• Manyika (people)

    Manyika, one of the cluster of Shona-speaking peoples inhabiting extreme eastern Zimbabwe and adjacent areas of interior Mozambique south of the Púnguè River. The Manyika have existed as an ethnic group discrete from other Shona groups only since the 1930s. Historically, the Manyika recognized a

  • manyplies (anatomy)

    artiodactyl: Digestive system: … (or paunch), the reticulum, the omasum (psalterium or manyplies)—which are all believed to be derived from the esophagus—and the abomasum (or reed), which corresponds to the stomach of other mammals. The omasum is almost absent in chevrotains. Camels have a three-chambered stomach, lacking the separation of omasum and abomasum; the…

  • Manzala, Lake (lake, Egypt)

    Nile River: Physiography of Nile River: …Lake Burullus (Buḥayrat Al-Burullus), and Lake Manzala (Buḥayrat Al-Manzilah).

  • Manzanar Relocation Centre (internment facility, California, United States)

    Manzanar War Relocation Center, internment facility for Japanese Americans during World War II. In March 1942 the U.S. War Relocation Authority was set up; fearing subversive actions, it established 10 relocation centres for persons of Japanese ancestry, located in California, Arizona, Idaho, Utah,

  • Manzanar War Relocation Center (internment facility, California, United States)

    Manzanar War Relocation Center, internment facility for Japanese Americans during World War II. In March 1942 the U.S. War Relocation Authority was set up; fearing subversive actions, it established 10 relocation centres for persons of Japanese ancestry, located in California, Arizona, Idaho, Utah,

  • Manzanera, Phil (British musician)

    Roxy Music: …stabilized around Ferry, Mackay, Eno, Manzanera, and Thompson. The band’s eponymous debut album, the nonalbum single “Virginia Plain” (both 1972), and the follow-up album For Your Pleasure (1973) were hits in Britain, as Roxy Music’s fully textured sound and lush instrumentation set it apart from mainstream rock. When Eno departed…

  • Manzanillo (Cuba)

    Manzanillo, city, eastern Cuba. It lies amid swamplands at the head of the shallow Gulf of Guacanayabo, an embayment of the Caribbean Sea. Founded in 1784, Manzanillo is a commercial and manufacturing centre for the fertile agricultural district to the east and north, which produces sugarcane,

  • Manzanillo (Mexico)

    Manzanillo, city and port, western Colima estado (state), west-central Mexico. It lies on the Pacific Ocean between Manzanillo Bay and Cuyutlán Lagoon. In pre-Columbian times the site was occupied by the town of Tzalahua, and ships for Hernán Cortés’s expedition (1533) to the Gulf of California

  • manzanita (plant)

    manzanita, any of about 50 species of evergreen shrubs and trees of the genus Arctostaphylos, of the heath family (Ericaceae), native to western North America. The leaves are alternate, thick, evergreen, and smooth-edged. The small, urn-shaped flowers are pink or white and are borne in terminal

  • Manzano Peak (mountain, New Mexico, United States)

    Torrance: …the Manzano Mountains, topped by Manzano Peak (10,098 feet [3,077 metres]). Most of Torrance county is an area of rolling plains interrupted by ridges, hills, and mesas and scarred by the dry beds of streams; it includes the long, wide Estancia Basin. Within county borders are the Cibola National Forest,…

  • Manzhouguo (puppet state created by Japan in China [1932])

    Manchukuo, puppet state created in 1932 by Japan out of the three historic provinces of Manchuria (northeastern China). After the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05), Japan gained control of the Russian-built South Manchurian Railway, and its army established a presence in the region; expansion there was

  • Manzhouli (China)

    Manzhouli, city in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region, China. It is situated on the border opposite the Russian town of Zabaykalsk and lies 100 miles (160 km) west of Hailar and 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Lake Hulun. Manzhouli was long a small Mongolian settlement in the Hulun Buir League. It

  • Manzhu Guo (puppet state created by Japan in China [1932])

    Manchukuo, puppet state created in 1932 by Japan out of the three historic provinces of Manchuria (northeastern China). After the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05), Japan gained control of the Russian-built South Manchurian Railway, and its army established a presence in the region; expansion there was

  • manzi (Chinese social class)

    Kublai Khan: Social and administrative policy: …or northern Chinese, and the nanren, or southern Chinese—the latter group also referred to pejoratively as manzi (“barbarians”)—who lived in what had been Nan Song China. The expenses of state and the support of the privileged bore heavily on those two classes. Kublai’s continuing wars produced a heavy and useless…

  • Manzikert, Battle of (Byzantine history [1071])

    Battle of Manzikert, battle on August 26, 1071, in which the Byzantines under the emperor Romanus IV Diogenes were defeated by the Seljuq Turks led by the sultan Alp-Arslan (meaning “Heroic Lion” in Turkish). It was followed by Seljuq conquest of most of Anatolia and marked the beginning of the end

  • Manzil Bū Ruqaybah (Tunisia)

    Menzel Bourguiba, town located in north-central Tunisia. It lies on the southwestern shore of Lake Bizerte, 10 miles (16 km) southwest of Bizerte town and the Mediterranean Sea. Menzel Bourguiba, which is of modern origin, owes its development to the adjacent naval base and dockyard at Sidi

  • Manzilah, Buḥayrat Al- (lake, Egypt)

    Nile River: Physiography of Nile River: …Lake Burullus (Buḥayrat Al-Burullus), and Lake Manzala (Buḥayrat Al-Manzilah).

  • Manzini (Eswatini)

    Manzini, town, central Swaziland. The Great Usutu River flows south of Manzini on its way east toward the Indian Ocean, and the Malkerns irrigation scheme is to the north. It was originally called Bremersdorp, for a trader who established a store there in 1887, but it was renamed in 1960. The first

  • Manzini, Gianna (Italian author)

    Italian literature: Women writers: …existential in nature; fastidious stylist Gianna Manzini, an admirer of Virginia Woolf who is at her best in the autobiographical Ritratto in piedi (1971; “Full-Length Portrait”); and Alba De Céspedes, whose Nessuno torna indietro (1938; “There’s No Turning Back”) was banned by fascist censors.

  • Manzoni Family, The (work by Ginzburg)

    Italian literature: Other writings: …biography (La famiglia Manzoni [1983; The Manzoni Family]). Giovanni Arpino excelled at personal sympathies that cross cultural boundaries (La suora giovane [1959; The Novice] and Il fratello italiano [1980; “The Italian Brother”]). Fulvio Tomizza also tackled this theme in L’amicizia (1980; “The Friendship”).

  • Manzoni, Alessandro (Italian author)

    Alessandro Manzoni was an Italian poet and novelist whose novel I promessi sposi (The Betrothed) had immense patriotic appeal for Italians of the nationalistic Risorgimento period and is generally ranked among the masterpieces of world literature. After Manzoni’s parents separated in 1792, he spent

  • Manzoni, Giacomo (Italian sculptor)

    Giacomo Manzù was an Italian sculptor who, in the mid-20th century, revived the ancient tradition of creating sculptural bronze doors for ecclesiastical buildings. His sober realism and extremely delicate modeling alternately achieved austere severity and sensuousness of form and surface, lending a

  • Manzoni, Piero (Italian artist)

    Western painting: Art and consumerism: French and Italian art in the 1950s: …the work of Italian artist Piero Manzoni, who produced materialist counterpropositions to his more spiritually elevated gestures. Based in Milan, Manzoni partly inherited his irreverent attitude to aesthetic protocols from Lucio Fontana, an artist who had developed a peculiarly Italian version of Informel painting (originally a Parisian movement that rejected…

  • Manzoor, Mohammad Abdul (Bangladeshi general)

    Ziaur Rahman: Mohammad Abdul Manzoor, who in 1971 had fought beside him in the battle to win independence for Bangladesh.

  • Manzu dynasty (Chinese history)

    Qing dynasty, the last of the imperial dynasties of China, spanning the years 1644 to 1911/12. Under the Qing the territory of the empire grew to treble its size under the preceding Ming dynasty (1368–1644), the population grew from some 150 million to 450 million, many of the non-Chinese

  • Manzù, Giacomo (Italian sculptor)

    Giacomo Manzù was an Italian sculptor who, in the mid-20th century, revived the ancient tradition of creating sculptural bronze doors for ecclesiastical buildings. His sober realism and extremely delicate modeling alternately achieved austere severity and sensuousness of form and surface, lending a

  • Mao (Dominican Republic)

    Mao, city, northwestern Dominican Republic. It lies near the Yaque del Norte River in the fertile Cibao Valley. Mao is principally a rice-growing and milling centre, although a variety of other crops are grown in the area. Lumbering and placer gold mining take place near the city. Mao can be

  • Mao (ancient god)

    Men: …with the Persian moon god Mao. His name was usually written together with a cult title, often an adjective denoting a locality, and his most frequent attributes were the pine cone, bucranium (ox skull), and chicken. He was represented as a male figure with a crescent moon behind his shoulders.…

  • Maó (Spain)

    Maó, capital of Minorca Island, Balearic Islands provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), Spain. It originated as the Mediterranean Portus Magonis, bearing the name of the Carthaginian general Mago. Under the Romans it was a municipium (privileged town). The Arab pirate

  • mao (card game)

    crazy eights: …in the variation known as mao, newcomers are not told what the rules are but have to learn them by making mistakes and suffering the penalties. This feature may have been suggested by eleusis.

  • Mao Ch’ang (Chinese scholar)

    Mao Chang was a Chinese scholar whose revision of and commentary on the great Confucian classic the Shijing (“Classic of Poetry”) became so famous that for the next 2,000 years this text was often referred to as the Mao shi (“Mao Poetry”). His work is still generally considered the authoritative

  • Mao Chang (Chinese scholar)

    Mao Chang was a Chinese scholar whose revision of and commentary on the great Confucian classic the Shijing (“Classic of Poetry”) became so famous that for the next 2,000 years this text was often referred to as the Mao shi (“Mao Poetry”). His work is still generally considered the authoritative

  • Mao Dun (Chinese author)

    Mao Dun was a Chinese literary critic and author, generally considered republican China’s greatest realist novelist. Forced to interrupt his schooling in 1916 because he ran out of money, Shen Yanbing became a proofreader at the Commercial Press in Shanghai, the most important publishing house of

  • MAO inhibitor (drug)

    depression: Treatments for depression: …contrast, the antidepressants known as monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) interfere with the activity of monoamine oxidase, an enzyme that is known to be involved in the breakdown of norepinephrine and serotonin.

  • Mao Shan Taoism (Daoism)

    Shangqing, important early sectarian movement associated with the emergence of Daoism during the southern Six Dynasties period (220–589 ce). The origins of the sect go back to the revelations made to Yang Xi in the 4th century, which were gathered together as an early corpus of scriptures

  • Mao shi (Chinese literature)

    Shijing, the first anthology of Chinese poetry. It was compiled by the ancient sage Confucius (551–479 bc) and cited by him as a model of literary expression, for, despite its numerous themes, the subject matter was always “expressive of pleasure without being licentious, and of grief without being

  • Mao Tse-tung (Chinese leader)

    Mao Zedong was the principal Chinese Marxist theorist, soldier, and statesman who led his country’s communist revolution. Mao was the leader of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) from 1935 until his death, and he was chairman (chief of state) of the People’s Republic of China from 1949 to 1959 and

  • Mao Tse-tung Ssu-hsiang (ideology)

    Maoism, doctrine composed of the ideology and methodology for revolution developed by Mao Zedong and his associates in the Chinese Communist Party from the 1920s until Mao’s death in 1976. Maoism has clearly represented a revolutionary method based on a distinct revolutionary outlook not

  • Mao Tun (Chinese author)

    Mao Dun was a Chinese literary critic and author, generally considered republican China’s greatest realist novelist. Forced to interrupt his schooling in 1916 because he ran out of money, Shen Yanbing became a proofreader at the Commercial Press in Shanghai, the most important publishing house of

  • Mao Zedong (Chinese leader)

    Mao Zedong was the principal Chinese Marxist theorist, soldier, and statesman who led his country’s communist revolution. Mao was the leader of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) from 1935 until his death, and he was chairman (chief of state) of the People’s Republic of China from 1949 to 1959 and

  • Mao Zedong Sixiang (ideology)

    Maoism, doctrine composed of the ideology and methodology for revolution developed by Mao Zedong and his associates in the Chinese Communist Party from the 1920s until Mao’s death in 1976. Maoism has clearly represented a revolutionary method based on a distinct revolutionary outlook not

  • Mao’s Last Dancer (film by Beresford [2009])

    Bruce Beresford: Beresford later helmed Mao’s Last Dancer (2009), which was based on the real-life story of a Chinese ballet dancer who defected to the United States, and Peace, Love & Misunderstanding (2011). His later credits included the dramedy Mr. Church (2016) and the TV movie Flint (2017), about the…

  • Mao, Ho-kwang (American scientist)

    high-pressure phenomena: The diamond-anvil cell: …December 1975 by the geophysicists Ho-kwang Mao and Peter M. Bell, both of the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, in Washington, D.C., where they subsequently attained diamond-cell pressures of approximately 300 GPa. Heating of diamond-cell samples, with both resistance heaters and lasers, has extended accessible pressure-temperature conditions…

  • MAO-B inhibitor (drug)

    antiparkinson drug: COMT and MAO-B inhibitors: Similar to COMT inhibitors, MAO-B inhibitors slow the degradation of dopamine in the brain. Best known of these agents is selegiline, which extends the effects of levodopa and often is prescribed in combination with levodopa and carbidopa.

  • Mao-ming (China)

    Maoming, city in western Guangdong sheng (province), China. Maoming is situated some 16 miles (25 km) inland, 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Zhanjiang city. Little more than a small market town and minor administrative centre until the 1950s, the whole area has undergone rapid growth since then;

  • Maodun (emperor of Xiongnu)

    history of Central Asia: Early eastern peoples: …was killed by his son Maodun, under whose long reign (c. 209–174 bce) the Xiongnu became a major power and a serious menace to China. In many respects the Xiongnu are the eastern counterpart of the Scythians. The Chinese historian Sima Qian (c. 145–c. 87 bce) described the nomadic tactics…

  • MAOI (drug)

    depression: Treatments for depression: …contrast, the antidepressants known as monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) interfere with the activity of monoamine oxidase, an enzyme that is known to be involved in the breakdown of norepinephrine and serotonin.

  • Maoism (ideology)

    Maoism, doctrine composed of the ideology and methodology for revolution developed by Mao Zedong and his associates in the Chinese Communist Party from the 1920s until Mao’s death in 1976. Maoism has clearly represented a revolutionary method based on a distinct revolutionary outlook not

  • Maoke Mountains (mountains, Indonesia)

    Maoke Mountains, westernmost segment of the central highlands of New Guinea. It is located in the Indonesian province of Papua. The range extends for 430 miles (692 km), and much of it lies above 12,000 feet (3,660 metres), with a number of peaks rising above the 14,500-foot (4,400-metre) snow

  • Maoming (China)

    Maoming, city in western Guangdong sheng (province), China. Maoming is situated some 16 miles (25 km) inland, 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Zhanjiang city. Little more than a small market town and minor administrative centre until the 1950s, the whole area has undergone rapid growth since then;

  • Māori (people)

    Māori, member of a Polynesian people of New Zealand. Their traditional history describes their origins in terms of waves of migration that culminated in the arrival of a “great fleet” in the 14th century from Hawaiki, a mythical land usually identified as Tahiti. This historical account provides

  • Māori Boy: A Memoir of Childhood (memoir by Ihimaera)

    Witi Ihimaera: Ihimaera’s later works included Māori Boy: A Memoir of Childhood (2014) and Native Son: The Writer’s Memoir (2019).

  • Māori hen (bird)

    weka, (Gallirallus australis), species of nonmigratory flightless bird of the rail family (Rallidae) that is endemic to New Zealand. The weka is roughly the size of a chicken (Gallus gallus), and its appearance is characterized by its variable, but mainly brown, plumage with black streaks. The

  • Māori King Movement (New Zealand history)

    New Zealand: Ethnic conflict: The Māori King Movement and the unrest in the Taranaki headed by Wiremu Kīngi (the two movements remained distinct though related) were opposed to further land sales.

  • Māori Land Wars (New Zealand history [1845–1872])

    Māori: The rise of the King Movement: …has sometimes been called the First Māori War), and they were not finally suppressed until 1847, by colonial forces under Gov. Sir George Grey. His victories brought a peace that lasted from 1847 to 1860.

  • Māori language

    Māori language, a language in the Eastern Polynesian subgroup of the Eastern Austronesian (Oceanic) languages that is spoken in New Zealand and the Cook Islands. It is the language of the indigenous Māori people. The Māori Language Act of 1987 made it one of New Zealand’s official languages.

  • Māori Party (political party, New Zealand)

    New Zealand: John Key’s first term as prime minister (2008–11): …three smaller parties, including the Māori Party. The latter had formed in 2004 as a result of the Labour government’s denial of Māori claims to customary rights over areas of the country’s shoreline and seabed.

  • Māori Representation Act (New Zealand [1867])

    Māori Representation Act, (1867), legislation that created four Māori parliamentary seats in New Zealand, bringing the Māori nation into the political system of the self-governing colony. The Native Representation Act was originally intended to be temporary. When Māori landholdings were converted

  • Māori Wars (New Zealand history [1845–1872])

    Māori: The rise of the King Movement: …has sometimes been called the First Māori War), and they were not finally suppressed until 1847, by colonial forces under Gov. Sir George Grey. His victories brought a peace that lasted from 1847 to 1860.

  • Maoshan revelations (Daoist revelations to the visionary Yang Xi)

    Taoism: Influence on secular literature: The revealed literature of Maoshan came to have the greatest effect on secular writings. As works of great literary refinement, the Lives of the Perfected directly inspired a very famous tale, the Intimate Life of Emperor Wu of Han (Han Wudi neizhuan; late 6th century), which in highly polished…

  • Maoshanzhi (Chinese treatise)

    Taoism: Literary developments: The Treatise on Maoshan (Maoshanzhi; 1329) is among the most monumental. It includes lives of the saints and patriarchs, notes on topography and history, and a valuable selection from 1,000 years of literary testimony and inscriptions on the mountain and its Taoism. The new Taoist…

  • Maozheng Guo (Chinese mathematician)

    S.R. Srinivasa Varadhan: …George Papanicolaou and Chinese mathematician Maozheng Guo, Varadhan obtained important new results in hydrodynamics, which he later extended to give new methods for the theory of random walks, the basic approach to diffusion theory, and many other processes that can be modelled probabilistically.

  • map (cartography)

    map, graphic representation, drawn to scale and usually on a flat surface, of features—for example, geographical, geological, or geopolitical—of an area of the Earth or of any other celestial body. Globes are maps represented on the surface of a sphere. Cartography is the art and science of making

  • Map (surname prefix)

    Mac: …Hiberno-Norman Fitz and the Welsh Ap (formerly Map). Just as the latter has become initial P, as in the modern names Price or Pritchard, Mac has in some names become initial C and even K—e.g., Cody, Costigan, Keegan.

  • MAP (food preservation)

    food preservation: Packaging: …led to the development of modified-atmosphere packaging. If the barrier properties are carefully selected, a packaging material can maintain a modified atmosphere inside the package and thus extend the shelf life of the food product.

  • Map and the Territory, The (novel by Houellebecq)

    Michel Houellebecq: Writing career and books: …Carte et le territoire (2010; The Map and the Territory), which features a character by the name of Houellebecq, won the 2010 Prix Goncourt. Soumission (2015; Submission) is a dystopian work of speculative fiction in which France has become an Islamic state. The novel was published on the day of…

  • Map and the Territory: Risk, Human Nature, and the Future of Forecasting, The (book by Greenspan)

    Alan Greenspan: In The Map and the Territory: Risk, Human Nature, and the Future of Forecasting (2013), Greenspan advanced guidelines for market prognostication in light of the lessons learned from the financial crisis. Although the book mostly constituted a reassertion and recontextualization of Greenspan’s long-held principles, it notably…

  • map engraving (cartography)

    map, graphic representation, drawn to scale and usually on a flat surface, of features—for example, geographical, geological, or geopolitical—of an area of the Earth or of any other celestial body. Globes are maps represented on the surface of a sphere. Cartography is the art and science of making

  • map expansion (biology)

    neuroplasticity: Map expansion: Map expansion, the fourth type of neuroplasticity, entails the flexibility of local brain regions that are dedicated to performing one type of function or storing a particular form of information. The arrangement of these local regions in the cerebral cortex is referred to…

  • map in map out (cartography)

    GIS: His MIMO (“map in–map out”) system made it possible to convert maps into a computer-usable form, manipulate the files, and produce a new map as the output. This innovation and its earliest descendants are generally classified as computerized cartography, but they set the stage for GIS.

  • Map Information Office of the United States Geological Survey

    map: Types of maps and charts available: …service is performed by the Map Information Office of the U.S. Geological Survey, which publishes and distributes indexes of each state showing map coverage and ordering information. Summary data on geodetic control and aerial photography are also maintained.

  • Map of Betrayal, A (novel by Ha Jin)

    Ha Jin: Literary works: …China during the Nanjing Massacre; A Map of Betrayal (2014), about a Chinese mole in the CIA; and The Boat Rocker (2016), in which a Chinese journalist in New York City attempts to expose his novelist ex-wife as a fraud. In A Song Everlasting (2021), a Chinese singer runs afoul…

  • Map of Hell, The (illustration by Botticelli)

    Ten Depictions of Hell: The Map of Hell (c. 1480–1490) by Sandro Botticelli: In addition, he drew The Map of Hell, perhaps the most disquieting of such illustrations. Here, hell is depicted as a funnel comprising nine major levels, each corresponding to one of Dante’s circles. Within each stratum, tiny sinners are trapped, but, due to their diminutive size, their punishments are…

  • Map of Misreading, A (work by Bloom)

    American literature: Theory: …Anxiety of Influence (1973) and A Map of Misreading (1975), Bloom reached a wide audience with The Western Canon (1994) and Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human (1998), both of which explored and defended the Western literary tradition.

  • map problem

    four-colour map problem, problem in topology, originally posed in the early 1850s and not solved until 1976, that required finding the minimum number of different colours required to colour a map such that no two adjacent regions (i.e., with a common boundary segment) are of the same colour. Three

  • map scale (cartography)

    map: Map scales and classifications: Map scale refers to the size of the representation on the map as compared to the size of the object on the ground. The scale generally used in architectural drawings, for example, is 1 4 inch to one foot, which means that…

  • Map to the Next World: Poetry and Tales, A (poetry by Harjo)

    Joy Harjo: Poetry and other writing: …American Book Award; Fishing (1992); A Map to the Next World: Poetry and Tales (2000); and How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems (2002). In Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings (2015), Harjo chronicles the joys and struggles of everyday life of Native Americans, beginning with the Trail of Tears,…

  • map turtle (reptile)

    turtle: Habitats: Map turtles (Graptemys), on the other hand, select the faster-flowing waters of those same streams. The saltwater terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) lives in brackish coastal estuaries and marshes from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to Padre Island, Texas. In some instances, juvenile

  • Map, Walter (English writer)

    Walter Map was an English churchman and writer whose work helps to illuminate the society and religious issues of his era. Probably of Welsh descent, Map studied at the University of Paris from about 1154 to 1160. He took holy orders and became a clerk in the household of Henry II, and he served

  • map-colouring problem (mathematics)

    number game: Map-colouring problems: Cartographers have long recognized that no more than four colours are needed to shade the regions on any map in such a way that adjoining regions are distinguished by colour. The corresponding mathematical question, framed in 1852, became the celebrated “four-colour map problem”:…

  • Mapa man (hominin fossil)

    Maba cranium, fossil fragments of an ancient human skull found in 1958 near the village of Maba (Ma-pa), Guangdong (Kwangtung) province, southern China. Intermediate in form between Homo erectus and H. sapiens, the remains are referred by many authorities to archaic H. sapiens or to an Asian

  • Mapai (political party, Israel)

    Mapai, early and major labour party in Palestine–Israel that in 1930 became the central partner in the Israel Labour Party

  • mapalus (Indonesian society)

    Minahasan: …divided into special societies called mapalus, which provide reciprocal agricultural assistance. Wet and dry rice, corn (maize), sago palms, coffee, tobacco, and cocoa are the principal crops.

  • Mapam (political party, Israel)

    Mapam, left-wing labour party in Israel and in the World Zionist Organization, founded in 1948 by the ha-Shomer ha-Tzaʿir (Young Guard) and the Aḥdut ʿAvoda-Poʿale Tziyyon (Labour Unity-Workers of Zion), which were both Marxist Zionist movements. Mapam maintains a Marxist ideology and is

  • Mapam Yumco (lake, China)

    Lake Mapam, lake, in the western Tibet Autonomous Region of China, to the south of the Kailas Range. Lying nearly 15,000 feet (4,600 metres) above sea level, it is generally recognized as the highest body of fresh water in the world. The lake is prominent in the mythology of Hinduism, and it has

  • Mapam, Lake (lake, China)

    Lake Mapam, lake, in the western Tibet Autonomous Region of China, to the south of the Kailas Range. Lying nearly 15,000 feet (4,600 metres) above sea level, it is generally recognized as the highest body of fresh water in the world. The lake is prominent in the mythology of Hinduism, and it has

  • Mapanioideae (plant subfamily)

    Cyperaceae: Evolution and classification: The smallest subfamily, the Mapanioideae, has about 170 species in 14 genera. The highly reduced, unisexual flowers are grouped together tightly in such a way as to simulate a single flower (pseudanthium).

  • Mape (people)

    Motilón: …were the Chaké and the Mape, who were agricultural and forest-dwelling and hostilely resisted European encroachments well into the 20th century.

  • Mapfumo, Thomas (Zimbabwean musician)

    Thomas Mapfumo is a Zimbabwean musician and composer who propelled Zimbabwe toward independence in the 1970s through his cultivation of chimurenga—a local genre of politically charged popular music. Mapfumo also was instrumental in introducing the West to the traditional music of Zimbabwe through

  • Mapilla (people)

    Kerala: Population composition: …Islam, with the Moplah (Mapilla) people of the Malabar Coast constituting the state’s largest Muslim community. Christians, who account for nearly one-fifth of the population, belong broadly to the Syrian Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches as well as to various Protestant denominations. Regardless of their sect, these indigenous Christians…

  • Mapimí Basin (basin, Mexico)

    Mapimí Basin, enclosed depression in northern Mexico. Situated in the arid Mesa del Norte and averaging 3,000 feet (900 metres) in elevation, it is structurally similar to the Basin and Range Province in the United States. Although once considered unreclaimable desert, with irrigation it supports

  • Maping (China)

    Liuzhou, city, central Zhuang Autonomous Region of Guangxi, southern China. Liuzhou, the second largest city in Guangxi, is a natural communication centre, being situated at the confluence of several tributaries that form the Liu River, which flows southward into a tributary of the Xi River. In

  • maple (tree)

    maple, (Acer), any of a large genus (about 200 species) of shrubs or trees in the family Sapindaceae, widely distributed in the North Temperate Zone but concentrated in China. Maples constitute one of the most important groups of ornamentals for planting in lawns, along streets, and in parks. They

  • Maple Leaf Flag

    vertically striped red-white-red national flag with a large central red maple leaf. It has a width-to-length ratio of 1 to 2.The establishment of the Canadian federation in 1867 was not accompanied by the creation of a special flag for the country. The imperial Union Jack and other British flags

  • maple leaf poplar (tree)

    poplar: Common species: The white poplar (P. alba)—also known as silver poplar for its leaves, which have white felted undersides, and as maple leaf poplar for the leaves’ lobed margins—is widely spreading or columnar in form, reaching 30 metres (100 feet) in height. The gray poplar (P. ×canescens), a…

  • Maple Leaf Rag (work by Joplin)

    Scott Joplin: …rags for piano, including “Maple Leaf Rag” and “The Entertainer,” published from 1899 through 1909, and his opera, Treemonisha, published at his own expense in 1911. Treemonisha was well received when it was first produced by a troupe in Atlanta, Georgia, directed and choreographed by Katherine Dunham. The production…

  • maple syrup (food)

    maple syrup, sweet syrup made by concentrating the sap of certain species of North American maple trees, chiefly the sugar maple and black maple. It was utilized by Indigenous peoples of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River regions prior to the arrival of European settlers. The bulk of maple

  • maple syrup urine disease (pathology)

    maple syrup urine disease, inherited metabolic disorder involving leucine, isoleucine, and valine (a group of branch chain amino acids). Normally, these amino acids are metabolized, step by step, by a number of enzymes, each of which is specific for each step in the metabolism of each amino acid.

  • Maple Tree school (Canadian literature)

    Confederation group, Canadian English-language poets of the late 19th century whose work expressed the national consciousness inspired by the Confederation of 1867. Their transcendental and romantic praise of the Canadian landscape dominated Canadian poetry until the 20th century. The Confederation

  • Maplewell Series (geology)

    Longmyndian: …overlain in turn by the Maplewell Series and the Brand Series. These rocks, collectively known as the Charnian, consist largely of volcanic rocks (most prominent in the Maplewell Series and least in the Brand Series) and of sedimentary conglomerates, sandstones, siltstones, and slates.