• Mountains of the Moon (film by Rafelson [1990])

    Bob Rafelson: Films of the late 1980s and beyond: Long in the making, Mountains of the Moon (1990) was a beautifully filmed adaptation of William Harrison’s mammoth novel about British explorer Sir Richard Burton (played by Patrick Bergin). The film, scripted by Rafelson with Harrison and suffused with authentic detail, was arguably Rafelson’s most cohesive work; though it…

  • Mountains of the Moon (mountains, Africa)

    Ruwenzori Range, mountain range bordering Uganda and Congo (Kinshasa); the range is thought to be the “Mountains of the Moon” described by the 2nd-century-ce geographer Ptolemy (Claudius Ptolemaeus). The mountains were long thought to be the source of the Nile. Lying slightly north of the Equator,

  • mountaintop removal (mining)

    West Virginia: Industry of West Virginia: …of surface mining, called “mountaintop removal,” that is particularly devastating to the landscape, and environmental laws restrict its expansion. In addition, concerns about air quality—focused on sulfur emissions and, more recently, production of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide—have subdued the demand for the coal mined in the north-central…

  • Mountaintop Speech (speech by King)

    assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Mountaintop Speech: On April 3 King was back in Memphis, where the city government had sought an injunction to prevent him from leading another march. The departure of his flight from Atlanta that morning had been delayed to allow a search of the luggage and…

  • Mountaintop, The (play by Hall)

    Samuel L. Jackson: , in The Mountaintop (2011–12). In 2022 he had a lead role in a revival of The Piano Lesson; it was directed by his wife, LaTanya Richardson Jackson.

  • Mountbatten class (air-cushion vehicle)

    Hovercraft: …largest of the series, the SR.N4, also called the Mountbatten class, had begun to ply the ferry routes between Ramsgate and Dover on the English side and Calais and Boulogne on the French side. In their largest variants, these enormous vehicles, weighing 265 tons and powered by four Rolls-Royce gas-turbine…

  • Mountbatten family (European family)

    Battenberg family, a family that rose to international prominence in the 19th and 20th centuries, the name being a revival of a medieval title. The first Battenbergs were a family of German counts that died out about 1314 and whose seat was the castle of Kellerburg, near Battenberg, in Hesse. The

  • Mountbatten of Burma, Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl, Viscount Mountbatten of Burma, Baron Romsey of Romsey (British statesman)

    Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten was a British statesman, naval leader, and the last viceroy of India. He had an international royal-family background; his career involved extensive naval commands, the diplomatic negotiation of independence for India and Pakistan, and the highest military

  • Mountbatten Plan (Indian history)

    Mahatma Gandhi: The last phase: …British government, culminating in the Mountbatten Plan of June 3, 1947, and the formation of the two new dominions of India and Pakistan in mid-August 1947.

  • Mountbatten, Louis Alexander (British admiral)

    Louis Alexander Mountbatten, 1st marquess of Milford Haven was a British admiral of the fleet and first sea lord, who was responsible, with Winston Churchill, for the total mobilization of the fleet prior to World War I. The eldest son of Prince Alexander of Hesse, he was naturalized as a British

  • Mountbatten, Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl, Viscount Mountbatten of Burma, Baron Romsey of Romsey (British statesman)

    Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten was a British statesman, naval leader, and the last viceroy of India. He had an international royal-family background; his career involved extensive naval commands, the diplomatic negotiation of independence for India and Pakistan, and the highest military

  • Mountbatten, Philip (British prince)

    Philip, duke of Edinburgh was the husband of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. Philip’s father was Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (1882–1944), a younger son of King George I of the Hellenes (originally Prince William of Denmark). His mother was Princess Alice (1885–1969), who was the

  • Mountbatten-Windsor, Archie Harrison (son of Duke and Duchess of Sussex)

    Prince Harry, duke of Sussex: Marriage to Meghan Markle: …first child, a boy named Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor; at the time, the baby was seventh in line to the throne. The birth came as the couple faced various difficulties. Although they were initially embraced by the press, their desire for privacy resulted in negative media coverage. In addition, there appeared…

  • Mountbatten-Windsor, Lilibet Diana (daughter of Duke and Duchess of Sussex)

    Meghan, duchess of Sussex: Stepping back from royal roles: …gave birth to a daughter, Lilibet (“Lili”) Diana Mountbatten-Windsor; the name honored both Harry’s mother and his grandmother Elizabeth II, whose nickname was Lilibet. Shortly thereafter Meghan released the children’s book The Bench, about a father-son relationship. In 2022 she began hosting the podcast Archetypes, which sought to “investigate the…

  • Mountford, Cecil (New Zealand rugby player and coach)

    Ces Mountford was a New Zealand rugby player and coach who was considered to be one of the best stand-off halfs in the sport. He joined Wigan (Lancashire, Eng.) in 1946 and in 1947–48 set an appearance record of 54 games in a season. In 1952 he moved to Warrington (Cheshire) as manager and steered

  • Mountford, Ces (New Zealand rugby player and coach)

    Ces Mountford was a New Zealand rugby player and coach who was considered to be one of the best stand-off halfs in the sport. He joined Wigan (Lancashire, Eng.) in 1946 and in 1947–48 set an appearance record of 54 games in a season. In 1952 he moved to Warrington (Cheshire) as manager and steered

  • Mountford, E. W. (British architect)

    Old Bailey: …was designed by English architect E.W. Mountford. In addition to the dome and sculpture of Justice, another iconic feature is the motto above the main entrance: “Defend the children of the poor & punish the wrongdoer.” The interior of the building includes a central hall and a grand marble staircase.…

  • Mounties

    Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Canada’s federal police force. It is also the provincial and criminal police establishment in all provinces except Ontario and Quebec and the only police force in the Yukon and Northwest territories. It is responsible for Canadian internal security as well.

  • mounting (military technology)

    artillery: Carriages and mountings: In 1850 carriages were broadly of two types. Field pieces were mounted on two-wheeled carriages with solid trails, while fortress artillery was mounted either on the “garrison standing carriage,” a boxlike structure on four small wheels, or on the platform-and-slide mounting previously described.

  • mounting (telescope)

    telescope: Refracting telescopes: …the stability of the telescope mounting. Any vibration in the mounting will also be magnified and may severely reduce the quality of the observed image. Thus, great care is usually taken to provide a stable platform for the telescope. This problem should not be associated with that of atmospheric seeing,…

  • mounting (pictures)

    printmaking: Mounting and care of prints: Very few people know how to display prints and how to take care of them properly. It is heartbreaking to see a great master’s print glued to a cheap cardboard or the border of a fine print ruined with tape.

  • Mountjoy, Charles Blount, 8th Lord (English lord deputy of Ireland)

    Charles Blount, 8th Lord Mountjoy was a soldier and English lord deputy of Ireland, whose victory at Kinsale, County Cork, in 1601 led to the conquest of Ireland by English forces. The second son of James Blount, 6th Lord Mountjoy, he succeeded to the family peerage on the death of his elder

  • Mountney, Laura (British designer)

    Laura Ashley was a British designer known for her traditional, Victorian-style prints on natural fabrics, which she used to create household furnishings, linens, and women’s clothing. By the time of her death there were more than 220 Laura Ashley shops worldwide. She served in the royal naval

  • Mountolive (novel by Durrell)

    The Alexandria Quartet: (1957), Balthazar (1958), Mountolive (1958), and Clea (1960), is set in Alexandria, Egypt, during the 1940s. Three of the books are written in the first person, Mountolive in the third. The first three volumes describe, from different viewpoints, a series of events in Alexandria before World War II;…

  • Moura (Queensland, Australia)

    Moura, town, eastern Queensland, Australia, on the Dawson River. Together with its neighbouring town, Kianga, Moura is the focus of a 350-square-mile (910-square-km) coalfield from which high-quality coking coal is mined for export to Japan. Local farms are supplied from Moura Weir, part of the

  • Mourdock, Richard (American politician)

    Joe Donnelly: His opponent was Richard Mourdock, a Tea Party candidate who had defeated longtime incumbent Richard Lugar in the Republican primary. Donnelly won the general election, becoming the first Democrat to win a statewide race in Indiana in more than 10 years.

  • Mouré, Erin (Canadian poet)

    Canadian literature: Poetry and poetics: …Theatres; or, Aturuxos Calados (2005), Erin Mouré offers inventive translations of Portuguese and Galician authors as she explores ideas of local and global citizenship and community.

  • Mourer, Marie-Louise-Jeanne (French actress)

    Martine Carol was a French film actress, the reigning blond sex symbol in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Appearing early in her career under the stage names of Catherine and Maryse Arley, she made her film debut in 1943, winning her first starring role in 1948. As the leading box-office star in

  • Mourera (plant genus)

    Podostemaceae: …Japan), Castelnavia (9 species, Brazil), Mourera (6 species, northern tropical South America), and Oserya (7 species, Mexico to northern tropical South America). A majority of the remaining 35 genera contain only one or two species each.

  • Mourguet, Laurent (French puppeteer)

    Guignol: …was created by the puppeteer Laurent Mourguet of Lyons in the early 19th century and was supposedly named for an actual canut, or Lyonnais silk worker. Guignol was performed with regional dialect and mannerisms and in the traditional garb of the peasant. Short-nosed, round-eyed, and perpetually surprised, he was easily…

  • Mourne Mountains (mountains, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)

    Mourne Mountains, mountains astride a corner of Down district and Newry and Mourne district, formerly in County Down, Northern Ireland, a compact range of granite peaks rising abruptly from the Irish Sea at Carlingford Lough (inlet of the sea) and extending for 9 miles (14.5 km) between Newcastle

  • Mourne, River (river, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)

    River Mourne, part of the Strule-Foyle river system in west-central Northern Ireland, formed by the junction of the Rivers Strule and Glenelly at Newton-Stewart. It flows north-northwest for about 10 miles (16 km) to a point west of Strabane, where it joins with the River Finn to form the

  • Mourners (work by Picasso)

    Pablo Picasso: Discovery of Paris: …as two funeral scenes (Mourners and Evocation), and in 1903 Casagemas appeared as the artist in the enigmatic painting La Vie.

  • mourning (social custom)

    mourning, formal demonstration of grief at the death of a person, practiced in most societies. Mourners are usually relatives, although they may be friends or members of the community. Mourning rites, which are of varying duration and rationale, usually weigh more heavily on women than on men.

  • Mourning Becomes Electra (film by Nichols [1947])

    Kirk Douglas: Out of the Past (1947), Mourning Becomes Electra (1947), and I Walk Alone (1948). He emerged as a star with an Oscar-nominated performance as a ruthless boxer in Champion (1949). In this film, Douglas established a screen persona of a cocky, intense, self-absorbed individual. His on-screen charisma made him an…

  • Mourning Becomes Electra (trilogy of plays by O’Neill)

    Mourning Becomes Electra, trilogy of plays by Eugene O’Neill, produced and published in 1931. The trilogy, consisting of Homecoming (four acts), The Hunted (five acts), and The Haunted (four acts), was modeled on the Oresteia trilogy of Aeschylus and represents O’Neill’s most complete use of Greek

  • mourning bride (plant, Scabiosa atropurpurea)

    scabious: Major species: Pincushion flower, also called sweet scabious, mourning bride, or garden scabious (Scabiosa atropurpurea), a southern European annual with deeply cut basal leaves and feathery stem leaves, produces fragrant 5-cm (2-inch) flower heads in white, rose, crimson, blue, or deep mahogany purple. It is about 1…

  • Mourning Bride, The (play by Congreve)

    The Mourning Bride, tragedy in five acts by William Congreve, produced and published in 1697. It is the source of the lines “Music has charms to soothe a savage breast” and “Heav’n has no rage, like love to hatred turn’d,/Nor Hell a fury, like a woman scorn’d.” The Mourning Bride—Congreve’s only

  • mourning cloak butterfly (insect)

    brush-footed butterfly: The mourning cloak (Nymphalis antiopa), known as the Camberwell beauty in England, overwinter as adults. The larvae, often known as spiny elm caterpillars, are gregarious in habit and feed principally on elm, willow, and poplar foliage.

  • mourning dove (bird)

    mourning dove, (Zenaida macroura), a member of the pigeon order Columbiformes, the common wild pigeon of North America having a long pointed tail and violet and pink on the sides of the neck. This game bird may live up to 16 years in captivity; however, most mourning doves live only 4 or 5 years in

  • Mourning Forest, The (film by Kawase [2007])

    Naomi Kawase: …for Mogari no mori (2007; The Mourning Forest), which explored the themes of death and bereavement that had dominated many of her earlier works. The film portrayed the relationship between an elderly man haunted by memories of his long-dead wife and the man’s caregiver, a young nurse who herself mourns…

  • mourning picture (art)

    folk art: Content and motifs: …two American forms: the “mourning picture,” executed in embroidery or watercolour, often depicting grieving figures draped around a tombstone under weeping willows, and the gravestone carved with a winged death’s-head or, later, with the urn-and-willow motif.

  • mourning procession (sculpture)

    Claus Sluter: Sluter did not invent the mourning procession nor did he design the setting. But he conceived of the figures as pleurants (weepers), of whom no two are alike; some are openly expressing their sorrow, others are containing their grief, but all are robed in heavy wool, draping garments that occasionally…

  • Mourning, Alonzo (American basketball player)

    Alonzo Mourning is an American professional basketball player who was notable for recovering from a kidney transplant to win a National Basketball Association (NBA) championship with the Miami Heat in 2006. Mourning—a centre 6 feet 10 inches (2.08 metres) tall—played collegiate basketball at

  • Mourning, Alonzo Harding, Jr. (American basketball player)

    Alonzo Mourning is an American professional basketball player who was notable for recovering from a kidney transplant to win a National Basketball Association (NBA) championship with the Miami Heat in 2006. Mourning—a centre 6 feet 10 inches (2.08 metres) tall—played collegiate basketball at

  • Mouroir: Bespieelende notas van ’n roman (work by Breytenbach)

    Breyten Breytenbach: …notas van ’n roman (Mouroir: Mirrornotes of a Novel) in 1983. In 1982 he was freed, and he subsequently returned to Paris. The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist (1984), his account of his arrest and detention, cemented his international reputation. Following the end of apartheid in South Africa,…

  • Mouroir: Mirrornotes of a Novel (work by Breytenbach)

    Breyten Breytenbach: …notas van ’n roman (Mouroir: Mirrornotes of a Novel) in 1983. In 1982 he was freed, and he subsequently returned to Paris. The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist (1984), his account of his arrest and detention, cemented his international reputation. Following the end of apartheid in South Africa,…

  • Mouron, Adolphe-Jean-Marie (French graphic artist)

    Cassandre was a graphic artist, stage designer, and painter whose poster designs greatly influenced advertising art in the first half of the 20th century. After studying art at the Académie Julian in Paris, Cassandre gained a reputation with such posters as “Étoile du Nord” (1927) and “Dubo Dubon

  • Mourou, Gérard (French physicist)

    Gérard Mourou is a French physicist who was awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize for Physics for his invention of chirped pulse amplification (CPA), a method of making pulses of laser light of high power and short duration. He shared the prize with American physicist Arthur Ashkin and Canadian physicist

  • Mourou, Gérard Albert (French physicist)

    Gérard Mourou is a French physicist who was awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize for Physics for his invention of chirped pulse amplification (CPA), a method of making pulses of laser light of high power and short duration. He shared the prize with American physicist Arthur Ashkin and Canadian physicist

  • Mourt’s Relation (work by Winslow and Bradford)

    Mayflower Compact: …below) can be found is Mourt’s Relation (1622), an account of Plymouth’s settlement written by Edward Winslow and William Bradford.

  • Mouru (ancient city, Turkmenistan)

    Merv, ancient city of Central Asia lying near the modern town of Mary, Mary oblast (province), Turkmenistan. Mentioned in ancient Persian texts as Mouru and in cuneiform inscriptions as Margu, it was the seat of a satrapy of the Persian Achaemenid empire. Under the Arabs in the 7th century the city

  • Mousa (emperor of Mali)

    Mūsā I of Mali was the mansa (emperor) of the West African empire of Mali from 1307 (or 1312). Mansa Mūsā left a realm notable for its extent and riches—he built the Great Mosque at Timbuktu—but he is best remembered in the Middle East and Europe for the splendour of his pilgrimage to Mecca (1324).

  • Mousa (Greek mythology)

    Muse, in Greco-Roman religion and mythology, any of a group of sister goddesses of obscure but ancient origin, the chief center of whose cult was Mount Helicon in Boeotia, Greece. They were born in Pieria, at the foot of Mount Olympus. Very little is known of their cult, but they had a festival

  • Mousa, Mount (mountain, Djibouti)

    Djibouti: Relief: Its highest peak is Mount Moussa at 6,654 feet (2,028 metres). The lowest point, which is also the lowest in Africa, is the saline Lake Assal, 509 feet (155 metres) below sea level.

  • Mousavi, Mir Hossein (prime minister of Iran)

    Mir Hossein Mousavi is an Iranian architect, painter, intellectual, and politician who served as Iran’s prime minister (1981–89) and as a presidential adviser (1989–2005). Mousavi was raised in Khāmeneh, near Tabrīz, in northwestern Iran. He received an M.A. in architecture from the National

  • mouse (rodent genus)

    mouse, (genus Mus), the common name generally but imprecisely applied to rodents found throughout the world with bodies less than about 12 cm (5 inches) long. In a scientific context, mouse refers to any of the 38 species in the genus Mus, which is the Latin word for mouse. The house mouse (Mus

  • mouse (computer device)

    mouse, hand-controlled electromechanical device for interacting with a digital computer that has a graphical user interface. The mouse can be moved around on a flat surface to control the movement of a cursor on the computer display screen. Equipped with one or more buttons, it can be used to

  • Mouse and His Child, The (work by Hoban)

    children’s literature: Contemporary times: …attention but is more remarkable: The Mouse and His Child (1969), by Russell Hoban, who had been a successful writer of gentle tales for small children. But here was a different affair altogether: a flawlessly written, densely plotted story with quiet philosophical overtones. It involved a clockwork mouse, his attached…

  • Mouse and the Motorcycle, The (work by Cleary)

    Beverly Cleary: Among the perennial favourites are The Mouse and the Motorcycle (1965), Runaway Ralph (1970), and the Ramona series, whose notable titles include Ramona the Pest (1968), Ramona and Her Father (1977), and Ramona Quimby, Age 8 (1981).

  • mouse deer (mammal)

    chevrotain, (family Tragulidae), any of about 10 species of small, delicately built, hoofed mammals that constitute the family Tragulidae (order Artiodactyla). Chevrotains are found in the warmer parts of Southeast Asia and India and in parts of Africa. They are classified into the genera

  • mouse flea (insect)

    flea: General features: …the rat flea and the mouse flea—having been carried all over the world by humans. Native species of fleas are found in polar, temperate, and tropical regions.

  • mouse lemur (primate)

    lemur: Lemur diversity: …lemurs (Cheirogaleus), along with the mouse (Microcebus), Coquerel’s (Mirza), hairy-eared (Allocebus), and fork-crowned (Phaner) lemurs, make up the family Cheirogaleidae, which in many respects are the most primitive living lemurs. Dwarf lemurs store fat in their tails and are dormant (estivate) during dry periods; they live in monogamous pairs. Mouse…

  • mouse opossum (marsupial)

    mouse opossum, any of a group of more than 55 species of Central and South American marsupials that are the most abundant members of the opossum family (Didelphidae, subfamily Didelphinae). Previously included in the genus Marmosa, mouse opossums are divided today among eight genera: gracile mouse

  • mouse possum (marsupial)

    mouse opossum, any of a group of more than 55 species of Central and South American marsupials that are the most abundant members of the opossum family (Didelphidae, subfamily Didelphinae). Previously included in the genus Marmosa, mouse opossums are divided today among eight genera: gracile mouse

  • Mouse That Roared, The (film by Arnold [1959])

    Jack Arnold: …of Leonard Wibberley’s satirical novel The Mouse That Roared and turned in a comic masterpiece, in no small part thanks to the talents of Peter Sellers. With that film’s success, Arnold never made another science-fiction movie. After the Audie Murphy western No Name on the Bullet (1959), he directed the…

  • mouse-ear chickweed (plant)

    chickweed: Mouse-ear chickweed (Cerastium fontanum), which is also from Europe, is a mat-forming, spreading perennial that has many upright stems, but it is usually not so tall as common chickweed. It grows in lawns, pastures, and cultivated fields throughout temperate regions. The stems and leaves are…

  • mouse-eared bat (mammal)

    brown bat: …bats belonging to the genera Myotis (little brown bats) or Eptesicus (big brown bats). Both are vesper bats, and both are widely distributed, being found in almost all parts of the world. Both genera are insectivorous.

  • mouse-like rodent (rodent suborder)

    rodent: Evolution and classification: Suborder Myomorpha (mouselike rodents) 5 extant families, 5 extinct families containing 44 genera and dating from the Early Eocene to present. The inclusion of Myoxidae is disputed, as evidence has been interpreted to support its placement here or in the Sciuromorpha. Family Muridae (“true” rats and…

  • mouse-tailed bat (mammal)

    bat: Annotated classification: Family Rhinopomatidae (mouse-tailed bats) 4 small species in 1 genus (Rhinopoma) of North Africa and tropical Asia. Tail very long and largely free beyond a narrow interfemoral membrane. Ears large; small nose leaf; primitive shoulder girdle. Family Thyropteridae (disk-winged bats) 3 species in 1 genus (

  • mousebird (bird genus)

    coly, any member of the genus Colius, a group of African birds that, because of their long, drooping tails, look much like mice when seen running along branches. The single genus (Colius) and six species constitute the family Coliidae, order Coliiformes. The body is sparrow sized, but the tail

  • mousehare (mammal)

    pika, (genus Ochotona), small short-legged and virtually tailless egg-shaped mammal found in the mountains of western North America and much of Asia. Despite their small size, body shape, and round ears, pikas are not rodents but the smallest representatives of the lagomorphs, a group otherwise

  • Mouseion (ancient institution, Alexandria, Egypt)

    Alexandrian Museum, ancient centre of classical learning at Alexandria in Egypt. A research institute that was especially noted for its scientific and literary scholarship, the Alexandrian Museum was built near the royal palace about the 3rd century bce possibly by Ptolemy I Soter (reigned

  • mousetail (plant)

    mousetail, any of about 15 species of small, annual, herbaceous (nonwoody) plants constituting the genus Myosurus of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae). They occur in the temperate zones of both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Mousetails are so named for a long, slender column covered with

  • Mousetrap, The (work by Christie)

    Agatha Christie: Christie’s plays included The Mousetrap (1952), which set a world record for the longest continuous run at one theatre (8,862 performances—more than 21 years—at the Ambassadors Theatre, London) before moving in 1974 to St Martin’s Theatre, where it continued without a break until the COVID-19 pandemic closed theatres…

  • Mouskos, Mikhail Khristodolou (bishop and president of Cyprus)

    Makarios III was the archbishop and primate of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus. He was a leader in the struggle for enosis (union) with Greece during the postwar British occupation, and, from 1959 until his death in 1977, he was the president of independent Cyprus. Mouskos, the son of a poor

  • Mouskouri, Nana (Greek singer)

    Harry Belafonte: …Miriam Makeba and Greek singer Nana Mouskouri helped introduce them to American audiences, and An Evening with Belafonte/Makeba (1965) garnered a Grammy for best folk recording.

  • moussaka (food)

    moussaka, dish of baked lamb and eggplant prepared throughout the Balkans and Middle East but most closely associated with Greece and Turkey. In the Greek version, eggplants are sliced and fried lightly in olive oil and then layered in a casserole with a mixture of ground lamb, onions, tomato

  • Moussaoui, Zacarias (French criminal defendant)

    September 11 attacks: The September 11 commission and its findings: …was the handling of the Zacarias Moussaoui case. Moussaoui, a French citizen of Moroccan descent, was attending flight school in the summer of 2001 in Minnesota, where he attracted attention from instructors because he had little knowledge of flying and did not behave like a typical aviation student. The flight…

  • mousse (food)

    mousse, savoury or sweet dish with the consistency of a dense foam, composed of a puréed chief ingredient mixed with stiffly beaten egg whites, whipped cream, or both. Mousses are almost always cold dishes, and sweet mousses are sometimes served frozen. Savoury mousses are frequently prepared from

  • Moussorgsky, Modest Petrovich (Russian composer)

    Modest Mussorgsky was a Russian composer noted particularly for his opera Boris Godunov (final version first performed 1874), his songs, and his piano piece Pictures from an Exhibition (1874). Mussorgsky, along with Aleksandr Borodin, Mily Balakirev, Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, and César Cui, was a

  • Moussoulou (album by Sangaré)

    Oumou Sangaré: …finally released her debut recording, Moussoulou (“Women”), and it received an overwhelmingly enthusiastic response. Audiences were enchanted not only with her agile vocals but also with her lyrics, which critically addressed taboo topics such as polygamy, arranged marriage, and the hardship of women in western African society. When the album…

  • moustache (facial hair)

    mustache, hair grown on the upper lip. Since antiquity, the wearing of mustaches, like beards, has reflected a wide range of customs, religious beliefs, and personal tastes. It was usual in the past to make no distinction between a mustache and other facial hair such as a beard or whiskers, as

  • Mousterian industry (anthropology)

    Mousterian industry, tool culture traditionally associated with Neanderthal man in Europe, western Asia, and northern Africa during the early Fourth (Würm) Glacial Period (c. 40,000 bc). The Mousterian tool assemblage shows flaking techniques in common with the Clactonian, as well as the frequent

  • Moustier 1, Le (human fossil)

    Le Moustier: Designated Le Moustier 1, it includes most of the skull and several of the major long bones. Le Moustier 2, discovered in 1914, is the largely complete skeleton of a newborn. Both date to between 40,000 and 50,000 years ago. Analysis of these fossils has helped…

  • Moustier 2, Le (human fossil)

    Le Moustier: Le Moustier 2, discovered in 1914, is the largely complete skeleton of a newborn. Both date to between 40,000 and 50,000 years ago. Analysis of these fossils has helped establish that various features diagnostic of adult Neanderthals became obvious at different stages of development. For…

  • Moustier, Le (anthropological and archaeological site, France)

    Le Moustier, paleoanthropological and archaeological site in the Dordogne region of southwestern France that has yielded important Neanderthal remains. In the 1860s the upper cave in the cliff face at Le Moustier yielded a rich assemblage of stone tools from the Paleolithic Period, and it thereby

  • Moustiers faience (pottery)

    Moustiers faience, French tin-glazed earthenware produced by factories in the town of Moustiers from about 1679 into the 19th century. The wares manufactured in the 17th and 18th centuries were so distinctive, and of such high quality, that they were extensively copied at other faience centres in

  • moutan peony (plant)

    peony: The tree peonies are shrubby plants with permanent woody stems. The plants sometimes attain a height of 1.2 to 1.8 metres (about 4 to 6 feet). They begin flowering in late spring. The blossoms vary in colour from white to lilac, violet, and red. Tree peonies…

  • mouth (anatomy)

    mouth, in human anatomy, orifice through which food and air enter the body. The mouth opens to the outside at the lips and empties into the throat at the rear; its boundaries are defined by the lips, cheeks, hard and soft palates, and glottis. It is divided into two sections: the vestibule, the

  • mouth arm (anatomy)

    Chrysaora: Four long tentacles, commonly called mouth, or oral, arms, hang from the centre of the underside, where the mouth of the jellyfish is located. In most cases, 24 other, thinner extensile tentacles hang from the rim of the bell. Uniformly ciliated larvae, or planula, are brooded within the adult. The…

  • mouth bow (musical instrument)

    African music: Systems based on instrumental harmonics: …the musical bow, particularly the mouth bow (which uses the mouth as a resonator), is or was an important instrument. Western central Africa and the whole of southern Africa are the most prominent distribution areas for mouth bows; they are also found in some areas of West Africa.

  • mouth fungus (fish disease)

    mouth fungus, fish disease caused by bacteria that attack the fish’s mouth and produce a fuzzy cottonlike growth, which hinders breathing and eats away the jaws. Mouth fungus can be treated with antibiotics as well as other commercially available

  • Mouth of Hell (illustration from The Hours of Catherine of Cleves)

    Ten Depictions of Hell: Mouth of Hell (c. 1440) from The Hours of Catherine of Cleves: One of the most famous illustrations from the manuscript is a full-page depiction of the mouth of hell. It appears on the verso (left) page alongside Final Absolution on the recto (right) in the Office of the Dead, prayers at the end of every book of hours for the reader’s…

  • mouth organ (musical instrument)

    wind instrument: The Romantic period: The sheng is a mouth organ consisting of free-reed pipes vibrating under wind pressure from a globular wind chamber into which the player blows. The pitch is determined by the reed itself, which activates vibrations in the surrounding air.

  • Mouth to Mouth (film by Gómez Pereira [1995])

    Javier Bardem: In Boca a boca (1995; Mouth to Mouth) he garnered laughs and another Goya Award as an aspiring actor who falls in love with a customer while working for a telephone-sex company. Bardem later appeared as a wheelchair-bound policeman in Pedro Almodóvar’s Carne trémula (1997; Live Flesh).

  • mouth ulcer (medical disorder)

    canker sore, a small, painful ulcer of the oral cavity. Canker sores are round, shallow, white ulcers on the inner surface of the cheek or lip. They are surrounded by an inflamed area and may reach 2.5 cm (1 inch) in size. Canker sores can occur in three forms: as one to five small lesions that

  • mouth-breeding frog (amphibian)

    frog and toad: Annotated classification: Family Rhinodermatidae No fossil record; 8 presacral vertebrae, 1st and 2nd fused; pectoral girdle partly firmisternal; maxillary teeth, intercalary cartilages, and Bidder’s organ absent; omosternum cartilaginous; southern South America; 2 species; adult length 2.5 cm (1 inch). Family Sooglossidae No fossil record; 8 presacral vertebrae; vertebrae

  • mouth-to-mouth breathing

    artificial respiration: Mouth-to-mouth breathing soon after became the most widely used method of artificial respiration. The person using mouth-to-mouth breathing places the victim on his back, clears the mouth of foreign material and mucus, lifts the lower jaw forward and upward to open the air passage, places…

  • mouthbreeder (fish reproduction)

    mouthbreeder, any fish that breeds its young in the mouth. Examples include certain catfishes, cichlids, and cardinal fishes. The male of the sea catfish Galeichthys felis places up to 50 fertilized eggs in its mouth and retains them until they are hatched and the young are two or more weeks old.