Phoenicians and
- Erzählungen (work by Kurz)
Hermann Kurz: …tales of Swabian life in Erzählungen (1858–63; “Tales”).
- Erzählungen (work by Kleist)
Heinrich von Kleist: …eight masterly novellas, collected in Erzählungen (1810–11), of which “Das Erdbeben in Chili” (“The Earthquake in Chile”), “Michael Kohlhaas,” and “Die Marquise von O…” have become well-known as tales of violence and mystery. They are all characterized by an extraordinary economy, power, and vividness and by a tragic subject matter…
- Erzberg (region, Austria)
Alps: Mining and manufacturing: …is still significant in the Erzberg of Austria, where iron has been extracted from the mountain since the Middle Ages. Near Cluse, in the pre-Alps of Haute-Savoie not far from Geneva, a region of watchmaking, screw cutting, component manufacturing, and related industries emerged in the first quarter of the 19th…
- Erzberger, Matthias (German politician)
Matthias Erzberger was a leader of the left wing of the Roman Catholic Centre Party in Germany and signatory of the Armistice of World War I. The son of a craftsman, Erzberger turned from teaching school to journalism with the Centre newspaper, Deutsches Volksblatt, and worked his way up in the
- Erzgebirge (mountain range, Europe)
Ore Mountains, range of hills bounding the Bohemian Massif, extending 100 miles (160 km) along the German-Czech border, and reaching an average width of 25 miles (40 km). The Bohemian (southeastern) side of the range has a steep scarp face (2,000 to 2,500 feet [600 to 750 metres] high in places);
- Erzherzog-Trio (work by Beethoven)
Archduke Trio, trio for piano, violin, and cello by Ludwig van Beethoven, which premiered on April 11, 1814, in Vienna. The premiere of the Archduke Trio was one of Beethoven’s final concert performances as a pianist, because of his increasing deafness. Dedicated to Archduke Rudolf of
- Erzherzogtrio (work by Beethoven)
Archduke Trio, trio for piano, violin, and cello by Ludwig van Beethoven, which premiered on April 11, 1814, in Vienna. The premiere of the Archduke Trio was one of Beethoven’s final concert performances as a pianist, because of his increasing deafness. Dedicated to Archduke Rudolf of
- Erzhumanist, Der (German scholar)
Conradus Celtis was a German scholar known as Der Erzhumanist (“The Archhumanist”). He was also a Latin lyric poet who stimulated interest in Germany in both classical learning and German antiquities. Celtis studied at the universities of Cologne and Heidelberg and was crowned poet laureate by the
- Erziehung des Menschengeschlechts, Die (work by Lessing)
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing: Final years at Wolfenbüttel. of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing: …Die Erziehung des Menschengeschlechts (1780; The Education of the Human Race), is a treatise that closely reflects the working of his mind and expresses his belief in the perfectibility of the human race. In the history of the world’s religions, Lessing saw a developing moral awareness that would, he believed,…
- Erziehungsroman (German literary genre)
bildungsroman, class of novel that depicts and explores the manner in which the protagonist develops morally and psychologically. The German word Bildungsroman means “novel of education” or “novel of formation.” The folklore tale of the dunce who goes out into the world seeking adventure and learns
- Erzincan (Turkey)
Erzincan, city, eastern Turkey. It lies on the northern bank of the Kara River, a major tributary of the Euphrates. The city is situated in a fertile plain, 3,900 feet (1,200 meters) above sea level, enclosed by snowcapped mountains. It was taken by the Seljuq Turks from Byzantium in 1071, fell to
- Erzurum (Turkey)
Erzurum, city, eastern Turkey. It lies 6,400 feet (1,950 metres) above sea level in a fertile plain surrounded by high mountains. On a caravan route from Anatolia to Iran, Erzurum has been a major commercial and military centre since antiquity and is now a major rail station on the route between
- Erzya (people)
Finno-Ugric religion: The Finno-Ugric peoples: … in the southeast and the Erzya in the northwest), living in a rather large region near the middle reaches of the Volga River, and the Cheremis (the Mari), living in the vicinity of the confluence of the Volga and the Kama.
- Erzya language
Mordvin language: It has two major dialects: Erzya, spoken in the eastern portion of Mordvinia and the surrounding territory, and Moksha, spoken in the west. Both dialects are currently written and have official status, and their speakers have been known to identify themselves as separate ethnic groups. Indeed, they lack a common…
- Es (chemical element)
einsteinium (Es), synthetic chemical element of the actinoid series of the periodic table, atomic number 99. Not occurring in nature, einsteinium (as the isotope einsteinium-253) was first produced by intense neutron irradiation of uranium-238 during the detonation of nuclear weapons. This isotope
- ES cell (biology)
stem cell: Embryonic stem cells: Embryonic stem cells (often referred to as ES cells) are stem cells that are derived from the inner cell mass of a mammalian embryo at a very early stage of development, when it is composed of a hollow sphere of dividing cells…
- Es steht geschrieben (work by Dürrenmatt)
Friedrich Dürrenmatt: His first play, Es steht geschrieben (1947; “It Is Written”), is about the Anabaptist suppression in Münster in 1534–36. In it, as in Der Blinde (1948; “The Blind Man”) and Romulus der Grosse (1949; Romulus the Great), Dürrenmatt takes comic liberties with the historical facts. Die Ehe des…
- Es-Salt (Jordan)
Al-Salṭ, town, west-central Jordan. It is on the old main highway (often called the Al-Salṭ Road) leading from Amman to Jerusalem. The town is situated in the Al-Balqāʾ highland, about 2,600–2,750 feet (about 790–840 metres) above sea level, and is built on two hills, one of which has the ruins of
- ESA (European research organization)
European Space Agency (ESA), European space and space-technology research organization founded in 1975 from the merger of the European Launcher Development Organisation (ELDO) and the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO), both established in 1964. Members include Austria, Belgium, the Czech
- Esagila (ancient temple, Middle East)
Esagila, most important temple complex in ancient Babylon, dedicated to the god Marduk (q.v.), the tutelary deity of that city. The temple area was located south of the huge ziggurat called Etemenanki; it measured 660 feet (200 m) on its longest side, and its three vast courtyards were surrounded
- Esagila Tablet (historical document)
history of Mesopotamia: Nebuchadrezzar II: …to be found in the Esagila Tablet, which has been known since the late 19th century. Its base measured about 300 feet on each side, and it was 300 feet in height. There were five terracelike gradations surmounted by a temple, the whole tower being about twice the height of…
- Esaki diode (electronics)
Leo Esaki: …which became known as the Esaki diode. It also opened new possibilities for solid-state developments that his corecipients of the 1973 prize exploited separately. In 1960 Esaki was awarded an IBM (International Business Machines) fellowship for further research in the United States, and he subsequently joined IBM’s research laboratories in…
- Esaki Reiona (Japanese physicist)
Leo Esaki is a Japanese solid-state physicist and researcher in superconductivity who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 with Ivar Giaever and Brian Josephson. Esaki was a 1947 graduate in physics from Tokyo University and immediately joined the Kobe Kogyo company. In 1956 he became chief
- Esaki, Leo (Japanese physicist)
Leo Esaki is a Japanese solid-state physicist and researcher in superconductivity who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 with Ivar Giaever and Brian Josephson. Esaki was a 1947 graduate in physics from Tokyo University and immediately joined the Kobe Kogyo company. In 1956 he became chief
- Esala Perahera (Buddhist festival)
Kandy: The Esala Perahera, the annual 10-day torchlight parade of dancers and drummers, dignitaries, and ornately decorated elephants, commemorates the sacred tooth; it is now one of the better-known festivals in Asia, and it may be the largest Buddhist celebration in the world.
- Esarhaddon (king of Assyria)
Esarhaddon was the king of Assyria from 680–669 bc, a descendant of Sargon II. He is best known for his conquest of Egypt in 671. Although he was a younger son, Esarhaddon had already been proclaimed successor to the throne by his father, Sennacherib, who had appointed him governor of Babylon some
- Esau (biblical figure)
Esau, in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) book of Genesis (25:19–34; 27; 28:6–9; 32:3–21; 33:1–16; and 36), a son of Isaac and Rebekah, the elder twin brother of Jacob, and in Hebrew tradition the ancestor of the Edomites. At birth Esau was red and hairy, and he became a wandering hunter, while
- Esau, Katherine (American botanist)
Katherine Esau was a Russian-born American botanist who did groundbreaking work in the structure and workings of plants. Her Plant Anatomy is a classic in the field. Esau was born to a Mennonite family of German descent. When the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 cut short her agricultural studies in
- esbatement den appelboom, Het (Dutch play)
morality play: In the Dutch play Het esbatement den appelboom (“The Miraculous Apple Tree”), for example, a pious couple, Staunch Goodfellow and Steadfast Faith, are rewarded when God creates for them an everbearing apple tree with the property that whoever touches it without permission becomes stuck fast. This leads to predictable…
- Esbjerg (Denmark)
Esbjerg, city, southwestern Jutland, Denmark, opposite Fanø island on the North Sea. Founded in 1868, after the loss of North Slesvig (Schleswig) to Germany, to provide a new export outlet for Jutland’s agricultural produce, it grew rapidly after the harbour was completed in 1874 and was chartered
- Esbjörn, Lars Paul (Swedish missionary)
Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church: …Andover, Illinois (1850), served by Lars P. Esbjörn, the pioneer Swedish missionary pastor to the Swedish immigrants of the Midwest. Under the leadership of Esbjörn and Hasselquist, many congregations were started, and Augustana College and Theological Seminary, in Rock Island, Illinois, was organized, with Esbjörn as its first president.
- Esbo (Finland)
Espoo, city, southern Finland, just west of Helsinki, in a region of broad, flat valleys covered with low clay hills. It is located in an area that has been inhabited since 3500 bc. The city has railway connections to Helsinki and the remainder of Finland. It is a thriving technology centre where
- ESC (biology)
stem cell: Embryonic stem cells: Embryonic stem cells (often referred to as ES cells) are stem cells that are derived from the inner cell mass of a mammalian embryo at a very early stage of development, when it is composed of a hollow sphere of dividing cells…
- ESCA
surface analysis: X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy: Since the binding energies of the electrons emitted through XPS are discrete and atoms of different elements have different characteristic electron-binding energies, the emitted electron beam can provide a simple method of elemental analysis. The specificity of XPS is very good, since…
- esca (anatomy)
paracanthopterygian: Life cycle and reproduction: …is a fleshy enlargement, the esca, used to lure prey within range of capture. (The illicium and esca are generally also present in male anglerfishes but do not appear in members of suborder Ceratioidei.) The esca is commonly luminous; the female also has other light-producing organs. In 1922 a specimen…
- Escafeld (England, United Kingdom)
Sheffield, town, city, and metropolitan borough, metropolitan county of South Yorkshire, north-central England. Sheffield lies about 160 miles (260 km) northwest of London. The city and metropolitan borough lie within the historic county of Yorkshire, except for the area around Beighton and
- Escal-Vigor (work by Eekhoud)
Georges Eekhoud: In the novel Escal-Vigor (1899; Escal-Vigor: A Strange Love), Eekhoud confronted his own homosexuality.
- Escal-Vigor: A Strange Love (work by Eekhoud)
Georges Eekhoud: In the novel Escal-Vigor (1899; Escal-Vigor: A Strange Love), Eekhoud confronted his own homosexuality.
- Escalante River (river, Utah, United States)
Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument: In the northeast, the Escalante River has cut deep into the sandstone over many millennia to create a tangle of interconnected, sometimes quite narrow, steep-sided canyons that provide a challenge for hikers.
- Escalante, Francisco Silvestre Vélez de (Spanish explorer)
Silvestre Vélez de Escalante was a Spanish Franciscan missionary-explorer, who in 1776–77 with his superior Francisco Domínguez, while seeking a route to Monterey in California from Santa Fe (now in New Mexico), rediscovered the Grand Canyon (Arizona). He explored what is now western Colorado and
- Escalante, Silvestre Vélez de (Spanish explorer)
Silvestre Vélez de Escalante was a Spanish Franciscan missionary-explorer, who in 1776–77 with his superior Francisco Domínguez, while seeking a route to Monterey in California from Santa Fe (now in New Mexico), rediscovered the Grand Canyon (Arizona). He explored what is now western Colorado and
- Escalante, Tadeo (artist)
Cuzco school: The work of Tadeo Escalante stands out as an example of the mestizo style. His murals of the Church of Huaro (1802), including a depiction of Hell, utilize Baroque dynamism at the same time that they freely interpret space and perspective.
- escalated force (crowd control)
police: Methods of crowd policing: …ancient strategy of crowd control, escalated force (the use of increasing amounts of force until the crowd disperses), still prevails in most countries that have not adopted Western-style democracy. Even in democracies, however, escalated force was the traditional way of controlling crowds until the 1970s, when the strategy of negotiated…
- escalation (military)
war: The control of war: …show a strong tendency to escalate. Thus, one state erects a tariff barrier to protect its industry against the competition of a trade partner, and the partner retaliates, the retaliatory interaction being repeated until the two countries find themselves in a trade war. Armaments races show a similar tendency to…
- escalator (transportation)
escalator, moving staircase used as transportation between floors or levels in subways, buildings, and other mass pedestrian areas. An inclined belt, invented by Jesse W. Reno of the United States in 1891, provided transportation for passengers riding on cleats attached to the belt, which was
- escalator clause (business and labor)
escalator clause, provision in union or business contracts for automatic adjustment of wages or prices in proportion to changes in an external standard, such as the U.S. cost of living index. Escalator clauses have been used most extensively since World War II. They are used in union contracts as a
- Escalera Dorada (sculpture by Siloé)
Diego de Siloé: His early masterpiece, the Escalera Dorada (Golden Staircase; 1519–23) in the Burgos Cathedral, combines both his sculptural and architectural gifts in a work of painted and gilded exuberance.
- Escales (work by Ibert)
Jacques Ibert: …popular work, the symphonic suite Escales (1922; “Ports of Call”). From 1937 until 1960 Ibert was director of the French Academy in Rome. He wrote for almost every genre. Of his seven operas the most successful was Angélique (1926). The brilliantly witty Divertissement (1930) was a popular orchestral piece.
- Escalier Monumental (feature, Auch, France)
Auch: …Place Salinis, from which the Monumental Steps (Escalier Monumental) lead down to the river.
- Escallonia (plant genus)
Escallonia, genus of South American evergreen trees and shrubs in the family Grossulariaceae, order Rosales, comprising about 50 species. Members of the genus are found mainly in mountainous areas—notably in the Andes Mountains—although species in the temperate, southernmost portions of the range
- Escalloniales (plant order)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Order Escalloniales Family: Escalloniaceae. Order Paracryphiales Family: Paracryphiaceae.
- escallop (bivalve)
scallop, any of the marine bivalve mollusks of the family Pectinidae, particularly species of the genus Pecten. The family, which includes about 50 genera and subgenera and more than 400 species, is worldwide in distribution and ranges from the intertidal zone to considerable ocean depths. The two
- escalope (meat)
veal: Scallops, small thin slices—called scallopine in Italy and escalopes or médaillons in France—may be cooked in wine or other sauces.
- Escalus (fictional character)
Measure for Measure: …careful supervision of the magistrate Escalus. Vincentio asks Isabella to give up her idea of being a nun in order to become his wife. (Whether she accepts is today a matter of theatrical choice.)
- Escanaba (Michigan, United States)
Escanaba, city, seat (1861) of Delta county, southern Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U.S. It is a port on Little Bay de Noc, an inlet of Green Bay, about 55 miles (90 km) north-northeast of Menominee. Lumber operations began there in the 1830s. The community, whose name was derived from an Ojibwa
- ESCAP (UN)
United Nations: Economic reconstruction: …Commission for Europe and the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East. Similar commissions were established for Latin America in 1948 and for Africa in 1958. The major work of economic reconstruction, however, was delegated to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank), one of the major…
- Escapade (film by Leonard [1935])
Robert Z. Leonard: Dancing Lady to Ziegfeld Girl: Escapade (1935), however, was more successful. The comedy, which was set in prewar Vienna, featured Luise Rainer, in her Hollywood debut, opposite William Powell. Next was The Great Ziegfeld (1936), Leonard’s best and biggest hit. The lavish biopic of flamboyant showman Flo Ziegfeld starred MGM’s…
- Escape Artist, The (film by Deschanel [1982])
Ricky Jay: …adviser on such films as The Escape Artist (1982) and Forrest Gump (1994), for which he provided the special wheelchair that enabled actor Gary Sinise to portray a double amputee, as well as The Illusionist and The Prestige (both 2006), in the latter of which he also had a small…
- Escape Artist, The (novel by Wagoner)
David Wagoner: …his fourth and best-known novel, The Escape Artist, about a boy trying to make it as an amateur magician. The story was adapted and released as a feature film by executive producer Francis Ford Coppola in 1982 but received only mediocre reviews.