- fetial (Roman official)
fetial, any of a body of 20 Roman priestly officials who were concerned with various aspects of international relations, such as treaties and declarations of war. The fetials were originally selected from the most noble families; they served for life, but, like all priesthoods, they could only
- Fetiales (Roman official)
fetial, any of a body of 20 Roman priestly officials who were concerned with various aspects of international relations, such as treaties and declarations of war. The fetials were originally selected from the most noble families; they served for life, but, like all priesthoods, they could only
- fetich (psychology)
fetishism, in psychology, a form of sexual deviance involving erotic attachment to an inanimate object or an ordinarily asexual part of the human body. The term fetishism was actually borrowed from anthropological writings in which “fetish” (also spelled fetich) referred to a charm thought to
- fetich (religion)
African art: Congo (Kinshasa) and Congo (Brazzaville): …wood carvings: masks, ancestor figures, fetishes, bowls, boxes, cups, staffs, pots and lids, pipes, combs, tools, weapons, and musical instruments. Similar objects are also carved in ivory, and in some cases copper, brass, and iron are used. In rare instances, stone figures have been found.
- Fétiche et fleurs (painting by Hayden)
Palmer Hayden: In 1933 Hayden’s still life Fétiche et fleurs—a composition that incorporates a Fang reliquary sculpture and African textiles—won a prize in the Harmon Foundation’s “Exhibition of the Work of Negro Artists.” The references to tribal African material culture showed the influence of Locke as well as that of the Cubists,…
- fetid buckeye (plant)
buckeye: Species: The most-notable species is the Ohio buckeye (A. glabra), also called fetid, or Texas, buckeye, which is primarily found in the Midwestern region of the United States. The tree grows up to 21 metres (70 feet) in height and has twigs and leaves that yield an unpleasant odour when crushed.…
- fetid yew (tree)
stinking yew, (species Torreya taxifolia), an ornamental evergreen conifer tree of the yew family (Taxaceae), limited in distribution to western Florida and southwestern Georgia, U.S. The stinking yew, which grows to 13 metres (about 43 feet) in height in cultivation, carries an open pyramidal head
- fetiform teratoma (tumor)
teratoma: Epidemiology and pathology: The fetiform teratoma is an exceedingly rare cystlike tumor with mature cells that usually forms on the ovary and is known for its similarity in appearance to a malformed fetus.
- Fétis, François-Joseph (Belgian music scholar)
François-Joseph Fétis was a prolific scholar and pioneer scientific investigator of music history and theory. He was also an organist and composer. As a child Fétis played violin, piano, and organ; he produced a violin concerto at age nine. He entered the Paris Conservatory in 1800 and in 1803 went
- fetish (religion)
African art: Congo (Kinshasa) and Congo (Brazzaville): …wood carvings: masks, ancestor figures, fetishes, bowls, boxes, cups, staffs, pots and lids, pipes, combs, tools, weapons, and musical instruments. Similar objects are also carved in ivory, and in some cases copper, brass, and iron are used. In rare instances, stone figures have been found.
- fetish (psychology)
fetishism, in psychology, a form of sexual deviance involving erotic attachment to an inanimate object or an ordinarily asexual part of the human body. The term fetishism was actually borrowed from anthropological writings in which “fetish” (also spelled fetich) referred to a charm thought to
- fetishism (psychology)
fetishism, in psychology, a form of sexual deviance involving erotic attachment to an inanimate object or an ordinarily asexual part of the human body. The term fetishism was actually borrowed from anthropological writings in which “fetish” (also spelled fetich) referred to a charm thought to
- fetishism (religion)
African art: Congo (Kinshasa) and Congo (Brazzaville): …wood carvings: masks, ancestor figures, fetishes, bowls, boxes, cups, staffs, pots and lids, pipes, combs, tools, weapons, and musical instruments. Similar objects are also carved in ivory, and in some cases copper, brass, and iron are used. In rare instances, stone figures have been found.
- Fetisov, Slava (Russian hockey player)
Slava Fetisov is a Russian hockey player who was regarded as one of the best defensemen in the history of the sport. As a member of the Soviet Olympic team in the 1980s, he won two gold medals and a silver. He was also a member of seven world championship teams (1978–79, 1981–84, and 1986). A
- Fetisov, Vyacheslav Alexandrovich (Russian hockey player)
Slava Fetisov is a Russian hockey player who was regarded as one of the best defensemen in the history of the sport. As a member of the Soviet Olympic team in the 1980s, he won two gold medals and a silver. He was also a member of seven world championship teams (1978–79, 1981–84, and 1986). A
- FETO (Islamic movement)
Fethullah Gülen: Hizmet movement: …faith-based civil society movement as Hizmet, which literally translates to “service.” The movement’s teachings promote interfaith and intercultural dialogue, science, democracy, and spirituality, while condemning violence and the politicization of religion. The movement lacks a formal structure or organization, its institutions and members are only loosely affiliated, and Gülen did…
- fetoplacental unit (biology)
human endocrine system: Growth and differentiation: …a system known as the fetoplacental unit. In this system the fetus is under the powerful influence of hormones from its own endocrine glands and hormones produced by the mother and the placenta. Maternal endocrine glands assure that a proper mixture of nutrients is transferred by way of the placenta…
- fetoscopy (medicine)
prenatal testing: Prenatal diagnostic tests: …umbilical cord or the fetus; fetoscopy, in which an instrument called a fetoscope is inserted through an incision in the abdomen in order to directly access the umbilical cord, amniotic cavity, and fetus; and fetal doppler ultrasound, which is used to examine blood flow in the umbilical cord, placenta, and…
- Fetter Lane Society (British religious society)
Moravian church: The British Isles: …to the formation of the Fetter Lane Society in 1738, the forerunner of churches in England, Wales, and Ireland. John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, met the Moravians during his trip to Georgia in 1735–36. Upon his return home, both he and his brother Charles affiliated with the Moravians. They…
- Fetter, Frank Albert (American economist)
Frank Albert Fetter was an American economist who was one of the pioneers of modern academic economics in the United States. After an interruption of university studies because of illness in his family, Fetter graduated from Indiana University in 1891 and from Cornell University in 1892. He
- fetterbush (plant)
pieris, (genus Pieris), genus of about seven species of evergreen shrubs and small trees of the heath family (Ericaceae). Members of the genus are native to eastern Asia, eastern North America, and Cuba. Several species, including mountain fetterbush, or mountain andromeda (Pieris floribunda), and
- Fetterman Massacre (United States history [1866])
Crazy Horse: …in the massacre of Captain William J. Fetterman and his troop of 80 men (December 21, 1866) as well as in the Wagon Box fight (August 2, 1867), both near Fort Phil Kearny, in Wyoming Territory. Refusing to honour the reservation provisions of the Second Treaty of Fort Laramie (1868),…
- Fetterman, John (United States senator)
John Fetterman is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2022 and began representing Pennsylvania in that body the following year. He had previously served as the state’s lieutenant governor (2019–23). Fetterman was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, to Karl
- Fetterman, John Karl (United States senator)
John Fetterman is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2022 and began representing Pennsylvania in that body the following year. He had previously served as the state’s lieutenant governor (2019–23). Fetterman was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, to Karl
- Fetti, Domenico (Italian painter)
Domenico Fetti was an Italian Baroque painter whose best-known works are small representations of biblical parables as scenes from everyday life—e.g., The Good Samaritan. These works, which Fetti painted between 1618 and 1622, were executed in a style that emphasized the use of rich colour and the
- fetus (embryology)
fetus, the unborn young of any vertebrate animal, particularly of a mammal, after it has attained the basic form and structure typical of its kind. A brief treatment of the fetus follows. For more information on the human fetus, see pregnancy. Biologists arbitrarily speak of the earliest stages of
- Feu follet, Le (film by Malle [1963])
Louis Malle: …of Le Feu follet (1963; The Fire Within), which was acclaimed by critics as Malle’s most mature and sophisticated work. The sombre and keenly observed story of the last days of an alcoholic contemplating suicide demonstrated his versatility as a filmmaker. In Malle’s next major film, Le Voleur (1967; The…
- Feu follet, Le (work by Drieu La Rochelle)
Pierre Drieu La Rochelle: …and Le Feu follet (1931; The Fire Within, or Will o’ the Wisp; filmed by Louis Malle in 1963). Le Feu follet is the story of the last hours in the life of a young bourgeois Parisian addict who kills himself. In one fashion or another, the subject of decadence…
- Feu, Le (work by Barbusse)
Henri Barbusse: …author of Le Feu (1916; Under Fire, 1917), a firsthand witness of the life of French soldiers in World War I. Barbusse belongs to an important lineage of French war writers who span the period 1910 to 1939, mingling war memories with moral and political meditations.
- Feu; journal d’une escouade, Le (work by Barbusse)
Henri Barbusse: Barbusse’s Le Feu; journal d’une escouade, awarded the Prix Goncourt, is one of the few works to survive the proliferation of wartime novels. Its subtitle, Story of a Squad, reveals the author’s double purpose: to relate the collective experience of the poilus’s (French soldiers’) life in…
- Feuchères, Adrien-Victor de (French major)
Sophie Dawes, baroness de Feuchères: …her married in 1818 to Adrien-Victor de Feuchères, a major in the royal guards. The prince provided her dowry and made her husband his aide-de-camp and a baron. The baroness, pretty and clever, became a person of consequence at the court of Louis XVIII.
- Feuchères, Sophie Dawes, Baroness de (English adventuress)
Sophie Dawes, baroness de Feuchères was an English adventuress, mistress of the last survivor of the princes of Condé. The daughter of a drunken fisherman named Dawes, she grew up in the workhouse, went up to London as a servant, and became the mistress of the Duke de Bourbon, afterward the ninth
- Feuchtmayer, Joseph Anton (German artist)
Western sculpture: Central Europe: …including Johann Georg Übelherr and Joseph Anton Feuchtmayer, whose masterpieces are the Rococo figures at Birnau on Lake Constance. The sculptor Christian Wenzinger worked at Freiburg im Breisgau in relative isolation, but his softly modelled figures have a delicacy that recalls the paintings of François Boucher.
- Feuchtwanger, Lion (German writer)
Lion Feuchtwanger was a German novelist and playwright known for his historical romances. Born of a Jewish family, Feuchtwanger studied philology and literature at Berlin and Munich (1903–07) and took his doctorate in 1918 with a dissertation on poet Heinrich Heine. Also in 1918 he founded a
- feud (feudalism)
Germanic law: Rise of feudal and monarchial states: …as tenants of a so-called feud, or fee. Each feudal lord held a court for his tenants in which he applied the same law to all of the tenants, irrespective of their racial or national origin. Thus the old Germanic personal principle was abandoned in favour of the territorial principle,…
- feud (private war)
feud, a continuing state of conflict between two groups within a society (typically kinship groups) characterized by violence, usually killings and counterkillings. It exists in many nonliterate communities in which there is an absence of law or a breakdown of legal procedures and in which attempts
- Feud (American television series)
Kathy Bates: Television: …in another TV anthology series, Feud. In the first season—Bette and Joan, about the rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford—she played Joan Blondell. During this time she also starred as the owner of a medical marijuana dispensary in Disjointed (2017–18). Bates later took on the title role in the…
- Feud: Bette and Joan (American television series)
Olivia de Havilland: …in the FX television series Feud: Bette and Joan, about the rivalry between Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, the former of whom was a close friend. Later that year she sued FX and the production company, alleging that they had misappropriated her “name, likeness and identity without her permission and…
- feudal land tenure (economic system)
feudal land tenure, system by which land was held by tenants from lords. As developed in medieval England and France, the king was lord paramount with numerous levels of lesser lords down to the occupying tenant. Tenures were divided into free and unfree. Of the free tenures, the first was tenure
- Feudal Society (work by Bloch)
Marc Bloch: …La Société féodale (1939, 1940; Feudal Society). Drawing on a lifetime of research, Bloch analyzed medieval ideas and institutions within the context of the intricate feudal bond, which laid the groundwork for the modern conceptions of freedom and political responsibility. Although 53 and the father of six children, he reentered…
- feudal system (social system)
feudalism, historiographic construct designating the social, economic, and political conditions in western Europe during the early Middle Ages, the long stretch of time between the 5th and 12th centuries. Feudalism and the related term feudal system are labels invented long after the period to
- feudalism (social system)
feudalism, historiographic construct designating the social, economic, and political conditions in western Europe during the early Middle Ages, the long stretch of time between the 5th and 12th centuries. Feudalism and the related term feudal system are labels invented long after the period to
- feudality (social system)
feudalism, historiographic construct designating the social, economic, and political conditions in western Europe during the early Middle Ages, the long stretch of time between the 5th and 12th centuries. Feudalism and the related term feudal system are labels invented long after the period to
- Feuer Peak (mountain, Austria)
Ebensee: Feuer Peak (5,241 feet [1,598 metres]) of the Höllen Mountains overlooks the town. Ebensee was first cited in 1450 and established a saltworks in 1607. The town continued to produce salt into the 21st century. Ebensee’s other products include chemicals (soda and ammonia), concrete, and…
- Feuer und Schwert im Sudan (work by Slatin)
Rudolf Karl, baron von Slatin: His book, Feuer und Schwert im Sudan, 2 vol. (1896, 1922; “Fire and Sword in the Sudan”), was instrumental in enlisting support against the Mahdists. After serving with Lord Kitchener (1897–98) in the reconquest of the Sudan, he was named inspector general of the Sudan in 1900…
- Feuerbach, Anselm (German painter)
Anselm Feuerbach was one of the leading German painters of the mid-19th century working in a Romantic style of Classicism. Feuerbach was the son of a classical archaeologist and the nephew of the philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach. After studying art at the Düsseldorf Academy and in Munich, he went twice
- Feuerbach, Ludwig (German philosopher)
Ludwig Feuerbach was a German philosopher and moralist remembered for his influence on Karl Marx and for his humanistic theologizing. The fourth son of the eminent jurist Paul von Feuerbach, Ludwig Feuerbach abandoned theological studies to become a student of philosophy under G.W.F. Hegel for two
- Feuerbach, Ludwig Andreas (German philosopher)
Ludwig Feuerbach was a German philosopher and moralist remembered for his influence on Karl Marx and for his humanistic theologizing. The fourth son of the eminent jurist Paul von Feuerbach, Ludwig Feuerbach abandoned theological studies to become a student of philosophy under G.W.F. Hegel for two
- Feuerbach, Paul Johann Anselm, Ritter von (German jurist)
Paul, knight von Feuerbach was a jurist noted for his reform of criminal law in Germany. Feuerbach received a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Jena in 1795. He was appointed to the Bavarian Ministry of Justice in 1805 and prepared a penal code for Bavaria (effective from 1813) that
- Feuerbach, Paul, knight von (German jurist)
Paul, knight von Feuerbach was a jurist noted for his reform of criminal law in Germany. Feuerbach received a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Jena in 1795. He was appointed to the Bavarian Ministry of Justice in 1805 and prepared a penal code for Bavaria (effective from 1813) that
- Feuerstein, Reuven (Israeli psychologist)
human intelligence: The environmental viewpoint: …suggestion by the Israeli psychologist Reuven Feuerstein that the key to intellectual development is what he called “mediated learning experience.” The parent mediates, or interprets, the environment for the child, and it is largely through this mediation that the child learns to understand and interpret the world.
- Feuillade, Louis (French director)
Louis Feuillade was a motion-picture director whose internationally popular screen serials were the most influential French films of the period around World War I. Feuillade was a journalist who began his cinema career in 1906 as a scriptwriter. He soon was directing short adventure films. Fantômas
- Feuillants, Club of the (French political club)
Club of the Feuillants, conservative political club of the French Revolution, which met in the former monastery of the Feuillants (Reformed Cistercians) near the Tuileries, in Paris. It was founded after Louis XVI’s flight to Varennes (June 20, 1791), when a number of deputies, led by Antoine
- Feuilles d’analyse appliquée à la géométrie (work by Monge)
Gaspard Monge, count de Péluse: Feuilles d’analyse appliquée à la géométrie (1801; “Analysis Applied to Geometry”) was an expanded version of his lectures on differential geometry; a later edition incorporated his Application de l’algèbre à la géométrie (1805; “Applications of Algebra to Geometry”) as Application de l’analyse à la géométrie…
- Feuilles d’automne, Les (work by Hugo)
Victor Hugo: Success (1830–51): …period of the July Monarchy: Les Feuilles d’automne (1831; “Autumn Leaves”), intimate and personal in inspiration; Les Chants du crépuscule (1835; Songs of Twilight), overtly political; Les Voix intérieures (1837; “Inner Voices”), both personal and philosophical; and Les Rayons et les ombres (1840; “Sunlight and Shadows”), in which the poet,…
- Feuillet, Raoul-Auger (French dancer)
Raoul-Auger Feuillet was a French dancer, dancing master, and choreographer whose dance notation system was published in his Chorégraphie ou l’art de décrire la danse (1700; “Choreography, or the Art of Describing the Dance”). Working in Paris, he collaborated with André Lorin, conductor of the
- Feuillets d’Hypnos (work by Char)
René Char: …collections Seuls demeurent (1945) and Feuillets d’Hypnos (1946; “Leaves of Hypnos”). The latter work, his poetic journal of the war years, reflects his humanism, his belief in man’s high calling, and his anger at the brutality of war. Char’s subsequent volumes include Les Matinaux (1950; “The Early Risers”), Recherche de…
- Feurs (France)
Forez: …is derived from that of Feurs (Forum Segusiavorum in Roman times), a town midway between Roanne and Saint-Étienne, in an agriculturally rich area watered by the Loire River. The Forez counts of the Artaud family vied with the archbishops of Lyon for control of the Lyonnais from the latter part…
- Fever (recording by Lee)
Peggy Lee: Vocal career of the 1950s and ’60s: …by Gordon Jenkins, and “Fever” (1958), featuring one of her most seductive vocal performances and a musical backing of only drums, bass, and finger snaps. “Fever” garnered Lee her first Grammy Award nominations, for record of the year and best female vocal performance.
- Fever (short stories by Wideman)
John Edgar Wideman: Books and teaching career: Wideman’s short-story collections include Fever (1989), The Stories of John Edgar Wideman (1992), American Histories (2018), and You Made Me Love You: Selected Stories, 1981–2018 (2021). Among his other works are the memoirs Fatheralong: A Meditation on Fathers and Sons, Race and Society (1994; a finalist for a
- Fever (album by Minogue)
Kylie Minogue: …vein the following year with Fever (2001). On the strength of its sultry single “Can’t Get You Out of My Head,” which went to number one in multiple countries (and to number seven in the United States), the album became an international blockbuster. The release of Body Language (2003) extended…
- fever (pathology)
fever, abnormally high body temperature. Fever is a characteristic of many different diseases. For example, although most often associated with infection, fever is also observed in other pathologic states, such as cancer, coronary artery occlusion, and certain disorders of the blood. It also may
- Fever Fever (album by Puffy AmiYumi)
Puffy AmiYumi: …albums Jet CD (1998) and Fever Fever (1999) were regarded as J-pop classics.
- Fever Pitch (film by Bobby and Peter Farrelly [2005])
Drew Barrymore: Stardom: …comedies 50 First Dates (2004), Fever Pitch (2005), Music and Lyrics (2007), He’s Just Not That into You (2009), and Going the Distance (2010).
- Fever Pitch (work by Hornby)
Nick Hornby: Early life and career: …that saw the release of Fever Pitch, an autobiographical account of his life as an obsessive supporter of the English football (soccer) club Arsenal. The hugely popular book was adapted to film in 1997 and again in 2005.
- Fever Pitch (film by Brooks [1985])
Richard Brooks: Later work: His last movie was Fever Pitch (1985), starring Ryan O’Neal as a gambling addict. The drama was a commercial and critical failure, and Brooks subsequently retired.
- Fever River (river, Illinois, United States)
Galena: It lies along the Galena River (originally called Fever River), 4 miles (6 km) east of the Mississippi River and about 15 miles (25 km) southeast of Dubuque, Iowa. French explorers visited the region in the late 17th century and found Sauk and Fox Indians mining lead. In 1807…
- Fever River Settlement (Illinois, United States)
Galena, city, seat (1827) of Jo Daviess county, northwestern Illinois, U.S. It lies along the Galena River (originally called Fever River), 4 miles (6 km) east of the Mississippi River and about 15 miles (25 km) southeast of Dubuque, Iowa. French explorers visited the region in the late 17th
- Fever, The (play by Shawn)
Wallace Shawn: …a third in 1991 for The Fever, a caustic 90-minute monologue that dissects the power relations between the world’s poor and elite classes and finds a pervasive moral deficiency in the latter. The Designated Mourner (1996; film 1997) touched on similar ground, telling the story—through actionless narrations by the three…
- Feverel, Richard (fictional character)
Richard Feverel, fictional character, the protagonist of the novel The Ordeal of Richard Feverel (1859) by George
- feverfew (plant)
tansy: Tansies, especially feverfew (Tanacetum parthenium) and costmary (T. balsamita), are sometimes cultivated in herb gardens and are used in traditional medicines in some places. Florists’ pyrethrum (T. coccineum, sometimes Chrysanthemum coccineum) is the source of the organic insecticide pyrethrin.
- Feversham, Louis de Durfort, 2nd earl of, Viscount Sondes of Lees Court, Baron Duras of Holdenby, baron of Throwley, marquis de Blanquefort (British military officer)
Louis de Durfort, 2nd earl of Feversham was a French-born soldier who played a notable role in military and diplomatic affairs in England under Charles II and James II. Durfort (known as the marquis de Blanquefort in France) met James, then duke of York, in 1650 and went to England in 1665, where
- Feversham, Louis de Durfort, 2nd earl of, Viscount Sondes Of Lees Court, Baron Duras Of Holdenby, Baron Of Throwley, Marquis De Blanquefort (British military officer)
Louis de Durfort, 2nd earl of Feversham was a French-born soldier who played a notable role in military and diplomatic affairs in England under Charles II and James II. Durfort (known as the marquis de Blanquefort in France) met James, then duke of York, in 1650 and went to England in 1665, where
- feverwort (plant)
feverwort, any of the four North American plant species of the genus Triosteum, all coarse perennials belonging to the family Caprifoliaceae. Several other species of the genus are East Asian. The common names feverwort, wild ipecac, and horse gentian resulted from former medicinal uses of the
- Févin, Antoine de (French composer)
choral music: Occasional music: …for which the French composer Antoine de Févin wrote a superb choral work, Gaude Francorum regia corona, was certainly not decided upon at short notice. Nor was the visit of Cardinal Ippolito de’ Medici to Venice the result of a sudden decision, for Willaert had ample time to pen his…
- Few Days in Athens, A (work by Wright)
Frances Wright: …some youthful romantic verse and A Few Days in Athens (1822), a novelistic sketch of a disciple of Epicurus that outlined the materialistic philosophy to which she adhered throughout her life. In August 1818 she sailed with her sister for America for a two-year visit, during which her play Altorf,…
- Few Figs from Thistles, A (poetry by Millay)
Edna St. Vincent Millay: …she published the verse collection A Few Figs from Thistles, from which the line “My candle burns at both ends” derives. The poem was taken up as the watchword of the “flaming youth” of that era and brought her a renown that she came to despise. In 1921 she published…
- Few Good Men, A (film by Reiner [1992])
Kevin Bacon: Breakthrough in Footloose and later film career: … and Tommy Lee Jones, and A Few Good Men (1992), supporting Jack Nicholson. Bacon increasingly gravitated toward these smaller, more complex character roles in which he thrived.
- Few Good Men, A (play by Sorkin)
Aaron Sorkin: …little attention, but the third, A Few Good Men (1989), was a major success on Broadway, running for more than a year. Inspired by a case related to Sorkin by his sister, a military attorney, the play centres on the court-martial of two marines accused of having killed a fellow…
- Few of the Girls, A (short stories by Binchy)
Maeve Binchy: …collections Chestnut Street (2014) and A Few of the Girls (2016) were published posthumously. She authored several plays for the stage and for television.
- Few Stout Individuals, A (play by Guare)
John Guare: A Few Stout Individuals (2003) is a colourful account of the memories and delusions of a dying Ulysses S. Grant.
- Fey, Charles August (Bavarian-born American inventor)
slot machine: …invented by Bavarian-born American inventor Charles August Fey, at the time a mechanic in San Francisco, who built his first coin-operated gambling machine in 1894. The following year Fey built the 4-11-44 in his basement; it proved so successful at a local saloon that he soon quit his job and…
- Fey, Elizabeth Stamatina (American comedian, writer, and actress)
Tina Fey is an American writer and actress whose work on the television shows Saturday Night Live (SNL)—she was its first female head writer (1999–2006)—and 30 Rock (2006–13) helped establish her as one of the leading comedians in the early 21st century. Fey was educated at the University of
- Fey, Tina (American comedian, writer, and actress)
Tina Fey is an American writer and actress whose work on the television shows Saturday Night Live (SNL)—she was its first female head writer (1999–2006)—and 30 Rock (2006–13) helped establish her as one of the leading comedians in the early 21st century. Fey was educated at the University of
- Feydeau, Georges (French dramatist)
Georges Feydeau was a French dramatist whose farces delighted Parisian audiences in the years immediately prior to World War I and are still regularly performed. Feydeau was the son of the novelist Ernest Feydeau, the author of the novel Fanny (1858). The younger Feydeau was an able actor and
- Feydeau, Georges-Léon-Jules-Marie (French dramatist)
Georges Feydeau was a French dramatist whose farces delighted Parisian audiences in the years immediately prior to World War I and are still regularly performed. Feydeau was the son of the novelist Ernest Feydeau, the author of the novel Fanny (1858). The younger Feydeau was an able actor and
- Feyder, Jacques (French director)
Jacques Feyder was a popular French motion-picture director of the 1920s and ’30s whose films are imbued with a sympathy for the common man and an attempt at psychological interpretation of character. His sharp criticism of French social and political trends was subordinated to his delineation of
- Feyerabend, Paul Karl (American philosopher)
philosophy of science: Scientific change: Hanson (1924–67), Stephen Toulmin, Paul Feyerabend (1924–94), and Thomas Kuhn. Although these authors differed on many points, they shared the view that standard logical-empiricist accounts of confirmation, theory, and other topics were quite inadequate to explain the major transitions that have occurred in the history of the sciences. Feyerabend,…
- Feynman diagram (physics)
Feynman diagram, a graphical method of representing the interactions of elementary particles, invented in the 1940s and ’50s by the American theoretical physicist Richard P. Feynman. Introduced during the development of the theory of quantum electrodynamics as an aid for visualizing and calculating
- Feynman Lectures on Physics, The (work by Feynman)
Richard Feynman: …Caltech; the result, published as The Feynman Lectures on Physics, 3 vol. (1963–65), became a classic textbook. Feynman’s views on quantum mechanics, scientific method, the relations between science and religion, and the role of beauty and uncertainty in scientific knowledge are expressed in two models of science writing, again distilled…
- Feynman, Richard (American physicist)
Richard Feynman was an American theoretical physicist who was widely regarded as the most brilliant, influential, and iconoclastic figure in his field in the post-World War II era. Feynman remade quantum electrodynamics—the theory of the interaction between light and matter—and thus altered the way
- Feynman, Richard Phillips (American physicist)
Richard Feynman was an American theoretical physicist who was widely regarded as the most brilliant, influential, and iconoclastic figure in his field in the post-World War II era. Feynman remade quantum electrodynamics—the theory of the interaction between light and matter—and thus altered the way
- Feyẕābād (Afghanistan)
Feyẕābād, town, northeastern Afghanistan. It lies along the Kowkcheh River, at 4,000 feet (1,200 m) above sea level. Feyẕābād was destroyed by Morād Beg of Qondūz in 1821 and its inhabitants removed to Qondūz, but, after Badakhshan was annexed by ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān, ruler of Afghanistan (1880–1901),
- Feyzullah (Turkish religious leader)
Mustafa II: …leader of the Muslim hierarchy, Feyzullah, while he himself devoted his last years to hunting. A military mutiny deposed Mustafa on Aug. 22, 1703.
- fez (hat)
Fès: …in the world where the fez (brimless red felt hat in the shape of a truncated cone) was made. Most of the city’s traditional crafts, such as leatherwork and pottery making, are practiced in the narrow, winding streets of the old city and are sold in that section’s traditional marketplaces,…
- Fez (Morocco)
Fès, city, northern Morocco, on the Wadi Fès just above its influx into the Sebou River. The oldest of Morocco’s four imperial cities, it was founded on the banks of the Wadi Fès by Idrīs I (east bank, about 789) and Idrīs II (west bank, about 809). The two parts were united by the Almoravids in
- Fezzan (region, Libya)
Fezzan, historic region of northern Africa and until 1963 one of the three provinces of the United Kingdom of Libya. It is part of the Sahara (desert) and now constitutes the southwestern sector of Libya. Fezzan’s climate is extreme, with very hot summers and cool winters. Rainfall is scarce and
- Fezziwig (fictional character)
Fezziwig, fictional character, the generous employer of the young Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol (1843) by Charles Dickens. Fezziwig appears early in the story, during Scrooge’s encounter with the Ghost of Christmas Past. Scrooge and the ghost visit Fezziwig’s workplace, where Scrooge was an
- FF (medicine)
renal system: Quantitative tests: This is called the filtration fraction and on average in healthy individuals is 125/600, or about 20 percent. Thus about one-fifth of plasma entering the glomeruli leaves as filtrate, the remaining four-fifths continuing into the efferent glomerular arterioles. This fraction changes in a number of clinical disorders, notably hypertension.
- FF-1 (aircraft)
Leroy Randle Grumman: His FF-1, which entered service with the U.S. Navy in 1933, was a two-seat biplane with retractable landing gear. With the F4F Wildcat, introduced in 1940, Grumman switched to monoplane construction. The F4F featured a folding wing for compact stowage and was the United States’ principal…