- fulmar (bird)
fulmar, any of several species of gull-like oceanic birds of the family Procellariidae (order Procellariiformes), which also includes the petrels and the shearwaters. The name fulmar refers especially to the two species of the genus Fulmarus. Fulmars fly low over the waves of the open ocean, thus
- fulmar petrel (bird)
fulmar: The northern fulmar, or fulmar petrel (F. glacialis), nests in colonies on oceanic cliffs of the Arctic islands, the British Isles, and the coast of western Europe; in winter it is abundant in offshore waters in the sub-Arctic and temperate zones. The southern fulmar (F. glacialoides)…
- Fulmarus (bird genus)
fulmar: …two species of the genus Fulmarus. Fulmars fly low over the waves of the open ocean, thus resembling their narrower-winged relatives, the shearwaters. Fulmars will eat almost anything; their natural foods are small fish, squid, and crustaceans; but they often take ships’ garbage and will come ashore for carrion.
- Fulmarus glacialis (bird)
fulmar: The northern fulmar, or fulmar petrel (F. glacialis), nests in colonies on oceanic cliffs of the Arctic islands, the British Isles, and the coast of western Europe; in winter it is abundant in offshore waters in the sub-Arctic and temperate zones. The southern fulmar (F. glacialoides)…
- Fulmarus glacialoides (bird)
fulmar: The southern fulmar (F. glacialoides) has a comparable distribution in the Southern Hemisphere. Both fulmars are typically predominately white with a pearly gray mantle, but darker colour phases occur in some populations.
- fulminant disease (pathology)
digestive system disease: Acute hepatocellular hepatitis: …develop a sudden, severe (fulminant) form of hepatic necrosis that can lead to death. In this form of the disease jaundice increases to high levels during the first 7 to 10 days, spontaneous bleeding occurs because of reductions of blood-clotting proteins, and irrational behaviour, confusion, or coma follow, caused…
- fulminant hepatitis (pathology)
hepatitis: Signs and symptoms: …of acute viral hepatitis include fulminant hepatitis, which is a very severe, rapidly developing form of the disease that results in severe liver failure, impaired kidney function, difficulty in the clotting of blood, and marked changes in neurological function. Mortality is between 60 and 80 percent, but with liver transplant…
- Fulton (county, New York, United States)
Fulton, county, east-central New York state, U.S. The northern half of the county lies in the Adirondack Mountains, is occupied by Adirondack Park, and features pine forests. The southern half consists of hilly uplands wooded with maple, birch, and beech. The principal lakes are Great Sacandaga,
- Fulton (Missouri, United States)
Fulton, city, seat (1825) of Callaway county, central Missouri, U.S. It lies 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Jefferson City. Laid out in 1825 and named Volney, it was renamed shortly thereafter for Robert Fulton, steamboat engineer and inventor. Fulton is the seat of Westminster College (1851) and
- Fulton (ship)
Fulton, first steam-powered warship, weighing 2,745 displacement tons and measuring 156 feet (48 metres) in length, designed for the U.S. Navy by the U.S. engineer Robert Fulton. She was launched in October 1814 and her first trial run was in June of the following year. A wooden catamaran
- Fulton (county, Pennsylvania, United States)
Fulton, county, southern Pennsylvania, U.S., bordered to the east by Tuscarora Mountain, to the south by Maryland, and to the west by the Rays and Town hills. It consists of a mountainous area in the Appalachian Ridge and Valley physiographic region. The principal waterways are Meadow Grounds Lake
- Fulton Flash (American athlete)
Helen Stephens was an American runner who won two gold medals at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin and was undefeated in official competition. Known as the Fulton Flash, Stephens had won nine Amateur Athletic Union track-and-field titles by the age of 18. At the 1936 Olympic Games, Stephens won the
- Fulton Opera House (building, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States)
Lancaster: The Fulton Opera House (built 1852), which was named for steamboat designer and county resident Robert Fulton, was built on the site of the Lancaster jail, where the Paxton Boys from Dauphin county slaughtered the last of the Susquehanna Indians during the Indian uprising known as…
- Fulton, John (American bullfighter and painter)
John Fulton was an American bullfighter and painter, who was one of only two Americans (the other was Sidney Franklin) to receive the alternativa (the ceremony in which a novice becomes a full matador) in Madrid, the centre of the bullfighting world. When he was a boy growing up in Philadelphia,
- Fulton, Mary Hannah (American physician and missionary)
Mary Hannah Fulton was an American physician and missionary to China who ministered to many thousands not only through her own practice but by greatly expanding the availability of medical education in that country. Fulton was educated at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, and at Hillsdale
- Fulton, Robert (American inventor)
Robert Fulton was an American inventor, engineer, and artist who brought steamboating from the experimental stage to commercial success. He also designed a system of inland waterways, a submarine, and a steam warship. Fulton was the son of Irish immigrants. When their unproductive farm was lost by
- Fulton, Ruth (American anthropologist and author)
Ruth Benedict was an American anthropologist whose theories had a profound influence on cultural anthropology, especially in the area of culture and personality. Benedict graduated from Vassar College in 1909, lived in Europe for a year, and then settled in California, where she taught in girls’
- Fulushou (Chinese mythology)
Fulushou, in Chinese mythology, a collective term for the three so-called stellar gods, taken from their names: Fuxing, Luxing, and
- Fulvia (wife of Mark Antony)
Fulvia was the wife of Mark Antony, and a participant in the struggle for power following the death of Julius Caesar. Fulvia was the daughter of Marcus Fulvius Bambalio of Tusculum. She was first married to the demagogic politician Publius Clodius Pulcher. Their daughter Claudia was subsequently
- fulvic acid (chemical compound)
fulvic acid, one of two classes of natural acidic organic polymer that can be extracted from humus found in soil, sediment, or aquatic environments. Its name derives from Latin fulvus, indicating its yellow colour. This organic matter is soluble in strong acid (pH = 1) and has the average chemical
- Fulvicin (drug)
griseofulvin, drug produced by the molds Penicillium griseofulvum and P. janczewski and used in the treatment of ringworm, including athlete’s foot and infections of the scalp and nails. Griseofulvin exerts its antimicrobial activity by binding to microtubules, cellular structures responsible for
- Fulvius Flaccus, Marcus (Roman consul)
ancient Rome: The program and career of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus: Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, chairman of the commission and consul in 125, tried to solve the problem by offering the Italians the citizenship (or alternatively the right to appeal against Roman executive acts to the Roman people) in return for bringing their holdings of public land…
- Fulvius Plautianus (Roman military commander)
Caracalla: …commander of the imperial guard, Fulvius Plautianus; he is said to have hated Plautianus and played an important role in having him executed on the charge of a conspiracy against the imperial dynasty. He also exiled his own wife to an island and later killed her.
- fulvous tree duck (duck)
whistling duck: …of the tribe is the fulvous tree duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), with isolated populations in North and South America, India, and Africa—a most unusual world distribution and, remarkably, without geographic variation. It is mallard-sized, with a rusty brown body, a white rump, and creamy stripes on the flanks.
- fumagillin (drug)
beekeeping: The yearly work cycle: …beekeepers also feed the drug fumagillin to reduce possible damage to the adult bees by nosema disease (see below Disease and pest control). The colonies need a sunny exposure and protection from cold winds. Some beekeepers in northern and mountainous areas wrap their colonies with insulating material in winter. A…
- fumarase (enzyme)
metabolism: Regeneration of oxaloacetate: …in a reaction catalyzed by fumarase [45]; this type of reaction also occurred in step [39] of the cycle. The product of reaction [45] is malate.
- fumarate (chemical compound)
metabolism: Regeneration of oxaloacetate: …results in the formation of fumarate and reduced FAD.
- Fumaria (plant)
fumitory, (genus Fumaria), genus of about 60 species of annual plants in the poppy family (Papaveraceae). Fumitory species are native to Eurasia and Africa and have been introduced to Australia and the Americas. Several of the plants are used in herbal medicine. Common, or drug, fumitory (Fumaria
- Fumaria officinalis (plant)
fumitory: Common, or drug, fumitory (Fumaria officinalis) is a 90-cm- (3-foot-) tall climbing plant with lacy leaves and spikelike sprays of white or pinkish tubular flowers. The plant is native to Europe and Asia and has naturalized in parts of North America, having escaped cultivation. Once regarded as a medicinal…
- Fumariaceae (plant subfamily)
Papaveraceae: Physical description: …its own family, the subfamily Fumarioideae characteristically features bilaterally symmetrical flowers with two dissimilar pairs of petals. The leaves are often compound or finely divided. Many species have rhizomes or tubers.
- fumaric acid (chemical compound)
fumaric acid, organic compound related to maleic acid
- Fumarioideae (plant subfamily)
Papaveraceae: Physical description: …its own family, the subfamily Fumarioideae characteristically features bilaterally symmetrical flowers with two dissimilar pairs of petals. The leaves are often compound or finely divided. Many species have rhizomes or tubers.
- fumarole (geology)
fumarole, vent in the Earth’s surface from which steam and volcanic gases are emitted. The major source of the water vapour emitted by fumaroles is groundwater heated by bodies of magma lying relatively close to the surface. Carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide are usually emitted
- Fumban (Cameroon)
Foumban, town located in northwestern Cameroon. It lies 140 miles (225 km) north-northwest of Yaoundé. Foumban was the historic capital of the Bamum kingdom; a palace there dates from the 18th century. Njoya (reigned 1890–1923), the best known of the Bamum kings, established schools, invented a
- Fumbina (historical kingdom, Nigeria)
Adamawa: …which was then known as Fumbina, several times before settling it finally in 1841 in Yola, which has since remained the seat of the emirate. At his death, in 1848, Fumbina extended over parts of present-day eastern Nigeria and most of northern Cameroon; even as the easternmost emirate of the…
- fumble (sports)
American football: The play of the game: …the ball by recovering a fumble or intercepting a pass. Failing to make a first down, the offensive side must surrender the ball, usually by punting (kicking) it on fourth down. The offense scores by advancing the ball across the opponent’s goal line (a six-point touchdown) or placekicking it over…
- fume (air pollution)
air pollution: Fine particulates: …μm in diameter are called fumes.
- fumi-e (Japanese policy)
Japan: The enforcement of national seclusion: …out by such means as fumi-e, in which one was made to trample on an image of Christ or the Virgin Mary. The system of registration at Buddhist temples was instituted: all Japanese were required to register as parishioners to a parent Buddhist temple, called a danna-dera (“family temple”), which…
- fumigant (chemistry)
fumigant, any volatile, poisonous substance used to kill insects, nematodes, and other animals or plants that damage stored foods or seeds, human dwellings, clothing, and nursery stock. Soil fumigants are sprayed or spread over an area to be cultivated and are worked into the soil to control
- fumitory (plant)
fumitory, (genus Fumaria), genus of about 60 species of annual plants in the poppy family (Papaveraceae). Fumitory species are native to Eurasia and Africa and have been introduced to Australia and the Americas. Several of the plants are used in herbal medicine. Common, or drug, fumitory (Fumaria
- fumitory family (plant subfamily)
Papaveraceae: Physical description: …its own family, the subfamily Fumarioideae characteristically features bilaterally symmetrical flowers with two dissimilar pairs of petals. The leaves are often compound or finely divided. Many species have rhizomes or tubers.
- Fun Home (graphic memoir by Bechdel)
Alison Bechdel: …Bechdel published the graphic memoir Fun Home, a coming-of-age story that detailed her relationship with her father, a closeted gay man with an obsessive eye for decorative detail, and her own emerging lesbian consciousness. The critically acclaimed work was named a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and…
- Fun House (album by the Stooges)
Iggy and the Stooges: …and the band’s second album, Fun House (1970)—along with Iggy’s outrageous onstage performances, in which he smeared himself with peanut butter and rolled on broken glass—secured the band’s cult status. In 1973 the group released Raw Power, with production help from David Bowie, before disbanding the following year.
- fun shrub (plant)
Ochnaceae: Fun shrub, or carnival bush (Ochna multiflora), reaches 1.5 metres (5 feet) and has evergreen leaves. Its yellow, buttercup-like flowers have sepals that turn scarlet and remain after the petals fall. There are 3 to 5 projecting, jet-black fruits. Other genera have dry capsules with…
- Fun-Da-Mental (British musical group)
bhangra: …Reservations (1993), and the group Fun-Da-Mental, with Seize the Time (1995), began to use their music as a vehicle for poignant social commentary. Not only did these and other artists address such issues as racial conflict and the HIV/AIDS epidemic, but they tapped stylistic features of reggae, rap, and other…
- fun. (American indie pop band)
Jack Antonoff: fun. and Bleachers: …form the indie pop trio fun. The group’s sound was inspired by a combination of hip-hop, pop music of the 1950s, and adult contemporary music of the 1980s. Its debut album, Aim and Ignite, was released in 2009. Its next effort, Some Nights (2012), debuted at number three on the…
- Funabashi (Japan)
Funabashi, city, western Chiba ken (prefecture), east-central Honshu, Japan. It is situated on the northeastern coast of Tokyo Bay between the cities of Urayasu (west) and Narashino (east). Formed by the amalgamation of the post town of Funabashi with the fishing village of Katsushika in 1937, it
- Funafuti Atoll (atoll and national capital, Tuvalu)
Funafuti Atoll, coral atoll, capital of Tuvalu, in the west-central Pacific Ocean. Funafuti is the most populous of the country’s nine atolls. Its main islet is Fongafale, the site of the village of Vaiaku, where most of Tuvalu’s government offices are located. The atoll comprises some 30 islets
- Funaki, Kazuyoshi (Japanese ski jumper)
Nagano 1998 Olympic Winter Games: Ski jumper Kazuyoshi Funaki soared to the gold medal on the 120-metre hill and a silver on the 90-metre hill and led a dramatic victory in the team ski jumping event. Hiroyasu Shimizu took home the gold medal in the 500-metre speed skating event and the bronze…
- Funan (ancient state, Indochina)
Funan, ancient state in Cambodia that arose in the 1st century ce and was incorporated into the state of Chenla in the 6th century. Funan (perhaps a Chinese transcription of pnom, “mountain”) was the first important Hinduized kingdom in southeast Asia. It covered portions of what are now Vietnam,
- Funaria (plant genus)
cord moss, any of the plants of the genus Funaria (subclass Bryidae), distinguished by the spirally twisted seta (stalk) of the capsule (spore case). About 86 species of Funaria are found in many habitats throughout the world, especially on limestone or recently burned areas. About nine species are
- Funaria hygrometrica (plant species)
cord moss: …America; the most common is F. hygrometrica, which is often described in textbooks as a representative bryophyte (member of a group including mosses and liverworts).
- Funchal (Portugal)
Funchal, city and capital of the região autónoma (autonomous region) of the Madeira Islands of Portugal in the North Atlantic Ocean. It lies on the southern coast of Madeira Island. Funchal was founded in 1421 by the Portuguese navigator João Gonçalves Zarco, and it was briefly under Spanish
- Funchal Islands (archipelago, Portugal)
Madeira Islands, archipelago of volcanic origin in the North Atlantic Ocean, belonging to Portugal. It comprises two inhabited islands, Madeira and Porto Santo, and two uninhabited groups, the Desertas and the Selvagens. The islands are the summits of mountains that have their bases on an abyssal
- FUNCINPEC Party (political party, Cambodia)
Cambodia: The 1990s: …Peaceful, and Cooperative Cambodia (Funcinpec), a royalist political faction sponsored by Prince Sihanouk, who had returned home in 1992 after 12 years of residence in China and North Korea. The incumbent Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) and the former prime minister, Hun Sen, refused to accept the results of the…
- function (philosophy)
architecture: Content: …that interpret to society the functions and techniques of buildings.
- function (mathematics)
function, in mathematics, an expression, rule, or law that defines a relationship between one variable (the independent variable) and another variable (the dependent variable). Functions are ubiquitous in mathematics and are essential for formulating physical relationships in the sciences. The
- function (computer science)
computer programming language: Control structures: …is an example of a subprogram (also called a procedure, subroutine, or function). A subprogram is like a sauce recipe given once and used as part of many other recipes. Subprograms take inputs (the quantity needed) and produce results (the sauce). Commonly used subprograms are generally in a collection or…
- function analysis (mathematics)
functional analysis, Branch of mathematical analysis dealing with functionals, or functions of functions. It emerged as a distinct field in the 20th century, when it was realized that diverse mathematical processes, from arithmetic to calculus procedures, exhibit very similar properties. A
- Function of Criticism at the Present Time, The (essay by Arnold)
Matthew Arnold: Arnold as critic: …in the 1865 volume, “The Function of Criticism at the Present Time,” is an overture announcing briefly most of the themes he developed more fully in later work. It is at once evident that he ascribes to “criticism” a scope and importance hitherto undreamed of. The function of criticism, in…
- Function of Orgasm, The (work by Reich)
Wilhelm Reich: In The Function of Orgasm (1927), he argued that the ability to achieve orgasm, called orgastic potency, was an essential attribute of the healthy individual; failure to dissipate pent-up sexual energy by orgasm could produce neurosis in adults. This work led him into the sexual politics…
- functional analysis (economics)
marketing: The evolving discipline of marketing: Finally, a functional analysis examines the general tasks that marketing performs. For example, any marketing effort must ensure that the product is transported from the supplier to the customer. In some industries this transportation function may be handled by a truck, while in others it may be…
- functional analysis (mathematics)
functional analysis, Branch of mathematical analysis dealing with functionals, or functions of functions. It emerged as a distinct field in the 20th century, when it was realized that diverse mathematical processes, from arithmetic to calculus procedures, exhibit very similar properties. A
- functional assessment (medicine)
functional measurement, the processes by which medical professionals evaluate disability and determine the need for occupational therapy or physical rehabilitation. Functional measurement refers specifically to quantifying an individual’s performance of particular tasks and activities in the
- functional autonomy (psychology)
Gordon Allport: Allport called this concept functional autonomy. His approach favoured emphasis on the problems of the adult personality rather than on those of infantile emotions and experiences. In Becoming (1955) he stressed the importance of self and the uniqueness of adult personality. The self, he contended, is an identifiable organization…
- functional class nomenclature (chemistry)
organohalogen compound: Nomenclature: …naming organohalogen compounds: substitutive and functional class. In substitutive nomenclature the prefix fluoro-, chloro-, bromo-, or iodo- is added to the name of the hydrocarbon framework along with a number (called a locant) identifying the carbon to which the halogen is attached. Substituents, including the halogen, are listed in alphabetical…
- functional costing (economics)
defense economics: Choosing weapon systems: …illustrated by the technique of functional costing. Ordinarily, most budgets are a listing of expenditures under various main headings—personnel, equipment, and supplies—and the total is approved through the political process. This type of budget is called an accountability budget because it accounts for defense expenditure, but it cannot inform the…
- functional fixedness (psychology)
thought: Obstacles to effective thinking: Functional fixedness is the inability to realize that something known to have a particular use may also be used to perform other functions. When one is faced with a new problem, functional fixedness blocks one’s ability to use old tools in novel ways. Overcoming functional…
- functional food (nutrition)
nutraceutical: …used interchangeably with the terms functional food and dietary supplement, though there are distinctions. Functional foods are foods normally consumed in the diet that have scientifically assessed health benefits. Dietary supplements are ingestible preparations purposefully added to the diet to benefit health but are not necessarily derived from foods. Nutraceuticals,…
- functional genomics (genetics)
recombinant DNA: Genomics: …two subdivisions: structural genomics and functional genomics. Structural genomics is based on the complete nucleotide sequence of a genome. Each member of a library of clones is physically manipulated by robots and sequenced by automatic sequencing machines, enabling a very high throughput of DNA. The resulting sequences are then assembled…
- functional group (chemistry)
functional group, any of numerous combinations of atoms that form parts of chemical molecules, that undergo characteristic reactions themselves, and that in many cases influence the reactivity of the remainder of each molecule. In organic chemistry the concept of functional groups is useful as a
- functional group analysis (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Classical qualitative analysis: …between added chemical reagents and functional groups of the organic molecules. As a consequence, the result of the assay provides information about a portion of the organic molecule but usually does not yield sufficient information to identify it completely. Other measurements, including those of boiling points, melting points, and densities,…
- Functional Group Party (political party, Indonesia)
Golkar, social and political organization in Indonesia that evolved into a political party after it was founded as the Sekretariat Bersama Golongan Karya (Joint Secretariat of Functional Groups) by a group of army officers in 1964. Golkar, established ostensibly to counterbalance the growing power
- functional language (computer language)
computer programming language: Declarative languages: Functional languages have a mathematical style. A functional program is constructed by applying functions to arguments. Functional languages, such as LISP, ML, and Haskell, are used as research tools in language development, in automated mathematical theorem provers, and in some commercial projects.
- functional magnetic resonance imaging (medicine)
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), neuroimaging technique used in biomedical research and in diagnosis that detects changes in blood flow in the brain. This technique compares brain activity under resting and activated conditions. It combines the high-spatial-resolution noninvasive
- functional measurement (medicine)
functional measurement, the processes by which medical professionals evaluate disability and determine the need for occupational therapy or physical rehabilitation. Functional measurement refers specifically to quantifying an individual’s performance of particular tasks and activities in the
- functional MRI (medicine)
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), neuroimaging technique used in biomedical research and in diagnosis that detects changes in blood flow in the brain. This technique compares brain activity under resting and activated conditions. It combines the high-spatial-resolution noninvasive
- functional murmur (medicine)
pregnancy: Cardiovascular and lymphatic systems: Such distorted sounds, called “functional” murmurs (as distinguished from “organic” murmurs, which may be present when the heart is diseased), do not indicate that anything is amiss, although they may be sufficiently atypical to cause the obstetrician to refer the patient to a cardiologist for evaluation. Pregnancy sometimes produces minor…
- functional pigment (chemistry)
surface coating: Specialty, functional, and other pigments: This catchall class includes pigments that are very important but are used in relatively low volumes. Included are those specific materials which give unique optical properties to coatings, such as aluminum flake pigments for metallic automotive coatings, pearlescent pigments, fluorescent pigments,…
- functional psychology (psychology)
functionalism, in psychology, a broad school of thought originating in the U.S. during the late 19th century that attempted to counter the German school of structuralism led by Edward B. Titchener. Functionalists, including psychologists William James and James Rowland Angell, and philosophers
- functional psychosis (psychology)
psychosis: …into two categories: organic and functional. Organic psychoses are characterized by abnormal brain function that is caused by a known physical abnormality, which in most cases is some organic disease of the brain. However, altered brain function that precipitates hallucinations and delusions is more often associated with specific psychiatric disorders,…
- functional region (anthropology)
region: Regions may be nodal, defined by the organization of activity about some central place (e.g., a town and its hinterland, or tributary area), or uniform, defined by the homogeneous distribution of some phenomena within it (e.g., a tropical rainforest).
- functional toxic response (pathology)
poison: Morphological versus functional toxic responses: …can be morphological (structural) or functional or both. In most cases, the chemical produces morphological changes in an organ, which in turn affects the function of the organ. In a small number of cases, the chemical produces functional changes in an organ without changing the structure of the organ.
- functional-structural analysis (sociology)
structural functionalism, in sociology and other social sciences, a school of thought according to which each of the institutions, relationships, roles, and norms that together constitute a society serves a purpose, and each is indispensable for the continued existence of the others and of society
- functionalism (psychology)
functionalism, in psychology, a broad school of thought originating in the U.S. during the late 19th century that attempted to counter the German school of structuralism led by Edward B. Titchener. Functionalists, including psychologists William James and James Rowland Angell, and philosophers
- functionalism (philosophy)
functionalism, in the philosophy of mind, a materialist theory of mind that defines types of mental states in terms of their causal roles relative to sensory stimulation, other mental states, and physical states or behaviour. Pain, for example, might be defined as a type of neurophysiological state
- functionalism (international organizations)
functionalism, an approach to the formation of international organizations that advocates international cooperation on scientific, humanitarian, social, and economic issues. Functionalists argue that mutual trust and habits of cooperation between governments are more likely to develop through the
- Functionalism (architecture)
Functionalism, in architecture, the doctrine that the form of a building should be determined by practical considerations such as use, material, and structure, as distinct from the attitude that plan and structure must conform to a preconceived picture in the designer’s mind. Although Functionalism
- functionalism (linguistics)
functionalism, in linguistics, the approach to language study that is concerned with the functions performed by language, primarily in terms of cognition (relating information), expression (indicating mood), and conation (exerting influence). Especially associated with the Prague school of
- functionalism (social science)
functionalism, in social sciences, theory based on the premise that all aspects of a society—institutions, roles, norms, etc.—serve a purpose and that all are indispensable for the long-term survival of the society. The approach gained prominence in the works of 19th-century sociologists,
- Functions of the Executive (work by Barnard)
Chester Irving Barnard: …an academic, his first book, Functions of the Executive (1938), became an essential resource in the teaching of organizational sociology and business theory.
- functor (mathematics)
foundations of mathematics: Abstraction in mathematics: …category of (small) categories and functors, as the morphisms between categories are called, which preserve relationships among the objects and arrows.
- Fund for the Republic (American corporation)
Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions: …and its parent corporation, the Fund for the Republic (chartered in New York in 1952), for 25 years. The purpose of the centre—to clarify the basic issues confronting a democratic society—was served through discussion and criticism, publications, and public meetings. Scholars, public officials, and leaders of thought and action from…
- Fund for the South (Italian government program)
Italy: Public and private sectors: The Southern Development Fund (Cassa per il Mezzogiorno), a state-financed fund set up to stimulate economic and industrial development between 1950 and 1984, met with limited success. It supported early land reform—including land reclamation, irrigation work, infrastructure building, and provision of electricity and water to rural…
- Fundação Nacional do Indio (agency, Brazil)
South America: Sociological changes: …Proteção do Indio) and the National Indian Foundation (Fundação Nacional do Indio) were established, although such organizations often have become agents for the relocation and control of Indian groups rather than for their interests and survival. Christian missionaries sometimes have acted as representatives of Indian rights. Indians of the Andean…
- Fundación Futuro (Chilean organizaton)
Sebastián Piñera: Early life and political career: …creation in 1993 of the Fundación Futuro, a nonprofit organization concerned with water preservation and renewable energy that also established Tantauco Park, an ecological park on the Chilean island of Chiloé.
- fundame (decorative arts)
lacquerwork: Japanese processes: …various depths in the lacquer; fundame, fine gold or silver powder worked to a flat, dull surface; hirame, small, irregularly shaped pieces of sheet gold or silver placed on the surface; togidashi, the design built up to the surface in gold, silver, and colours with many coats of lacquer and…
- Fundamenta Astronomiae (work by Bessel)
astronomy: Precise calculations and observations: …catalog of unprecedented accuracy, the Fundamenta Astronomiae (“Foundations of Astronomy”).
- Fundamenta Botanica (work by Linnaeus)
Carolus Linnaeus: Classification by natural characters of Carolus Linnaeus: …the form of a booklet, Fundamenta Botanica (1736; “The Foundations of Botany”), that framed the principles and rules to be followed in the classification and naming of plants.
- fundamental (physics)
sound: Fundamentals and harmonics: …frequency is known as the fundamental, or first harmonic.