• Manfredi, Doria (Italian servant)

    Giacomo Puccini: Mature work and fame: Elvira unexpectedly became jealous of Doria Manfredi, a young servant from the village who had been employed for several years by the Puccinis. She drove Doria from the house threatening to kill her. Subsequently, the servant girl poisoned herself, and her parents had the body examined by a physician, who…

  • Manfredo, Peter, Jr. (American boxer)

    Joe Calzaghe: In April 2007 Calzaghe fought Peter Manfredo, Jr., the runner-up on the American reality television boxing show The Contender. Calzaghe won the match easily in front of a crowd of 35,000, a record for an indoor boxing event in Europe. In November 2007 Calzaghe became the undisputed world champion when…

  • Manfredonia (Italy)

    Manfredonia, town and archiepiscopal see, Puglia (Apulia) region, east central Italy, on the southern slope of the Promontorio del Gargano at the head of the Golfo (gulf) di Manfredonia, northeast of Foggia. The Romanesque church of Sta. Maria di Siponto (1117), 2 miles (3 km) southwest, marks the

  • Mang (people)

    Vietnam: Languages: Bahnar, Mnong, Mang (Maa), Muong, and Stieng—speak Mon-Khmer languages, connecting them with the Khmer. French missionaries and administrators provided Roman script for some of the Montagnard languages, and additional orthographies have since been devised.

  • Mang language

    Palaungic languages: …as Kano’ (Danau, or Danaw), Mang, and sometimes Lamet (which are often grouped in the Khmuic branch), as well as the many languages classified within the Palaung-Riang, Angkuic, and Waic subbranches of Palaungic.

  • manga (Japanese literary style)

    manga, individual comic strip, comic book, or graphic novel originating in Japan or, collectively, Japanese comic books and graphic novels as a genre. In Japan the term manga is used to refer to comics regardless of culture of origin. In the West, it largely refers only to comic books or graphic

  • Manga (Mongol khan)

    Möngke was a grandson of Genghis Khan and heir to the great Mongol empire. Elected great khan in 1251, he was the last man who held this title to base his capital at Karakorum, in central Mongolia. Under his rule the city achieved an unprecedented splendour, and the Mongol Empire continued to

  • Manga (people)

    Niger: Ethnic groups: …into a number of subgroups—the Manga, the Dogara (Dagara), the Mober, the Buduma, and the Kanembu; they are also found living in Chad, Cameroon, and Nigeria. Apart from the nomadic Teda of the Tibesti region, who constitute an important minority, the remainder of the population consists of Arabs, Black Africans…

  • Manga (region, Niger)

    Niger: Relief: In the Manga region, in the east, traces of ancient watercourses appear on the sandy plain.

  • Manga Kanuri (dialect)

    Kanuri language: …consists of two main dialects, Manga Kanuri and Yerwa Kanuri (also called Beriberi, which its speakers consider pejorative), spoken in central Africa by more than 5,700,000 individuals at the turn of the 21st century. Manga Kanuri is a trade language spoken by about 450,000 people in Niger and more than…

  • Mangaasi culture

    Oceanic art and architecture: Melanesia: …style is that of the Mangaasi culture of Vanuatu, which dates from 700 bc to ad 1200. Early Mangaasi ceramics include spherical pots and are decorated with bold triangles outlined with applied fillets, within which are further arrangements of incised triangles. Handles were modeled in bird and animal forms.

  • mangabey (monkey)

    mangabey, any of nine species of slender, rather long-limbed monkeys of the genera Cercocebus and Lophocebus, found in African tropical forests. Mangabeys are fairly large quadrupedal monkeys with cheek pouches and deep depressions under the cheekbones. Species range in head and body length from

  • Mangaia (atoll, Cook Islands, Pacific Ocean)

    Mangaia, southernmost of the southern group of the Cook Islands, a self-governing state in free association with New Zealand in the South Pacific Ocean. It is the second largest of the Cook Islands, after Rarotonga, and at an estimated 18 million years old is believed to be the oldest island in the

  • mangal (ecology)

    rainforest: Mangrove forests occur along estuaries and deltas on tropical coasts. Temperate rainforests filled with evergreen and laurel trees are lower and less dense than other kinds of rainforests because the climate is more equable, with a moderate temperature range and well-distributed annual rainfall.

  • Mangal Pandey: The Rising (film by Mehta [2005])

    Aamir Khan: Later films: …played the title character in Mangal Pandey: The Rising (2005), about a leading revolutionary in the Indian Mutiny (1857–58). He also starred in Rang De Basanti (2006; “Paint Me Yellow”), a drama that explores youth, patriotism, and social justice. Winner of several Filmfare Awards, including ones for best film and…

  • mangal-kavya (Hindu literature)

    mangal-kavya, a type of eulogistic verse in honour of a popular god or goddess in Bengal (India). The poems are sometimes associated with a pan-Indian deity, such as Shiva, but more often with a local Bengali deity—e.g., Manasa, the goddess of snakes, or Shitala, the goddess of smallpox, or the

  • Mangala dipani (Pali text)

    Buddhism: Later Theravada literature: …important Pali texts is the Mangala dipani, a highly respected commentary on the Mangala-sutta that was written in northern Thailand in the 16th century. Important vernacular texts include the 14th-century Traibhumikatha (“Three Worlds According to King Ruang”), which is the oldest-known full-length text written in Thai, and the Buddhadhamma, a…

  • Mangalia (Romania)

    Constanƫa: …located in Eforie Sud and Mangalia. Mangalia was built on the ruins of an ancient Greek city that was founded in the 6th century bc. A 15th-century Turkish mosque and an ancient tomb (4th century ad) are situated in Mangalia. Three churches, built one on top of another, and underground…

  • Mangalore (India)

    Mangaluru, city, southwestern Karnataka state, southwestern India. It is a port on the Arabian Sea coast that lies on the backwaters formed by the Netravati and Gurpur rivers. Mangaluru has long been a roadstead along the Malabar Coast. It became engaged in trade with the Persian Gulf region in the

  • Mangalore, Treaty of (Great Britain-India [1784])

    Mysore Wars: …son Tipu Sultan by the Treaty of Mangalore (1784).

  • Mangaluru (India)

    Mangaluru, city, southwestern Karnataka state, southwestern India. It is a port on the Arabian Sea coast that lies on the backwaters formed by the Netravati and Gurpur rivers. Mangaluru has long been a roadstead along the Malabar Coast. It became engaged in trade with the Persian Gulf region in the

  • Mangalyaan (Indian space mission)

    Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), unmanned mission to Mars that is India’s first interplanetary spacecraft. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched the Mars Orbiter Mission on November 5, 2013, using its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on

  • Mangan (India)

    Mangan, town, central Sikkim state, northeastern India. It lies in a deep valley on the east bank of the Tista River, just south of where it joins the Talung River. Mangan is a trading center situated on the North Sikkim Highway. It has a hospital, a rest house, and a small hydroelectric power

  • Mangan, James Clarence (Irish writer)

    James Clarence Mangan was a prolific and uneven writer of almost every kind of verse whose best work, inspired by love of Ireland, ranks high in Irish poetry. The son of an unsuccessful grocer, at the age of 15 Mangan became a copying clerk in a scrivener’s office and remained one for 10 years. He

  • Manganelli, Giorgio (Italian author)

    Giorgio Manganelli was an Italian critical theorist and novelist, one of the leaders of the avant-garde in the 1960s. Manganelli first emerged as a literary innovator in 1964, both as the author of the experimental novel Hilarotragoedia, a phenomenological monologue, and as a member of Gruppo 63

  • manganese (chemical element)

    manganese (Mn), chemical element, one of the silvery white, hard, brittle metals of Group 7 (VIIb) of the periodic table. It was recognized as an element in 1774 by the Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele while working with the mineral pyrolusite and was isolated the same year by his associate,

  • manganese bronze (metallurgy)

    bronze: …useful in mechanical engineering are manganese bronzes, in which there may be little or no tin but considerable amounts of zinc and up to 4.5 percent manganese. Aluminum bronzes, containing up to 16 percent aluminum and small amounts of other metals such as iron or nickel, are especially strong and…

  • manganese dioxide (chemical compound)

    antiferromagnetism: …magnetism in solids such as manganese oxide (MnO) in which adjacent ions that behave as tiny magnets (in this case manganese ions, Mn2+) spontaneously align themselves at relatively low temperatures into opposite, or antiparallel, arrangements throughout the material so that it exhibits almost no gross external magnetism. In antiferromagnetic materials,…

  • manganese monoxide (chemical compound)

    manganese: Compounds: Manganese(II) oxide, or manganese monoxide (MnO), is used as a starting material for the production of manganous salts, as an additive in fertilizers, and as a reagent in textile printing. It occurs in nature as the green mineral manganosite. It also can be prepared commercially by heating manganese…

  • manganese nodule (mineralogy)

    authigenic sediment: Manganese nodules are pebbles or stones about the size of walnuts that are built of onionlike layers of manganese and iron oxides. Minor constituents include copper, nickel, and cobalt, making the nodules a potential ore of these valuable elements. Mining of manganese nodules has been…

  • manganese oxide (chemical compound)

    antiferromagnetism: …magnetism in solids such as manganese oxide (MnO) in which adjacent ions that behave as tiny magnets (in this case manganese ions, Mn2+) spontaneously align themselves at relatively low temperatures into opposite, or antiparallel, arrangements throughout the material so that it exhibits almost no gross external magnetism. In antiferromagnetic materials,…

  • manganese processing

    manganese processing, preparation of the ore for use in various products. Manganese (Mn) is a hard, silvery white metal with a melting point of 1,244 °C (2,271 °F). Ordinarily too brittle to be of structural value itself, it is an essential agent in steelmaking, in which it removes impurities such

  • manganese steel (metallurgy)

    steel: Wear-resistant steels: Manganese steels are often called Hadfield steels, after their inventor, Robert Hadfield.

  • manganese(II) oxide (chemical compound)

    manganese: Compounds: Manganese(II) oxide, or manganese monoxide (MnO), is used as a starting material for the production of manganous salts, as an additive in fertilizers, and as a reagent in textile printing. It occurs in nature as the green mineral manganosite. It also can be prepared commercially by heating manganese…

  • manganese(IV) oxide (chemical compound)

    antiferromagnetism: …magnetism in solids such as manganese oxide (MnO) in which adjacent ions that behave as tiny magnets (in this case manganese ions, Mn2+) spontaneously align themselves at relatively low temperatures into opposite, or antiparallel, arrangements throughout the material so that it exhibits almost no gross external magnetism. In antiferromagnetic materials,…

  • Mangang (India)

    Mangan, town, central Sikkim state, northeastern India. It lies in a deep valley on the east bank of the Tista River, just south of where it joins the Talung River. Mangan is a trading center situated on the North Sikkim Highway. It has a hospital, a rest house, and a small hydroelectric power

  • Manganiello, Joe (American actor)

    Sofía Vergara: …the latter starred her husband, Joe Manganiello (married 2015; divorced 2024). In addition, Vergara lent her voice to the animated comedy The Emoji Movie (2017). In 2020 she joined the reality-competition show America’s Got Talent as a judge. She later starred as cocaine trafficker Griselda Blanco in the miniseries Griselda…

  • manganite (mineral)

    manganite, an ore mineral of manganese, basic manganese oxide [MnO(OH)] that forms dark gray to black crystal bundles or fibrous masses. Important deposits exist at Ilfeld, Ilmenau, Siegen, and Horhausen, Ger.; the Lauron and Aure valleys, in France; St. Just, Cornwall, Eng.; and Michigan and

  • manganous oxide (chemical compound)

    manganese processing: Chemical compounds: Manganous oxide is made by the reduction of manganous dioxide (MnO2) by carbon, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, or hydrocarbons at temperatures between 400 and 800 °C (750 and 1,450 °F). Manganese is readily assimilated by plants in this form, so that MnO is used as a…

  • manganous sulfate (chemical compound)

    manganese: Compounds: Manganese sulfate (MnSO4) is added to soils to promote plant growth, especially of citrus crops. In addition, it is a good reducing agent, particularly useful in the manufacture of paint and varnish dryers. The deep-purple compound potassium permanganate (KMnO4) has many uses, most notably as…

  • Mangar (people)

    Magar, indigenous ethnic group of Nepal, living mainly on the western and southern flanks of the country’s north-central Dhaulagiri mountain massif. They also live in small but significant numbers in northern India, especially in the state of Sikkim. The Magar speak a language of the Tibeto-Burman

  • Mangareva Islands (archipelago, French Polynesia)

    Gambier Islands, southeasternmost extension of the Tuamotu Archipelago of French Polynesia in the central South Pacific, nearly 1,000 miles (1,600 km) east-southeast of Tahiti. The islands are just north of the Tropic of Capricorn. The principal inhabited group of the Gambiers comprises the

  • Mangas Coloradas (Apache chief)

    Mangas Coloradas was a Mimbreño Apache chief noted for uniting the Apache nation. Mangas Coloradas, an unusually tall and striking man, became chief of the Mimbreño in 1837, after his predecessor—together with a number of Mimbreño men, women, and children—had been betrayed and murdered by a group

  • Mangaung (national judicial capital, South Africa)

    Bloemfontein, city, capital of Free State province (formerly Orange Free State) and judicial capital of the Republic of South Africa. Founded by Major H. Douglas Warden in 1846 as a fort and residency, it became the seat of the British-administered Orange River Sovereignty (1848–54) and of the

  • Mangbetu (people)

    Mangbetu, peoples of Central Africa living to the south of the Zande in northeastern Congo (Kinshasa). They speak a Central Sudanic language of the Nilo-Saharan language family. The Mangbetu are a cluster of peoples who penetrated and now occupy the formerly Pygmy territory and who, in turn,

  • mange (animal disease)

    mange, skin disease of animals caused by mite infestations, characterized by inflammation, itching, thickening of the skin, and hair loss. The most severe form of mange is caused by varieties of the mite Sarcoptes scabiei, which also causes human scabies. Some form of mange is known in all domestic

  • mangel (plant, Beta vulgaris cultivar)

    feed: Root crops: Beets (mangels), rutabagas, cassava, turnips, and sometimes surplus potatoes are used as feed. Compared with other feeds, root crops are low in dry-matter content and protein; they mostly provide energy.

  • Mangel, Marcel (French mime)

    Marcel Marceau was a preeminent 20th-century French mime whose silent portrayals were executed with eloquence, deceptive simplicity, and balletic grace. His most-celebrated characterization was Bip—a character half-Pierrot, half-Charlie Chaplin’s Little Tramp—first presented by Marceau in 1947. He

  • mangel-wurzel (plant, Beta vulgaris cultivar)

    feed: Root crops: Beets (mangels), rutabagas, cassava, turnips, and sometimes surplus potatoes are used as feed. Compared with other feeds, root crops are low in dry-matter content and protein; they mostly provide energy.

  • Mangelsdorff, Albert (German musician)

    Albert Mangelsdorff was a German trombonist, who began playing bop and in time became an outstanding modal, free jazz, and jazz-rock improviser. He was among the first post-World War II European jazz musicians to create original music. With his brother Emil (later known as an alto saxophonist),

  • Mangelsdorff, Emil (German musician)

    Albert Mangelsdorff: With his brother Emil (later known as an alto saxophonist), Albert attended secret meetings of the Hot Club of Frankfurt during the period when jazz was banned by the Nazis. He played trombone in a Frankfurt radio band that he led and with German bop groups in the…

  • Mangen (India)

    Mangan, town, central Sikkim state, northeastern India. It lies in a deep valley on the east bank of the Tista River, just south of where it joins the Talung River. Mangan is a trading center situated on the North Sikkim Highway. It has a hospital, a rest house, and a small hydroelectric power

  • Mangena Mokone (African clergyman)

    Ethiopianism: An ex-Wesleyan minister, Mangena Mokone, was the first to use the term when he founded the Ethiopian Church (1892). Among the main causes of the movement were the frustrations felt by Africans who were denied advancement in the hierarchy of the mission churches and racial discontent encouraged by…

  • Manger, Itzik (Austrian-Polish writer)

    Yiddish literature: Writers in Poland and the Soviet Union: Itzik Manger, born in Czernowitz, Austria-Hungary (now Chernivtsi, Ukraine), also lived in Warsaw, Paris, London, New York, and Tel Aviv. He wrote numerous books of poems, the most memorable of which are charming modern retellings of biblical stories, such as Khumesh lider (1935; “Songs from…

  • Mangerton (mountain, Ireland)

    Kerry: …on the Dingle Peninsula and Mangerton (2,756 feet [840 metres]) and Carrantuohill (3,414 feet [1,041 metres]) on the Iveragh Peninsula. The latter peak is the highest point in the country.

  • Mangeshkar, Lata (Indian singer)

    Lata Mangeshkar was an iconic Indian playback singer who was lovingly called Swar Kokila (vocal nightingale). Her career spanned eight decades, and she recorded songs for the soundtracks of more than 2,000 Indian films. Mangeshkar was born into a traditional Marathi family and was the eldest of

  • Mangetsu Temple (temple, Usuki, Japan)

    Usuki: …site of the former Buddhist Mangetsu Temple, with its ancient rock carvings. Pop. (2005) 43,352; (2010) 41,469.

  • Mangfall Bridge (bridge, Germany)

    bridge: Ulrich Finsterwalder: …bridge by Finsterwalder is the Mangfall Bridge (1959) south of Munich, a high bridge with a central span of 106 metres (354 feet) and two side spans of 89 metres (295 feet). The Mangfall Bridge features the first latticed truss walls made of prestressed concrete, and it also has a…

  • Manggarai (people)

    Manggarai, Indonesian people inhabiting western Flores, one of the Lesser Sunda Islands, in Indonesia. Numbering approximately 500,000 in the late 20th century, they speak a language in the Bima-Sumba subgroup of Indonesian languages. The Manggarai were historically ruled alternately by the

  • Manggarai language

    Austronesian languages: Central Malayo-Polynesian (CMP): …fuller descriptions are available include Manggarai and Ngadha, spoken on the island of Flores; Roti, spoken on the island of the same name; Tetum, spoken on the island of Timor; and Buruese, spoken on the island of Buru in the central Moluccas.

  • Mangghystaū (oblast, Kazakhstan)

    Mangghystaū, oblysy (region), southwestern Kazakhstan, east of the Caspian Sea. The region consists of vast flatlands, with some depressions (the Batyr Depression is 425 feet [130 m] below sea level). It is rich in petroleum and natural gas, especially in the oil and gas region of the Mangghystaū

  • Mangiarotti, Edoardo (Italian fencer)

    Edoardo Mangiarotti was an Italian fencer who was one of the most successful performers in the history of the sport. Over a 40-year career, Mangiarotti won 13 Olympic medals and 13 team world championships in foil and épée. Mangiarotti’s father, a master fencer, began giving Edoardo and his brother

  • Mangifera (plant genus)

    Sapindales: Distribution and abundance: …Micronesia) has about 60 species, Mangifera (occurring in Southeast Asia and Indo-Malaysia to Solomon Islands) has about 40 species, and Schinus (occurring from Mexico to Argentina) has about 30 species.

  • Mangifera indica (plant and fruit)

    mango, (Mangifera indica), member of the cashew family (Anacardiaceae) and one of the most important and widely cultivated fruits of the tropical world. The mango tree is considered indigenous to southern Asia, especially Myanmar and Assam state of India, and numerous cultivars have been developed.

  • Mangin, Alphonse (French military officer)

    searchlight: Alphonse Mangin of the French Army invented a double spherical glass mirror that was widely employed in searchlights until about 1885, when the parabolic reflector came into use. For military use, the reflector is generally metal.

  • Mangin, Charles (French general)

    Battle of Verdun: The tide turns at Verdun: Charles Mangin, who had held command of a section of the French defensive line from Fleury to the right bank of the Meuse from June 22, proposed a scheme to liberate the Verdun region. Nivelle approved, and that offensive was initiated on October 21 with…

  • Mangistau (oblast, Kazakhstan)

    Mangghystaū, oblysy (region), southwestern Kazakhstan, east of the Caspian Sea. The region consists of vast flatlands, with some depressions (the Batyr Depression is 425 feet [130 m] below sea level). It is rich in petroleum and natural gas, especially in the oil and gas region of the Mangghystaū

  • Mangit dynasty (Uzbek khanate)

    history of Central Asia: The Uzbeks: …Khiva in Khwārezm (1717–1920), the Mangits in Bukhara (1753–1920), and the Mings in Kokand (c. 1710–1876), in the upper valley of the Syr Darya. During this same period, east of the Pamirs, Kashgaria was torn apart by the rivalries of Khwājahs and Kyrgyz; in the Semirechye the Kazakhs were locked…

  • Mangkubumi (Southeast Asian ruler)

    Gianti Agreement: …Mangkubumi, later known as Sultan Amangku Buwono I, who built his palace in Jogjakarta. Raden Mas Said signed a treaty with the company in 1757, which entitled him to have a part of eastern Mataram. He was thenceforth known as Mangkunegara I.

  • Mangkunegara I (Southeast Asian ruler)

    Gianti Agreement: He was thenceforth known as Mangkunegara I.

  • Mangla Dam (dam, Pakistan)

    Mangla Dam, embankment dam on the Jhelum River near Jhelum, Pakistan. Mangla Dam, completed in 1967, is one of the main structures in the Indus Basin Project (another is Tarbela Dam). When it was completed, the dam structure rose 453 feet (138 metres) above ground level, was about 10,300 feet

  • Manglehorn (film by Green [2014])

    Al Pacino: Academy Award and later films: …of a small-town locksmith in Manglehorn (2014) and the late-life epiphany of a rock star in Danny Collins (2015). After a series of roles in unremarkable movies, Pacino joined a cast of colorful characters in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood (2019). He then costarred with De Niro in…

  • mangling (textiles process)

    clothing and footwear industry: Mangling: Mangling is the process of pressing a garment or section between two heated cylindrical surfaces.

  • Mango (Togo)

    Mango, town, northern Togo, western Africa, situated on the Oti River near the Kéran National Park. The town served as the principal locale of Savanes until the late 1970s, when Dapango (formerly Dapaong) assumed that position. Mango still functions as a centre for cattle and peanut (groundnut)

  • mango (plant and fruit)

    mango, (Mangifera indica), member of the cashew family (Anacardiaceae) and one of the most important and widely cultivated fruits of the tropical world. The mango tree is considered indigenous to southern Asia, especially Myanmar and Assam state of India, and numerous cultivars have been developed.

  • mango family (plant family)

    Anacardiaceae, the sumac family of flowering plants (order Sapindales), with about 80 genera and about 870 species of evergreen or deciduous trees, shrubs, and woody vines. Most members of Anacardiaceae are native to tropical and subtropical areas of the world. A few species occur in temperate

  • mango melon (plant)

    melon: Plants resembling true melons include the related watermelon (Citrullus…

  • Mango Pīr (hill, Pakistan)

    Karachi: City site: …in the north and east; Mango Pīr, the highest elevation, is 585 feet high.

  • Mangoaela, Z D (South African folklorist and poet)

    Z. D. Mangoaela was a Southern Sotho writer and folklorist whose early work set the stage for much South African indigenous literature. Mangoaela grew up in Basutoland (now Lesotho), where he received his primary education, later attending the Basutoland Training College, where he received a

  • Mangoaela, Zakea Dolphin (South African folklorist and poet)

    Z. D. Mangoaela was a Southern Sotho writer and folklorist whose early work set the stage for much South African indigenous literature. Mangoaela grew up in Basutoland (now Lesotho), where he received his primary education, later attending the Basutoland Training College, where he received a

  • Mangochi (Malawi)

    Mangochi, town, south-central Malawi, on the Shire River below its efflux from Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi) and 5 miles (8 km) south of its entrance into Lake Malombe. The town began as a British colonial defense post founded by the colonial administrator Sir Harry Johnston in the 1890s on the littoral

  • mangold (plant, Beta vulgaris cultivar)

    feed: Root crops: Beets (mangels), rutabagas, cassava, turnips, and sometimes surplus potatoes are used as feed. Compared with other feeds, root crops are low in dry-matter content and protein; they mostly provide energy.

  • Mangole (island, Indonesia)

    Sula: …large islands, Taliabu (the largest), Mangole, and Sanana (or Sulabesi), and several smaller ones make up the chain. The area of this group is about 1,875 square miles (4,850 square km). Taliabu and Mangole are separated by the narrow Capalulu Strait and are mountainous, thickly forested, and thinly populated. Taliabu…

  • mangonel (weapon)

    onager, in weaponry, ancient Roman torsion-powered weapon, similar to a catapult. It consisted of a single vertical beam thrust through a thick horizontal skein of twisted cords. The skein was twisted tight by geared winches, and the beam was then pulled down to a horizontal position, further

  • Mangoni (people)

    Ngoni, approximately 12 groups of people of the Nguni (q.v.) branch of Bantu-speaking peoples that are scattered throughout eastern Africa. Their dispersal was due to the rise of the Zulu empire early in the 19th century, during which many refugee bands moved away from Zululand. One Ngoni chief,

  • Mangope, Lucas M. (president of Bophuthatswana)

    Bophuthatswana: …South Africa’s nonindependent Bantustans, with Lucas M. Mangope as chief minister, and was declared an independent republic in December 1977.

  • mangosteen (tree and fruit)

    mangosteen, (Garcinia mangostana), handsome tropical tree (family Clusiaceae) native to Southeast Asia and cultivated for its tart-sweet fruit. The mangosteen fruit is highly valued for its juicy, delicate texture and slightly astringent flavour and is commonly eaten fresh, canned, or dried. The

  • Mangrai (king of Lan Na)

    Mangrai was the Thai founder of the city of Chiang Mai and the kingdom of Lan Na (reigned 1296–1317) in the north region of present Thailand, which remained an independent state until its capture by the Burmese in the 16th century. Mangrai succeeded his father as ruler of the principality of Chiang

  • mangrove (plant)

    mangrove, any of certain shrubs and trees that belong primarily to the families Rhizophoraceae, Acanthaceae, Lythraceae, Combretaceae, and Arecaceae; that grow in dense thickets or forests along tidal estuaries, in salt marshes, and on muddy coasts; and that characteristically have prop roots—i.e.,

  • mangrove cuckoo (bird)

    cuckoo: erythropthalmus) and the mangrove cuckoo (C. minor), which is restricted in the United States to coastal southern Florida (also found in the West Indies and Mexico to northern South America); they are represented in Central and South America by about 12 other species, some placed in the genera…

  • mangrove forest (ecology)

    rainforest: Mangrove forests occur along estuaries and deltas on tropical coasts. Temperate rainforests filled with evergreen and laurel trees are lower and less dense than other kinds of rainforests because the climate is more equable, with a moderate temperature range and well-distributed annual rainfall.

  • mangrove horseshoe crab (chelicerate)

    horseshoe crab: Natural history: …the mangrove horseshoe crab (Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda)—are found along Asia from Japan to India and closely resemble Limulus in both structure and habits. The animals are most abundant in estuarine waters, where they feed on algae, marine worms, clams and other mollusks, and dead fish.

  • mangrove snake (reptile)

    mangrove snake, (genus Boiga), any of about 30 species (family Colubridae) of weakly venomous, rear-fanged snakes, ranging from South Asia to Australia. They are at home on the ground and in trees; many catch birds at night. Because they have elliptical pupils and may be green-eyed, they are

  • mangrove snapper (fish)

    snapper: …and white Indo-Pacific fish; the gray, or mangrove, snapper (L. griseus), a gray, reddish, or greenish Atlantic fish; the yellowtail snapper (Ocyurus chrysurus), a swift-moving Atlantic species with a broad, yellow stripe from the nose to the wholly yellow tail; and the red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus), a bright-red fish (one…

  • mangrove swamp (ecology)

    rainforest: Mangrove forests occur along estuaries and deltas on tropical coasts. Temperate rainforests filled with evergreen and laurel trees are lower and less dense than other kinds of rainforests because the climate is more equable, with a moderate temperature range and well-distributed annual rainfall.

  • mangrove thicket (ecology)

    rainforest: Mangrove forests occur along estuaries and deltas on tropical coasts. Temperate rainforests filled with evergreen and laurel trees are lower and less dense than other kinds of rainforests because the climate is more equable, with a moderate temperature range and well-distributed annual rainfall.

  • Mangroves Matter

    Explore other Botanize! episodes and learn more about mangroves. Dr. Stacy Baez: There is an interconnectedness between mangroves, corals, and seagrass. So when one habitat is lost or degraded, there is a cascading effect downwards into the reef. We often think about protection in these silos. You

  • Mangu (Mongol khan)

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