- Futurist Manifesto (work by Marinetti)
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti: …the publication of Marinetti’s “Manifeste de Futurisme” in the Paris newspaper Le Figaro (February 20, 1909; see Manifesto of Futurism). His ideas were quickly adopted in Italy, where the writers Aldo Palazzeschi, Corrado Govoni, and Ardengo Soffici were among his most important disciples.
- Futurity Stakes (horse race)
James Winkfield: …in the United States, the Futurity Stakes in New York City. Already scheduled to ride for his usual stable in the race, he accepted a $3,000 offer to ride for another owner instead. His reputation was tarnished, and the number of his rides dropped by a third in 1903.
- Futurizm (the arts)
Futurism, early 20th-century artistic movement centered in Italy that emphasized the dynamism, speed, energy, and power of the machine and the vitality, change, and restlessness of modern life. During the second decade of the 20th century, the movement’s influence radiated outward across most of
- Futurological Congress, The (work by Lem)
Stanisław Lem: …short novel Kongres futurologiczny (1971; The Futurological Congress), a hilarious satire on government and academic conferences. In a Kafkaesque turn, at a hotel in Costa Rica, a conference to propose solutions to overpopulation in a time of violence and terrorism soon dissolves into anarchy as the hotel’s water supply is…
- futurology (social science)
futurology, in the social sciences, the study of current trends in order to forecast future developments. While the speculative and descriptive aspects of futurology are traceable to the traditions of utopian literature and science fiction, the methodology of the field originated in the
- futūwa (Islamic organization)
ʿAlī: The futuwwāt: In Islamic civilization, the futuwwāt (“spiritual chivalry”) were military and economic orders similar to the knightly fraternities and guilds of medieval Europe. Combining craftwork or service in the military or government with spiritual discipline, these orders have played a major role in Islamic history…
- futūwah (Islamic organization)
ʿAlī: The futuwwāt: In Islamic civilization, the futuwwāt (“spiritual chivalry”) were military and economic orders similar to the knightly fraternities and guilds of medieval Europe. Combining craftwork or service in the military or government with spiritual discipline, these orders have played a major role in Islamic history…
- futuwwāt (Islamic organization)
ʿAlī: The futuwwāt: In Islamic civilization, the futuwwāt (“spiritual chivalry”) were military and economic orders similar to the knightly fraternities and guilds of medieval Europe. Combining craftwork or service in the military or government with spiritual discipline, these orders have played a major role in Islamic history…
- Fux, Johann Joseph (Austrian composer)
Johann Joseph Fux was an Austrian composer, one of the most successful of his time, whose theoretical work on counterpoint, Gradus ad Parnassum, influenced generations of composers and teachers. Fux was organist at the Schottenkirche in Vienna in 1696, and he became court composer to the Holy Roman
- Fuxi (Chinese mythological emperor)
Fu Xi, first mythical emperor of China. His miraculous birth, as a divine being with a serpent’s body, is said to have occurred in the 29th century bce. Some representations show him as a leaf-wreathed head growing out of a mountain or as a man clothed with animal skins. Fu Xi is said to have
- Fuxian (China)
Wafangdian, city, southern Liaoning sheng (province), northeastern China. It is situated in the south-central part of the Liaodong Peninsula and is an important market centre for an agricultural and fruit-growing area that specializes in apples, pears, and grapes. It has developed industries
- Fuxin (China)
Fuxin, city, northwestern Liaoning sheng (province), northeastern China. It is located near the border with the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and serves as the administrative centre for several surrounding districts and counties. This area, located in the south-central part of Northeast China
- Fuxing (Chinese mythology)
Fuxing, in Chinese mythology, star god of happiness, one of the three stellar divinities known collectively as Fulushou. He is one of many Chinese gods who bestow happiness on their worshipers. Some say he is the same as Fushen, the spirit of happiness. If so, Fuxing was a historical personage,
- Fuzanglong (Chinese mythology)
long: …Dragon of Hidden Treasure (Fuzanglong); the Earth Dragon (Dilong), who controls the waterways; and the Spiritual Dragon (Shenlong), who controls the rain and winds. In popular belief only the latter two were significant; they were transformed into the Dragon Kings (Longwang), gods who lived in the four oceans, delivered…
- fuze (ignition device)
fuse, in explosives technology, device for firing explosives in blasting operations, in fireworks, and in military projectiles. The blasting safety fuse, employed to fire an explosive from a distance or after a delay, is a hollow cord filled with a mixture resembling black powder and designed to
- Fuzhou (Jiangxi, China)
Jiangxi: Settlement patterns: …the largest of which is Fuzhou. The west and northwest of the province is a focus of heavy and light industry, of which the coal city Pingxiang, on the Hunan border, is the major centre.
- Fuzhou (China)
Fuzhou, city and capital of Fujian sheng (province), southeastern China. It is situated in the eastern part of the province on the north bank of the estuary of Fujian’s largest river, the Min River, a short distance from its mouth on the East China Sea. The Min gives the city access to the interior
- Fuzhou language (Chinese language)
China: Sino-Tibetan of China: …to the south, by the Fuzhou, or Northern Min, language of northern and central Fujian and by the Xiamen-Shantou (Amoy-Swatow), or Southern Min, language of southern Fujian and easternmost Guangdong. The Hakka language of southernmost Jiangxi and northeastern Guangdong has a rather scattered pattern of distribution. Probably the best known…
- Fuzhou Navy Yard (Chinese history)
Fuzhou: History: …with Western technology when the Fuzhou Navy Yard was established; a shipyard and an arsenal were built under French guidance, and a naval school was opened. A naval academy was also established at the shipyard, and it became a centre for the study of Western languages and technical sciences. The…
- Fuzuli, Mehmed bin Süleyman (Turkish author)
Mehmed bin Süleyman Fuzuli was a Turkish poet and the most outstanding figure in the classical school of Turkish literature. A resident of Baghdad, Fuzuli apparently came from a family of religious officials and was well versed in the thought of his day, but very little is known about his life.
- fuzzy control (mathematics)
fuzzy logic: Fuzzy control: In technical applications, fuzzy control refers to programs or algorithms using fuzzy logic to allow machines to make decisions based on the practical knowledge of a human operator. The fundamental problem of automatic control is that of determining the appropriate response of the…
- fuzzy logic (mathematics)
fuzzy logic, in mathematics, a form of logic based on the concept of a fuzzy set. Membership in fuzzy sets is expressed in degrees of truth—i.e., as a continuum of values ranging from 0 to 1. In a narrow sense, the term fuzzy logic refers to a system of approximate reasoning, but its widest meaning
- fuzzy set (mathematics)
fuzzy logic: Fuzzy sets: Most concepts used in everyday language, such as “high temperature,” “round face,” or “aquatic animal,” are not clearly defined. In 1965 Lotfi Zadeh, an engineering professor at the University of California at Berkeley, proposed a mathematical definition of those classes that lack precisely…
- Fuʾād I (king of Egypt)
Fuʾād I was the first king of Egypt (1922–36) following its independence from Great Britain. The youngest son of Ismāʿīl Pasha, Fuʾād spent most of his childhood with his exiled father in Naples. Following his education at the military academy in Turin, Italy, he served in a number of
- Fuʾād II (king of Egypt)
Farouk I: …succeeded by his infant son, Fuʾād II, but less than a year later Egypt became a republic.
- FV
Future value (FV) is the estimated value of a current asset at a specified future date, based on the interest rate of investment and inflation. The future value of a given sum of money includes the present value in addition to any earnings generated from compounding interest rates. Inflation can
- FV (Madagascan political organization)
Madagascar: The Second Republic: Another opposition alliance, the Vital Forces (Forces Vives; FV), was created under the leadership of Albert Zafy, a professor at the University of Madagascar. Demonstrations favouring constitutional change were held, and discussions about a possible revision of the constitution continued without yielding any agreement. In June 1991 the FV…
- FV430 (armored vehicle)
armoured vehicle: Fully tracked carriers: …of the M113 was the FV430 series of tracked vehicles, introduced to the British Army in the 1960s. The FV430 vehicles were made in many versions, including mobile command posts and ambulances. The APC version, the FV432, had a crew of two and could transport eight fully armed soldiers. It…
- FV430 Bulldog (armored vehicle)
armoured vehicle: Fully tracked carriers: …of the M113 was the FV430 series of tracked vehicles, introduced to the British Army in the 1960s. The FV430 vehicles were made in many versions, including mobile command posts and ambulances. The APC version, the FV432, had a crew of two and could transport eight fully armed soldiers. It…
- Fw 190 (German aircraft)
Fw 190, German fighter aircraft that was second in importance only to the Bf 109 during World War II. A low-wing monoplane powered by a BMW air-cooled radial engine, it was ordered by the Luftwaffe in 1937 as a hedge against shortages of the liquid-cooled Daimler-Benz DB601 engine, which powered
- Fw 190A-2 (German aircraft)
Fw 190: The Fw 190A-2, the first mass-produced version, had a top speed of about 410 miles (660 km) per hour and a ceiling of 35,000 feet (10,600 metres). The fighter’s heavy cannon armament made it a potent bomber destroyer, and it played a major role in turning…
- Fw 190D (German aircraft)
Fw 190: The result was the Fw 190D, which entered service in the winter of 1943–44 with a top speed of about 440 miles (710 km) per hour and an armament of two cowling-mounted machine guns and a pair of 20-mm cannons in the wing roots. In principle, the Fw 190D…
- Fw 190F (German aircraft)
Fw 190: In the meantime, the Fw 190F and G had become the Luftwaffe’s standard fighter-bomber for ground attack. Though used in small numbers by Allied standards, the planes were effective in this role. Both ground-attack variants had additional armour protection, and the G version also could carry a single 4,000-pound…
- FWCC (religious organization)
Friends World Committee for Consultation (FWCC), international organization of the Society of Friends (Quakers) founded at Swarthmore, Pa., in 1937. It promotes visits, conferences, and study groups among Friends from all parts of the world and maintains contact with various Friends organizations
- FWHM
radiation measurement: Spectroscopy systems: …as the ratio of the full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) of the peak divided by the centroid position of the peak. This ratio is normally expressed as a percentage, and small values correspond to narrow peaks and good energy resolution. If the incident radiation consists of multiple discreet energies, good energy resolution will…
- FWS (United States government agency)
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: It is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, with headquarters in Fairbanks. One of the great pristine and largely undisturbed wilderness areas of North America, the refuge has been the subject of much controversy because of the potential hydrocarbon reserves within it.
- FX market (economics)
foreign exchange market (forex, or FX, market), institution for the exchange of one country’s currency with that of another country. Foreign exchange markets are actually made up of many different markets, because the trade between individual currencies—say, the euro and the U.S. dollar—each
- FY (accounting)
fiscal year (FY), in finance and government, an annual accounting period for which an institution’s financial statements are prepared. Different countries and companies use different fiscal years (often referred to in financial records with the acronym FY), and the fiscal year need not align with
- Fy antigen (biochemistry)
Duffy blood group system: …presence of glycoproteins known as Fy antigens on the surface of red blood cells, endothelial cells (cells lining the inner surface of blood vessels), and epithelial cells in the alveoli of the lungs and in the collecting tubules of the kidneys. The Duffy antigens Fya (Fy1) and Fyb (Fy2) were…
- Fyffe, Will (Scottish comedian)
Will Fyffe was a Scottish actor, music-hall entertainer, and pantomimist, one of the most popular character comedians of British stage and screen. As a child Fyffe toured Scotland in his father’s stock company; he made his debut as Little Willie in East Lynne. A precocious actor, he played the aged
- fyke net
commercial fishing: Methods: …of trap is the bag-shaped fyke net, held open by hoops; linked together in long chains, these are used to catch eels in rivers. When equipped with wings and leaders, fyke nets are employed in lakes where there are sheltered places with abundant plant life. Hundreds of such nets can…
- Fylde (district, England, United Kingdom)
Fylde, borough (district), administrative and historic county of Lancashire, northwestern England. It lies on the north bank of the estuary of the River Ribble at the Irish Sea, just southeast of the resort of Blackpool. Fylde borough is part of the Fylde geographic region, a low coastal plain 18
- fylgja (Germanic mythology)
Germanic religion and mythology: Guardian spirits: …of a cult of the fylgja (plural fylgjur), a word best translated as “fetch,” or “wraith.” The fylgja may take the form of a woman or an animal that is rarely seen except in dreams or at the time of death. It may be the companion of one man or…
- fylgjur (Germanic mythology)
Germanic religion and mythology: Guardian spirits: …of a cult of the fylgja (plural fylgjur), a word best translated as “fetch,” or “wraith.” The fylgja may take the form of a woman or an animal that is rarely seen except in dreams or at the time of death. It may be the companion of one man or…
- fylke (Norwegian government)
Norway: Political process: …meetings in each of Norway’s fylker. Each fylke elects a number of representatives (the number determined by the area of the fylke and the size of its population relative to that of the country as a whole) to the Storting, with party representation allotted on the basis of the percentage…
- Fyn (island, Denmark)
Funen, third largest island, after Zealand (Sjælland) and Vendsyssel-Thy, in Denmark. It lies between southern Jutland and Zealand and is bounded by the Little Belt (strait) to the west and the Great Belt to the east. Both straits are crossed by rail and road connections, including the Great Belt
- fynbos (scrubland, South Africa)
fynbos, scrubland plant community found along a narrow strip of the extreme southern coast of South Africa, composed of many species of broad-leaved evergreen shrubs, especially plants of the family Proteaceae. Fynbos ecosystems, part of the greater Cape floristic region, include more than 8,500
- Fyodor Alekseyevich (tsar of Russia)
Fyodor III was the tsar of Russia (reigned 1676–82) who fostered the development of Western culture in Russia, thereby making it easier for his successor, Peter I the Great (reigned 1682–1725), to enact widespread reforms based on Western models. The eldest son of Alexis (reigned 1645–76), Fyodor
- Fyodor I (tsar of Russia)
Fyodor I was the tsar of Russia (1584–98) whose death ended the rule of the Rurik dynasty in Russia. The son of Ivan IV the Terrible and his first wife, Anastasiya Romanovna Zakharina-Yureva, Fyodor succeeded his father on March 19, 1584. Being both physically weak and feebleminded, however, he
- Fyodor II (tsar of Russia)
Fyodor II was the tsar who ruled Russia briefly (April–June 1605) during the Time of Troubles (1598–1613). The son of Boris Godunov (reigned 1598–1605), Fyodor received an excellent education and was well acquainted with state affairs when his father unexpectedly died and he ascended the Russian
- Fyodor III (tsar of Russia)
Fyodor III was the tsar of Russia (reigned 1676–82) who fostered the development of Western culture in Russia, thereby making it easier for his successor, Peter I the Great (reigned 1682–1725), to enact widespread reforms based on Western models. The eldest son of Alexis (reigned 1645–76), Fyodor
- Fyodor Ivanovich (tsar of Russia)
Fyodor I was the tsar of Russia (1584–98) whose death ended the rule of the Rurik dynasty in Russia. The son of Ivan IV the Terrible and his first wife, Anastasiya Romanovna Zakharina-Yureva, Fyodor succeeded his father on March 19, 1584. Being both physically weak and feebleminded, however, he
- Fyodorov, Leonid (Russian priest)
Russian Catholic church: …they received their own exarch, Leonid Fyodorov; in 1921, however, Fyodorov was imprisoned, and the exarchy was dispersed under the communists.
- Fyodorov, Svyatoslav (Russian physician)
Svyatoslav Fyodorov was a Russian eye surgeon who in 1974 developed radial keratotomy (RK), the first surgical procedure to correct myopia (nearsightedness). In Fyodorov’s technique, tiny, precise incisions were made near the cornea of the eye. This reduced the focusing power of the cornea, which
- Fyodorovna, Maria (Russian grand duchess)
Nicholas I: Early life: …Duke Paul and Grand Duchess Maria. Some three and a half months after his birth, following the death of Catherine II the Great, Nicholas’s father became Emperor Paul I of Russia. Nicholas had three brothers, two of whom, the future emperor Alexander I and Constantine, were 19 and 17 years…
- fyrd (Anglo-Saxon militia)
fyrd, tribal militia-like arrangement existing in Anglo-Saxon England from approximately ad 605. Local in character, it imposed military service upon every able-bodied free male. It was probably the duty of the ealderman, or sheriff, to call out and lead the fyrd. Fines imposed for neglecting the
- Fyt, Jan (Flemish painter)
Jan Fyt was a Flemish painter known for his technical mastery in the rendering of animals. Apprenticed to a painter when scarcely more than 10 years old, Fyt was accepted into the Guild of St. Luke as a master at age 20 and over the next 30 years produced a vast number of pictures with facility and
- Fyzabad (India)
Faizabad, city, east-central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It lies on the Ghaghara River, about 75 miles (120 km) east of Lucknow. The city of Ayodhya, just to the east, is a suburb. Faizabad was founded in 1730 by Sādāt ʿAlī Khan, the first nawab of Oudh (now Ayodhya), who made it his