• Felon Voting (ProCon debate)

    While felony crimes differ from U.S. state to state, they can include the serious, often violent acts of arson, assault, battery, burglary, child endangerment, domestic assault, drug dealing, fraud, kidnapping, manslaughter, murder, rape, robbery, and stalking. In the United States, as

  • felony and misdemeanour (crime)

    felony and misdemeanour, in Anglo-American law, classification of criminal offenses according to the seriousness of the crime. U.S. jurisdictions generally distinguish between felonies and misdemeanours. A class of minor offenses that may be described as petty offenses or quasi-crimes is also

  • felony murder rule (law)

    crime: Intention: …the other hand, some “felony murder” statutes attribute criminal intention to any deaths that occur during the commission of certain “dangerous felonies.” This is similar to strict liability. For example, in one case in the United States, a person committing a robbery took a hostage, who then was accidentally…

  • Felou gundi (rodent)

    gundi: The Felou gundi (Felovia vae) is confined to Senegal, Mali, and Mauritania. The East African gundi, or Speke’s pectinator (Pectinator spekei), is geographically isolated from all other gundi species and lives in Ethiopia and Somalia.

  • Felovia vae (rodent)

    gundi: The Felou gundi (Felovia vae) is confined to Senegal, Mali, and Mauritania. The East African gundi, or Speke’s pectinator (Pectinator spekei), is geographically isolated from all other gundi species and lives in Ethiopia and Somalia.

  • Felsch, Happy (American baseball player)

    Black Sox Scandal: Joe (“Shoeless Joe”) Jackson and Oscar (“Happy”) Felsch, and utility infielder Fred McMullin. Court records suggest that the eight players received $70,000 to $100,000 for losing five games to three.

  • Felsch, Oscar (American baseball player)

    Black Sox Scandal: Joe (“Shoeless Joe”) Jackson and Oscar (“Happy”) Felsch, and utility infielder Fred McMullin. Court records suggest that the eight players received $70,000 to $100,000 for losing five games to three.

  • Felsegg Bridge (bridge, Felsegg, Switzerland)

    bridge: Maillart’s innovations: …bridge over the Thur at Felsegg (1933), the Schwandbach Bridge near Hinterfultigen (1933), and the Töss River footbridge near Wulflingen (1934). The Felsegg bridge has a 68-metre (226-foot) span and features for the first time two parallel arches, both three-hinged. Like the Salginatobel Bridge, the Felsegg bridge features X-shaped abutment…

  • Felsenau Viaduct (bridge, Bern, Switzerland)

    bridge: Christian Menn: For the high, curving Felsenau Viaduct (1974) over the Aare River in Bern, spans of up to 154 metres (512 feet) were built using the cantilever method from double piers. The trapezoidal box girder, only 11 metres (36 feet) wide at the top, haunches at the supports and carries…

  • felsenmeer (geology)

    felsenmeer, (German: “sea of rock”), exposed rock surfaces that have been quickly broken up by frost action so that much rock is buried under a cover of angular shattered boulders. These mantles principally occur in Arctic regions and high mountain areas. Their continuity and depth varies with

  • felsic and mafic rocks (igneous rock)

    felsic and mafic rocks, division of igneous rocks on the basis of their silica content. Chemical analyses of the most abundant components in rocks usually are presented as oxides of the elements; igneous rocks typically consist of approximately 12 major oxides totaling over 99 percent of the rock.

  • Felsina (ancient city, Italy)

    Felsina, city founded by Etruscans about 510 bce on the site of modern Bologna, Italy, an area rich in Villanovan Iron Age remains. By the mid-4th century Felsina had fallen to invading Gauls (Boii tribe), who called it Bononia. The city was captured by Rome in 196 bce and was colonized seven years

  • felsite (igneous rock)

    felsic and mafic rocks, division of igneous rocks on the basis of their silica content. Chemical analyses of the most abundant components in rocks usually are presented as oxides of the elements; igneous rocks typically consist of approximately 12 major oxides totaling over 99 percent of the rock.

  • felt (fibre)

    felt, a class of fabrics or fibrous structures obtained through the interlocking of wool, fur, or some hair fibres under conditions of heat, moisture, and friction. Other fibres will not felt alone but can be mixed with wool, which acts as a carrier. Several industries manufacture goods through the

  • felt bush (plant)

    kalanchoe: Major species: marmorata); velvet leaf, or felt bush (K. beharensis); and devil’s backbone, or mother of thousands (K. daigremontiana). A range of attractive potted plants, commonly known as florist’s kalanchoe and distinguished by their colourful flowers, have been derived from K. blossfeldiana; they are marketed widely in the…

  • Felt, Mark (United States government official)

    Mark Felt was an American government official who served as the associate director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the early 1970s and in 2005 captured public attention when he revealed in an interview with Vanity Fair magazine that he was “Deep Throat,” the anonymous informant at

  • Felt, William Mark, Sr. (United States government official)

    Mark Felt was an American government official who served as the associate director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the early 1970s and in 2005 captured public attention when he revealed in an interview with Vanity Fair magazine that he was “Deep Throat,” the anonymous informant at

  • felt-leaf ceanothus (tree)

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

  • felt-tip pen (instrument)

    pen: Soft-tip pens that use points made of porous materials became commercially available during the 1960s. In such pens a synthetic polymer of controlled porosity transfers ink from the reservoir to the writing surface. These fibre-tipped pens can be used for lettering and drawing as well…

  • felting (textiles)

    felting, consolidation of certain fibrous materials by the application of heat, moisture, and mechanical action, causing the interlocking, or matting, of fibres possessing felting properties. Such fibres include wool, fur, and certain hair fibres that mat together under appropriate conditions

  • feltleaf ceanothus (tree)

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

  • Felton, John (British naval officer)

    George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham: …was stabbed to death by John Felton, a naval lieutenant who had served in his campaigns and who misguidedly believed that he was acting in defense of principles asserted in the House of Commons. The populace of London rejoiced at the news.

  • Felton, Rebecca Ann (American political activist)

    Rebecca Ann Felton was an American political activist, writer, and lecturer, and the first woman seated in the U.S. Senate. Rebecca Latimer was graduated first in her class from the Madison Female College, Madison, Georgia, in 1852 and the following year married William H. Felton, a local physician

  • Felton, William H. (American politician)

    Rebecca Ann Felton: …and the following year married William H. Felton, a local physician active in liberal Democratic politics. She assisted her husband in his political career (as a U.S. congressman and later in the state legislature), writing speeches, planning campaign strategy, and later helping to draft legislation. Together the Feltons promoted penal…

  • Feltre (Italy)

    Feltre, hill town, Veneto regione, northern Italy. Grouped around Alboino Castle, notable buildings include the cathedral, with a 14th-century campanile and a carved Byzantine cross of the 6th century, and the civic museum. In 1509 the heart of the town was destroyed during hostilities between the

  • Feltria (Italy)

    Feltre, hill town, Veneto regione, northern Italy. Grouped around Alboino Castle, notable buildings include the cathedral, with a 14th-century campanile and a carved Byzantine cross of the 6th century, and the civic museum. In 1509 the heart of the town was destroyed during hostilities between the

  • Felty syndrome (pathology)

    arthritis: Autoimmune arthritis: Felty syndrome is associated with splenomegaly (enlarged spleen), neutropenia (depressed white blood cell levels), and rheumatoid arthritis. Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis is the most common form of childhood arthritis. Disease etiology and clinical course typically differ from that of adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis, and sufferers are prone…

  • felucca (watercraft)

    boat: Middle East and Mediterranean: …Mediterranean are loosely classed as feluccas, a term originally applied to two-masted lateen sail craft fitted to row and built for speed; later the name came to be applied also to three-masted craft of the galley type that had once been called xebecs.

  • FEMA (United States government agency)

    Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), independent U.S. government organization dedicated to disaster relief. Part of the Department of Homeland Security since 2003, FEMA employs more than 20,000 people across 10 regional offices and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. More than $20 billion

  • female (sex)

    heredity: Prescientific conceptions of heredity: …the relative contributions of the female and the male parents were very unequal; the female was thought to supply what he called the “matter” and the male the “motion.” The Institutes of Manu, composed in India between 100 and 300 ad, consider the role of the female like that of…

  • female circumcision (ritual surgical procedure)

    female genital cutting (FGC), ritual surgical procedure that is traditional in some societies. FGC has been practiced by a wide variety of cultures and as a result includes a number of related procedures and social meanings. The term female genital cutting refers to a wide continuum of procedures

  • female condom (contraceptive)

    contraception: Barrier devices: …jelly), or by inserting a female condom (vaginal pouch) or a vaginal sponge permeated with a spermicide. The vaginal sponge is less effective than other devices but can be used for 24 hours. Spermicides, which—as the name suggests—kill sperm, also help prevent sperm from getting past the barrier device, improving…

  • Female Eunuch, The (work by Greer)

    Germaine Greer: …until her influential first book, The Female Eunuch (1970), was published. It postulates that passivity in women’s sexuality is a characteristic associated with a castrate, hence the title, and is a role foisted on them by history and by women themselves. Never shy of controversy, Greer debated author Norman Mailer…

  • Female Friends (novel by Weldon)

    Fay Weldon: …Down Among the Women (1971), Female Friends (1974), and Remember Me (1976) focus on various women’s reactions to male-and-female relationships. Praxis (1978) is noted for the development of its heroine, who endures in the face of repeated disasters. Puffball (1980), a novel about motherhood, combines supernatural elements with technical information…

  • female genital cutting (ritual surgical procedure)

    female genital cutting (FGC), ritual surgical procedure that is traditional in some societies. FGC has been practiced by a wide variety of cultures and as a result includes a number of related procedures and social meanings. The term female genital cutting refers to a wide continuum of procedures

  • female genital mutilation (ritual surgical procedure)

    female genital cutting (FGC), ritual surgical procedure that is traditional in some societies. FGC has been practiced by a wide variety of cultures and as a result includes a number of related procedures and social meanings. The term female genital cutting refers to a wide continuum of procedures

  • female homosexuality (human behavior)

    lesbianism, the tendency and orientation of a human female to be emotionally and usually sexually attracted to other females, or the state of being so attracted. As it was first used in the late 16th century, the word Lesbian was the capitalized adjectival term referring to the Greek island of

  • Female Immigration, Considered in a Brief Account of the Sydney Immigrants’ Home (work by Chisholm)

    Caroline Chisholm: …first report on her work, Female Immigration, Considered in a Brief Account of the Sydney Immigrants’ Home (1842), was the most sizable publication by an Australia-based woman to that date. She spent the years from 1846 to 1854 in England, raising funds for the immigration of whole families to Australia,…

  • female impersonation

    transvestism: …when presented to an audience.

  • female infertility (medical disorder)

    infertility, the inability of a couple to conceive and reproduce. Infertility is defined as the failure to conceive after one year of regular intercourse without contraception or the inability of a woman to carry a pregnancy to a live birth. Infertility can affect either the male or the female and

  • Female Man, The (work by Russ)

    science fiction: Sex and gender: Joanna Russ’s much-praised The Female Man (1975) suggests through its title that “femininity” is a weird condition forced on one by oppressors. Even Russ’s feminist classic paled by comparison to Margaret Atwood’s evocative dystopian misogyny in The Handmaid’s Tale (1985; film 1990). Drawn from dark contemporary trends, the…

  • Female Medical College of Pennsylvania (medical college, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States)

    Clara Marshall: …and course offerings at the Women’s Medical College.

  • female protective effect

    autism: Possible causes and risk factors: …lends support to the so-called female protective model, which attempts to explain the increased prevalence of autism in males. Interactions between genes and the environment likely play an important role in influencing susceptibility to autism.

  • female protective model

    autism: Possible causes and risk factors: …lends support to the so-called female protective model, which attempts to explain the increased prevalence of autism in males. Interactions between genes and the environment likely play an important role in influencing susceptibility to autism.

  • Female Quixote, The (novel by Lennox)

    Charlotte Lennox: …English novelist whose work, especially The Female Quixote, was much admired by leading literary figures of her time, including Samuel Johnson and the novelists Henry Fielding and Samuel Richardson.

  • Female Review, The (work by Sampson)

    Deborah Sampson: …account of her war experience, The Female Review, was published in 1797, and in 1802 she began to lecture on her experiences, concluding her highly romanticized speech by dressing in a soldier’s uniform and performing the manual of arms. She was perhaps the first woman to lecture professionally in the…

  • Female’s Friend, The (British magazine)

    history of publishing: Women’s magazines: …against the tide, such as The Female’s Friend (1846), which was one of the first periodicals to espouse women’s rights, but they seldom lasted long.

  • Femara (drug)

    letrozole, anticancer drug used to inhibit the synthesis of estrogen in postmenopausal women who have breast cancers that are dependent on the growth-promoting actions of the hormone. Letrozole is marketed as Femara and is manufactured by Swiss drug company Novartis AG. Letrozole is taken orally

  • feme sole (law)

    feme sole, in Anglo-American common law, a woman in the unmarried state or in the legally established equivalent of that state. The concept derived from feudal Norman custom and was prevalent through periods when marriage abridged women’s rights. Feme sole (Norman French meaning “single woman”)

  • Femgericht (medieval tribunal)

    fehmic court, medieval law tribunal properly belonging to Westphalia, though extending jurisdiction throughout the German kingdom. After 1180, when ducal rights in Westphalia passed to the archbishop of Cologne, Westphalian jurisdiction still retained Carolingian features: in every county, or

  • femic rock (geology)

    igneous rock: Chemical components: …and magnesium (Mg), are termed femic (from ferrous iron and magnesium), whereas the silicic rocks are referred to as sialic (from silica and aluminum, with which they are enriched) or salic (from silica and aluminum). The terms mafic (from magnesium and ferrous iron) and felsic (feldspar and silica) are used…

  • feminine caesura (prosody)

    caesura: …or long syllable, and the feminine caesura, which follows an unstressed or short syllable. The feminine caesura is further divided into the epic caesura and the lyric caesura. An epic caesura is a feminine caesura that follows an extra unstressed syllable that has been inserted in accentual iambic metre. An…

  • feminine ending (prosody)

    feminine ending, in prosody, a line of verse having an unstressed and usually extrametrical syllable at its end. In the opening lines from Robert Frost’s poem “Directive,” the fourth line has a feminine ending while the rest are

  • feminine gender (grammar)

    gender: …into two genders, masculine and feminine. Russian and German nouns are grouped into three genders, the third being neuter. While nouns referring to masculine or feminine beings almost always take the logical gender in these languages, for most other nouns the gender is arbitrary.

  • Feminine Mystique, The (work by Friedan)

    The Feminine Mystique, a landmark book by feminist Betty Friedan published in 1963 that described the pervasive dissatisfaction among women in mainstream American society in the post-World War II period. She coined the term feminine mystique to describe the societal assumption that women could find

  • Feminine Psychology (work by Horney)

    Karen Horney: …were given particular attention after Feminine Psychology, a collection of her early papers on the subject, was published in 1967.

  • feminine rhyme (prosody)

    feminine rhyme, in poetry, a rhyme involving two syllables (as in motion and ocean or willow and billow). The term feminine rhyme is also sometimes applied to triple rhymes, or rhymes involving three syllables (such as exciting and inviting). Robert Browning alternates feminine and masculine rhymes

  • femininity

    gender role: …on concepts of masculinity and femininity. A gender role should not be confused with gender identity, which refers to an individual’s internal sense of being masculine, feminine, on a spectrum between the two, a gender unrelated to that binary, or no gender at all.

  • feminism (sociology)

    feminism, the belief in social, economic, and political equality of the sexes. Although largely originating in the West, feminism is manifested worldwide and is represented by various institutions committed to activity on behalf of women’s rights and interests. Throughout most of Western history,

  • feminism, philosophical

    philosophical feminism, a loosely related set of approaches in various fields of philosophy that (1) emphasizes the role of gender in the formation of traditional philosophical problems and concepts, (2) analyzes the ways in which traditional philosophy reflects and perpetuates bias against women,

  • feminist ethics (philosophy)

    philosophical feminism: Feminist ethics: Whereas feminist social and political philosophy arose from consciousness-raising groups, feminist ethics was initially developed by women who were or had been full-time homemakers or mothers and who felt excluded (and in some cases offended) by the women’s movement’s emphasis on dismantling barriers…

  • Femme en soi, Une (novel by Castillo)

    Michel del Castillo: …“The Night of the Decree”), Une Femme en soi (1991; “A Woman Herself”), Le Crime des pères (1993; “The Fathers’ Crime”), Mon frère l’idiot (1995; “My Brother, the Idiot”), and De père franƈais (1998; “The French Father”).

  • Femme est une femme, Une (film by Godard [1961])

    History of film: France: …Femme est une femme [A Woman Is a Woman], 1961; Alphaville, 1965; Pierrot le fou, 1965), but the majority of them treated political and social themes from a Marxist, and finally Maoist, perspective (Le Petit Soldat [The Little Soldier], 1960; Vivre sa vie [My Life to Live], 1962; Les…

  • Femme Fatale (album by Spears)

    Britney Spears: Princess of Pop: …Baby One More Time, Oops!…I Did It Again, and In the Zone: …(“Womanizer”) since her debut; and Femme Fatale (2011) was her most up-tempo dance-oriented offering to date. Britney Jean (2013) was characterized by Spears as being highly personal, but it was criticized for obscuring her voice with synthesized effects. However, Glory (2016), her ninth studio album, was considered a return to…

  • femme fatale (stock character)

    femme fatale, a seductive and beautiful woman who brings disaster to anyone with whom she becomes romantically involved. The femme fatale is an archetype that appears throughout history in mythology, art, and literature and became a principal character in the hard-boiled detective novels and

  • Femme Fatale (film by De Palma [2002])

    Brian De Palma: Later work: …an audience, and the thriller Femme Fatale (2002) was a return to his earlier works. Directed and scripted by De Palma, it offered Antonio Banderas as a photographer and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos as a jewel thief. Although it drew praise from critics, it failed to register at the box office. The…

  • Femme pauvre, La (novel by Bloy)

    Léon Bloy: …and La Femme pauvre (1897; The Woman Who Was Poor), express his mystical conception of woman as the Holy Spirit and of love as a devouring fire. The eight volumes of his Journal (written 1892–1917; complete edition published 1939) reveal him as a crusader of the absolute, launching onslaughts against…

  • Femme qu’a le coeur trop petit, Une (work by Crommelynck)

    Fernand Crommelynck: In Une Femme qu’a le coeur trop petit (1934; “A Woman Whose Heart is Too Small”) Crommelynck depicts a perfect wife whose obsessive virtuousness and efficiency wither all love. With Chaud et froid (1934; “Hot and Cold”), Crommelynck returned to the theme of marital constancy. He…

  • Femme, Une (novel by Ernaux)

    Annie Ernaux: A Man’s Place and A Woman’s Story: …Place) and Une Femme (1987; A Woman’s Story). The former delves into the life of an early 20th-century working-class man with minimal education. It received great acclaim, earning her the Prix Renaudot, the French literary prize for an outstanding original novel, as well as a larger readership in France. Une…

  • Femmes savantes, Les (play by Molière)

    The Blue-Stockings, comedy in five acts by Molière, produced and published in 1672 as Les Femmes savantes. The play is sometimes translated as The Learned Ladies. Molière ridiculed the intellectual pretensions of the French bourgeoisie in this subtle, biting satire of dilettantes. The central

  • femoral artery (anatomy)

    human cardiovascular system: The aorta and its principal branches: …and become known as the femoral arteries after passing through the inguinal region, giving off branches that supply structures of the abdomen and lower extremities.

  • femoral nerve (anatomy)

    human nervous system: Lumbar plexus: …the anterior division of the femoral nerve. The posterior division of the femoral nerve provides sensory fibers to the inner surface of the leg (saphenous nerve), to the quadriceps muscles (muscular branches), to the hip and knee joints, and to the articularis genu muscle.

  • femoral vein (anatomy)

    human cardiovascular system: Inferior vena cava and its tributaries: …area and terminating in the femoral vein.

  • femoral-abdominal stridulation (insect behaviour)

    raspy cricket: …out alarm signals by using femoral-abdominal stridulation, in which the femur of a hind leg is rubbed across pegs on the abdomen. This produces the raspy noise for which they are named.

  • femtochemistry (chemistry)

    Ahmed H. Zewail: …of physical chemistry known as femtochemistry. Zewail was the first Egyptian and the first Arab to win a Nobel Prize in a science category.

  • femtometre (unit of measurement)

    atom: Atomic model: …measuring nuclear sizes is the femtometre (fm), which equals 10−15 metre. The diameter of a nucleus depends on the number of particles it contains and ranges from about 4 fm for a light nucleus such as carbon to 15 fm for a heavy nucleus such as lead. In spite of…

  • femtosecond spectroscopy (physical chemistry)

    Ahmed H. Zewail: During the process, known as femtosecond spectroscopy, molecules were mixed together in a vacuum tube in which an ultrafast laser beamed two pulses. The first pulse supplied the energy for the reaction, and the second examined the ongoing action. The characteristic spectra, or light patterns, from the molecules were then…

  • femur (anatomy)

    femur, upper bone of the leg or hind leg. The head forms a ball-and-socket joint with the hip (at the acetabulum), being held in place by a ligament (ligamentum teres femoris) within the socket and by strong surrounding ligaments. In humans the neck of the femur connects the shaft and head at a

  • fen (wetland)

    fen, type of wetland ecosystem, especially a low-lying area, wholly or partly covered with water and dominated by grasses and grasslike plants such as sedges and reeds. Fens develop on slopes, in depressions, or on flats as a result of sustained flows of mineral-rich groundwater in the root zone.

  • fen colony (Netherlandish history)

    Emmen: …of the peat colonies (veenkolonien) established in the 19th century to convert the surrounding peat fields to agricultural use. As peat digging declined after 1920, Emmen suffered considerable unemployment. It has grown rapidly into the foremost urban and industrial centre of Drenthe since textile (silk, rayon, synthetics), metallurgical, chemical,…

  • Fen He (river, China)

    Fen River, river in Shanxi province, northern China. The Fen River is an eastern tributary of the Huang He (Yellow River). After rising in the Guancen Mountains in northwestern Shanxi, it flows southeast into the basin of Taiyuan and then southwest through the central valley of Shanxi to join the

  • Fen Ho (river, China)

    Fen River, river in Shanxi province, northern China. The Fen River is an eastern tributary of the Huang He (Yellow River). After rising in the Guancen Mountains in northwestern Shanxi, it flows southeast into the basin of Taiyuan and then southwest through the central valley of Shanxi to join the

  • fen orchid (plant)

    twayblade: The fen orchid (L. loeselii) is a similar species found in northern Eurasia.

  • Fen River (river, China)

    Fen River, river in Shanxi province, northern China. The Fen River is an eastern tributary of the Huang He (Yellow River). After rising in the Guancen Mountains in northwestern Shanxi, it flows southeast into the basin of Taiyuan and then southwest through the central valley of Shanxi to join the

  • Fen River Valley (valley, China)

    Shanxi: Relief: The Fen River valley comprises a chain of linked, loess-filled basins that crosses the plateau from northeast to southwest. The largest of the valley’s basins is the 100-mile- (160-km-) long Taiyuan Basin. North of Taiyuan are three detached basins, which are areas of cultivation. Farther north the Datong…

  • fence (criminal)

    Moll Cutpurse: …an entertainer, a receiver (fence) and broker of stolen goods, and a celebrated cross-dresser. Because much of the historical material relating to her life is fragmented, prejudiced, embellished, or even invented, she has become something of a mythical figure.

  • fence (barrier)

    fence, barrier erected to confine or exclude people or animals, to define boundaries, or to decorate. Timber, soil, stone, and metal are widely used for fencing. Fences of living plants have been made in many places, such as the hedges of Great Britain and continental Europe and the cactus fences

  • Fences (play by Wilson)

    Fences, play in two acts by August Wilson, performed in 1985 and published in 1986. It won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1987. It was part of Wilson’s Century Cycle, with plays depicting African American life in each decade of the 20th century. Fences is set in 1957. The protagonist of Fences is

  • Fences (film by Washington [2016])

    Viola Davis: The Help and How to Get Away with Murder: …the 2016 film adaptation of Fences, which he also directed. For her work in the drama, Davis won a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award. Consequently, she became the first Black woman to win an Oscar, an Emmy, and a Tony for acting.

  • Fences and Windows (essays by Klein)

    Naomi Klein: She followed with Fences and Windows (2002), a volume of essays on anti-globalization topics that ranged from World Trade Organization protests to a study of the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, Mexico.

  • fenchyl alcohol (chemical compound)

    isoprenoid: Monoterpenes: …mentioned, as well as borneol, fenchyl alcohol, and the hydrocarbon camphene.

  • fencing (sport)

    fencing, organized sport involving the use of a sword—épée, foil, or sabre—for attack and defense according to set movements and rules. Although the use of swords dates to prehistoric times and swordplay to ancient civilizations, the organized sport of fencing began only at the end of the 19th

  • Fender (American company)

    bass: History: …1951 by what later became Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. The P Bass featured an ash body, a 20-fret maple neck, a 34-inch scale length, and a single pickup. Since its invention, the P Bass has been modified in various ways, with different sizes and different pickup arrangements.

  • Fender Broadcaster (guitar)

    Fender Telecaster, model of electric guitar created by American inventor and manufacturer Leo Fender that has the distinction of being the first mass-produced solid-body electric guitar. The Telecaster, or “Tele,” is renowned for its ease of use, durability, and affordability relative to other

  • Fender Electric Instruments Company (American company)

    bass: History: …1951 by what later became Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. The P Bass featured an ash body, a 20-fret maple neck, a 34-inch scale length, and a single pickup. Since its invention, the P Bass has been modified in various ways, with different sizes and different pickup arrangements.

  • Fender Electric Instruments Corporation (American company)

    bass: History: …1951 by what later became Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. The P Bass featured an ash body, a 20-fret maple neck, a 34-inch scale length, and a single pickup. Since its invention, the P Bass has been modified in various ways, with different sizes and different pickup arrangements.

  • Fender Jazz Bass (guitar)

    bass: History: …Model, later known as the Jazz Bass. The Jazz Bass was distinguished by its comparatively thin neck, which allowed for faster movement along its length—a feature considered advantageous for jazz bass playing—and broad tonal range, made possible by the use of two single-coil pickups, the tone of which could be…

  • Fender Precision Bass (guitar)

    bass: History: …an instrument known as the Precision Bass, or P Bass, was produced in 1951 by what later became Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. The P Bass featured an ash body, a 20-fret maple neck, a 34-inch scale length, and a single pickup. Since its invention, the P Bass has been modified…

  • Fender Stratocaster (guitar)

    Fender Stratocaster, model of electric guitar created by American inventor and manufacturer Leo Fender and known for its elegant design and tonal versatility. The Stratocaster, or “Strat,” as it is known by guitar aficionados, is easily recognized by the two horns that highlight the guitar body’s

  • Fender Telecaster (guitar)

    Fender Telecaster, model of electric guitar created by American inventor and manufacturer Leo Fender that has the distinction of being the first mass-produced solid-body electric guitar. The Telecaster, or “Tele,” is renowned for its ease of use, durability, and affordability relative to other