- nightglow (meteorology)
nightglow, weak, steady light emanating from the whole night sky. See
- nighthawk (bird)
nighthawk, any of several species of birds comprising the subfamily Chordeilinae of the family Caprimulgidae (see caprimulgiform). Unrelated to true hawks, they are classified with the nightjars, frogmouths, and allies in the order Caprimulgiformes. They are buffy, rufous (reddish), or grayish
- Nighthawk (aircraft)
F-117, single-seat, twin-engine jet fighter-bomber built by the Lockheed Corporation (now part of the Lockheed Martin Corporation) for the U.S. Air Force. It was the first stealth aircraft—i.e., an aircraft designed entirely around the concept of evading detection by radar and other sensors. After
- Nighthawk (comic-book character)
the Defenders: …the group was joined by Nighthawk, a former villain who bore more than a passing resemblance to DC Comics’ Batman.
- Nighthawks (painting by Hopper)
Nighthawks, painting by Edward Hopper completed in 1942, and one of the most immediately recognizable works of all of American art. In Nighthawks, curved geometric forms accentuated by an Art Deco facade and angular light provide an almost theatrical setting for a group of insulated and isolated
- Nightingale (island, Atlantic Ocean)
Tristan da Cunha: them—Tristan da Cunha, Inaccessible, Nightingale, Middle, and Stoltenhoff—are located within 25 miles (40 km) of one another, and the sixth, Gough, lies about 200 miles (320 km) south-southeast of the group. The territory is located approximately 1,300 miles (2,100 km) to the south of St. Helena. Inaccessible, Nightingale, Middle,…
- nightingale (bird)
nightingale, any of several small Old World thrushes, belonging to the family Turdidae (order Passeriformes), renowned for their song. The name refers in particular to the Eurasian nightingale (Erithacus, or Luscinia, megarhynchos), a brown bird, 16 centimetres (6 1 2 inches) long, with a rufous
- Nightingale of Montgomery Street (American drag performer and activist)
José Sarria was a Latino American drag performer and political activist who was the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States. (He ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors—the legislative body of the city and county—in 1961). Sarria was the
- nightingale thrush (bird)
nightingale thrush, any of 11 species of thrushes of the New World genus Catharus (family Turdidae). They are of slender build and have rather drab plumage and rich songs—qualities reminiscent of the European nightingale. In some tropical species, the eye rims, bill, and legs are orange, and the
- Nightingale, Florence (British nurse, statistician, and social reformer)
Florence Nightingale was a British nurse, statistician, and social reformer who was the foundational philosopher of modern nursing. Nightingale was put in charge of nursing British and allied soldiers in Turkey during the Crimean War. She spent many hours in the wards, and her night rounds giving
- nightjar (bird)
nightjar, any of about 60 to 70 species of birds that make up the subfamily Caprimulginae of the family Caprimulgidae and sometimes extended to include the nighthawks, subfamily Chordeilinae (see nighthawk). The name nightjar is sometimes applied to the entire order Caprimulgiformes. (See
- Nightline (American television program)
Nightline, American late-night television news program that officially debuted on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) network in 1980 and that began airing five nights per week in 1982. For many years it was among the highest-profile and most-influential television forums for discussion of the
- nightmare (sleep phenomenon)
nightmare, disturbing dream that provokes a strong negative emotional reaction. Nightmares differ from other dreams in that they typically cause the sleeper to awaken because of emotional distress. An upsetting dream that does not cause the dreamer to awaken is usually not considered a nightmare.
- Nightmare Abbey (novel by Peacock)
Thomas Love Peacock: In his best-known work, Nightmare Abbey (1818), romantic melancholy is satirized, with the characters Scythrop drawn from Shelley, Mr. Flosky from Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Mr. Cypress from Lord Byron.
- Nightmare Alley (film by del Toro [2021])
Cate Blanchett: Hepburn, Dylan, and Academy Awards: …Earth, and Guillermo del Toro’s Nightmare Alley. In the latter, a film noir adapted from a novel by William Lindsay Gresham, the actress played a manipulative psychoanalyst who meets a scheming carnival worker (Bradley Cooper).
- Nightmare Alley (film by Goulding [1947])
Edmund Goulding: The 1940s: Nightmare Alley (1947) was a radical departure for Goulding. The film noir featured Power as a carnival con man whose scheming leads to a horrendous end. Everybody Does It (1949) was based on a comic story by James M. Cain; Paul Douglas, Linda Darnell, and…
- Nightmare Factory, The (work by Kumin)
Maxine Kumin: The Privilege (1965) and The Nightmare Factory (1970) address issues of Jewish identity and family and of love between men and women. Kumin’s New Hampshire farm was the inspiration for her collection Up Country: Poems of New England, New and Selected (1972; Pulitzer Prize, 1973). Critics compared Kumin to…
- Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, A (film by Russell [1987])
Patricia Arquette: …debut in the horror movie A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987) and worked steadily thereafter, taking guest roles in TV shows and larger parts in minor films. Arquette won praise for her performances as the naïve girlfriend of a former convict in The Indian Runner (1991), Sean…
- Nightmare on Elm Street, A (film by Craven [1984])
Johnny Depp: Early life and career: …by his own bed in A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984). He divorced Allison the following year.
- Nightmares and Dreamscapes (short stories by King)
Stephen King: Short fiction: …volumes as Night Shift (1978), Nightmares and Dreamscapes (1993; TV miniseries 2006), Hearts in Atlantis (1999; film 2001), Just After Sunset (2008), and The Bazaar of Bad Dreams (2015). His collection You Like It Darker was released in 2024. Among its stories is “The Answer Man,” which King began writing…
- Nights and Weekends (film by Swanberg and Gerwig [2008])
Greta Gerwig: …and star with him in Nights and Weekends (2008). Gerwig had a breakthrough of sorts when she was cast in Noah Baumbach’s Greenberg (2010), which starred Ben Stiller. She began to appear in more conventional movies, including Woody Allen’s To Rome with Love (2012). She and Baumbach wrote Frances Ha…
- Nights in Rodanthe (film by Wolfe [2008])
Nicholas Sparks: …including Nights in Rodanthe (2002; film 2008), Dear John (2006; film 2010), The Choice (2007; film 2016), The Last Song (2009; film 2010), The Lucky One (2008; film 2012), The Best of Me (2011; film 2014), and The Longest Ride (2013; film 2015). In 2015 he released the novel
- Nights in Rodanthe (novel by Sparks)
Nicholas Sparks: …adapted for the screen, including Nights in Rodanthe (2002; film 2008), Dear John (2006; film 2010), The Choice (2007; film 2016), The Last Song (2009; film 2010), The Lucky One (2008; film 2012), The Best of Me (2011; film 2014), and The Longest Ride
- Nights in the Gardens of Spain (novel by Ihimaera)
Witi Ihimaera: Nights in the Gardens of Spain (1995; television film 2010) concerns a middle-aged married man with children who comes to realize that he is homosexual; the novel was widely viewed as a roman à clef. Ihimaera was himself married to a woman and later discovered…
- Nights in the Gardens of Spain (work by Falla)
Nights in the Gardens of Spain, a set of nocturnes for piano and orchestra by Manuel de Falla. Almost but not quite a piano concerto, it treats the keyboard instrument as a member of the orchestra rather than making a soloist of it. The piece premiered in 1916. Nights in the Gardens of Spain is
- Nights in White Satin (song by Hayward)
the Moody Blues: …Afternoon” and the signature “Nights in White Satin.” On In Search of the Lost Chord (1968) they traded the orchestra for the Mellotron, an electronic keyboard that reproduces orchestral sounds.
- Nights of Cabiria (film by Fellini [1957])
Federico Fellini: Major works: …Le notti di Cabiria (1957; Nights of Cabiria), developing the minor character she played in Lo sceicco bianco, a good-natured Roman prostitute who is optimistic even when humiliated and is swindled by the man she expects to marry. One of Fellini’s most likeable films, it won an Oscar for best…
- Nights of Rain and Stars (novel by Binchy)
Maeve Binchy: …lives by trading houses; and Nights of Rain and Stars (2004), a tale of vacationers in Greece who are linked by a shared tragedy. In 2008 Binchy released Heart and Soul, about a doctor who establishes a clinic in an underserved area while trying to juggle her own affairs. It…
- Nights of Straparola, The (work by Straparola)
Gianfrancesco Straparola: Straparola’s Piacevoli notti (1550–53; The Nights of Straparola) contains 75 novellas (short prose tales) that were later used as source material by William Shakespeare, Molière, and others. It drew from folk tradition and introduced into European literature some 20 fairy tales, among them what would eventually be known as…
- Nightsea Crossing (performance art by Abramović and Ulay)
Marina Abramović: …also traveled extensively, and their Nightsea Crossing (1981–87), a prolonged act of mutual meditation and concentration, was performed in more than a dozen locations around the world. When they decided to end their relationship in 1988, they symbolically marked the dissolution with a piece in which they walked from either…
- nightshade (plant)
bittersweet: ) or woody nightshade (Solanum dulcamara), belongs to the family Solanaceae. It is an herbaceous vine, up to 4.5 m long; the violet and yellow star-shaped flowers are followed by shiny green berries that gradually turn bright red.
- nightshade (plant genus)
nightshade, (genus Solanum), genus of about 2,300 species of flowering plants in the nightshade family (Solanaceae). The term nightshade is often associated with poisonous species, though the genus also contains a number of economically important food crops, including tomato (Solanum lycopersicum),
- nightshade family (plant family)
Solanaceae, the nightshade, or potato, family of flowering plants (order Solanales), with 102 genera and about 2,280 species, many of considerable economic importance as food and drug plants. Members of the Solanaceae family are found throughout the world but are most abundant and widely
- nightside auroral oval (meteorology)
geomagnetic field: Outer magnetic field: …to two regions called the nightside auroral ovals. The aurora borealis and aurora australis (northern lights and southern lights) appear within the regions defined by the feet of these field lines and are caused by bombardment of the atmosphere by energetic charged particles. On the dayside, magnetic field lines from…
- Nightspawn (novel by Banville)
John Banville: Fiction: …was followed by two novels: Nightspawn (1971), an intentionally ambiguous narrative, and Birchwood (1973), the story of an aristocratic Irish family in decline. Doctor Copernicus (1976), Kepler (1981), and The Newton Letter: An Interlude (1982) are fictional biographies based on the lives of noted scientists. These three works use scientific
- nightstick (weapon)
police: Nonlethal tactics and instruments: The nightstick carried by police officers was originally made of wood, but most now are made of composite materials.
- Nightwalker, and Other Poems (poetry by Kinsella)
Thomas Kinsella: During this time he published Nightwalker, and Other Poems (1967), a sombre collection ruminating on Ireland’s past and turbulent present. His translation of the ancient Gaelic saga The Cattle Raid of Cooley (Táin bó Cuailnge) was published in 1969, and the following year he began teaching at Temple University in…
- nightwatch (European history)
bobby: …themselves taking over activities from night watchmen such as lighting lamps and watching for fires. The original uniform consisted of a blue tailcoat and a top hat and was meant to emphasize that the police were not a military force, as was the fact that the officers did not carry…
- Nightwatchmen (work by Hannah)
Barry Hannah: In the less successful Nightwatchmen (1973), both a secret killer and a hurricane are unleashed upon a small college town.
- Nightwing (comic-book character)
Nightwing, fictional superhero. DC Comics’ Nightwing—formerly Robin the Boy Wonder—toiled for forty years under the shadow of the Batman as comics’ premier sidekick. First appearing in April 1940 in Detective Comics #38, Dick Grayson, the junior member of the Flying Graysons circus family,
- Nightwood (novel by Barnes)
Djuna Barnes: ” Her second novel, Nightwood (1936), is her masterpiece, about the doomed homosexual and heterosexual loves of five extraordinary, even grotesque, people. Her fluent style in this work imitates Elizabethan and other archaic writing, and the chapters are disjunct in time and place; the net effect is of horror…
- Nighy, Bill (British actor)
Stephen Daldry: …which starred Carey Mulligan and Bill Nighy as former lovers, earned Daldry a Tony nomination for best director. Daldry returned to cinema with Trash (2014), a drama about three boys who stumble upon a political scandal while picking through refuse in the favela they call home. He then reteamed with…
- nigi-mitama (Japanese religion)
tama: …the power of transforming), the nigi-mitama (with the power of unifying, or harmonizing), and the saki-mitama (with the power of blessing). Some shrines pay homage to a particular mitama of a deity, such as the separate shrines dedicated to the ara-mitama and the nigi-mitama of the goddess Amaterasu.
- nigirimeshi (food)
onigiri, popular Japanese snack consisting of a ball or cone of rice, often with a filling and wrapped in nori (seaweed). Onigiri takes its name from the Japanese word nigiru, meaning “to grasp” or “to squeeze,” so called because it is pressed by hand into a ball. The snack has also been called
- nigoda (Jaina philosophy)
jiva: Clusters of minute beings, called nigodas, belong to the lowest class of jivas, which possess only the sense of touch and undergo such common functions as respiration and metabolism but have little hope of ever progressing to a higher spiritual or bodily state. The whole space of the world is…
- nigre (chemistry)
soap and detergent: Boiling process: …percent water); the lower, called nigre, varies in soap content from 15 percent to 40 percent. Since colouring matter, dirt, salt, alkali, and metal soaps are soluble in nigre but relatively insoluble in neat soap, and since most of the impurities are dense and tend to settle, the nigre layer…
- Nigrinus (work by Lucian)
Lucian: In Nigrinus Lucian makes a Platonic philosopher censure the evils of Rome, contrasting the pretentiousness, lack of culture, and avarice of the Romans with the quiet, cultured life of the Athenians.
- Nigro, Laura (American singer)
Laura Nyro was an American singer-songwriter who during the 1960s and ’70s welded urban folk blues to the gospel resonance of the girl group sound. She is remembered both as a unique vocal stylist and as the composer of songs that were major hits for other recording artists. The daughter of a jazz
- nigun (vocal music)
nigun, wordless song sung by Ḥasidic Jews as a means of elevating the soul to God. Because they lacked words, the nigunim were felt to move the singer beyond the sensual and rational toward the mystic. Such songs were spontaneously extemporized by a rabbi or one of his disciples, the entire group
- NIH (United States agency)
National Institutes of Health (NIH), agency of the United States government that conducts and supports biomedical research into the causes, cure, and prevention of disease. The NIH is an agency of the Public Health Service of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the largest
- nihang (Sikh movement)
Akali, a movement in Sikhism. Akali also refers to any member of suicide squads in the armies of the Sikhs in India. The Akali suicide squads first appeared about 1690. Earlier in that century the Mughals had executed Arjan and Tegh Bahadur, the fifth and ninth Gurus, respectively, and the
- Nihaṅg Sāhibs (Sikh military organization)
monasticism: Quasi-monastic: …among the Sikhs is the Nihang Sahibs, created to fight Muslim incursions into the Sikh communities of the Punjab. The Nihang Sahibs wear military uniforms of blue and yellow robes whose design has remained unchanged since the 17th century. The Nihang Sahibs are married, but during their temporary active service…
- Nihāyat al-arab fī funūn al-adab (work compiled by al-Nuwayrī)
encyclopaedia: The Arab world: …of the Mamlūk period, the Nihāyat al-arab fī funūn al-adab (“The Aim of the Intelligent in the Art of Letters”), a work of almost 9,000 pages. It comprised: (1) geography, astronomy, meteorology, chronology, geology; (2) man (anatomy, folklore, conduct, politics); (3) zoology; (4) botany; (5) history. A complete edition was…
- Nihil Novi (Polish constitution [1505])
Poland: Political developments: The Nihil Novi constitution (1505) achieved some of these aims, but it also stipulated that no new laws could be passed without the consent of the Sejm. The way was opened for parliamentary dominance that would eventually undermine the existing system of checks and balances. The…
- nihil obstat (Roman Catholicism)
imprimatur: …judgment of a censor (nihil obstat: “nothing hinders [it from being printed]”), the term has come to imply ecclesiastical approval of the publication itself. Nevertheless, the imprimatur is not an episcopal endorsement of the content, nor is it a guarantee of doctrinal integrity. It does indicate that nothing offensive…
- nihilism (philosophy)
nihilism, (from Latin nihil, “nothing”), originally a philosophy of moral and epistemological skepticism that arose in 19th-century Russia during the early years of the reign of Tsar Alexander II. The term was famously used by Friedrich Nietzsche to describe the disintegration of traditional
- Nihombashi (district, Tokyo, Japan)
Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area: Centre and satellites: Nihonbashi, the “Japan Bridge” that was (and still is) considered the starting point for roads to the provinces, was the unchallenged mercantile centre of Edo. Today Ginza, farther south, is more important, even though it is not the largest retail district in the city. Kasumigaseki,…
- Nihon
Japan, island country lying off the east coast of Asia. It consists of a great string of islands in a northeast-southwest arc that stretches for approximately 1,500 miles (2,400 km) through the western North Pacific Ocean. Nearly the entire land area is taken up by the country’s four main islands;
- Nihon Arupusu (mountains, Japan)
Japanese Alps, mountains, central Honshu, Japan. The term Japanese Alps was first applied to the Hida Range in the late 19th century but now also includes the Kiso and Akaishi ranges to the south. The ranges are a popular skiing and mountain-climbing area. The Hida Range is included within
- Nihon Denshin Denwa Kōsha (Japanese company)
Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT), Japanese telecommunications company that almost monopolizes Japan’s domestic electronic communications industry. It is Japan’s largest company and one of the largest companies in the world. NTT was established in 1952 as a public corporation and the
- Nihon Hidankyo (Japanese grassroots movement)
Nihon Hidankyo, Japanese grassroots movement dedicated to eliminating nuclear weapons. Nihon Hidankyo was founded in 1956 by survivors of the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a group known as hibakusha (“bomb-affected people”). Its main activities include sending delegations to
- Nihon Kōkū (Japanese airline)
Japan Airlines (JAL), Japanese airline that became one of the largest air carriers in the world. Founded in 1951, it was originally a private company. It was reorganized in 1953 as a semigovernmental public corporation and was privatized in 1987. It is headquartered in Tokyo. At first a domestic
- Nihon Kyōsantō (political party, Japan)
Japanese Communist Party (JCP), leftist Japanese political party founded in 1922. Initially, the party was outlawed, and it operated clandestinely until the post-World War II Allied occupation command restored freedom of political association in Japan; it was established legally in October 1945. In
- Nihon Minshutō (political party, Japan)
Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), centrist Japanese political party that was founded in 1996 to challenge the long-dominant Liberal-Democratic Party (LDP). The DPJ made strong electoral showings from its earliest days, and within little more than a year of its establishment it became the country’s
- Nihon no higeki (film by Kinoshita)
Kinoshita Keisuke: Nihon no higeki (1953; A Japanese Tragedy), a film examining the weakened Japanese family structure, is skillfully constructed by crosscutting between stories and by the effective incorporation of flashbacks. Narayama-bushi kō (1958; Ballad of Narayama) is praised for the technical excellence with which Kinoshita used colour and the wide…
- Nihon Rikken Seitō shimbun (Japanese newspaper)
Mainichi shimbun, national daily newspaper, one of Japan’s “big three” dailies, which publishes morning and evening editions in Tokyo, Ōsaka, and three other regional centres. The newspaper had as its origin the Nihon Rikken Seitō shimbun (“Japan Constitutional Government Party Newspaper”), which
- Nihon Rōdō Kumiai Sō Hyōgikai (labor organization, Japan)
Sōhyō, trade-union federation that was the largest in Japan. Sōhyō was founded in 1950 as a democratic trade-union movement in opposition to the communist leadership of its predecessor organization. It rapidly became the most powerful labour organization in postwar Japan and formed close ties with
- Nihon Rōdō Kumiai Sōrengōkai (labor organization, Japan)
Japanese Trade Union Confederation (Rengō), largest national trade union in Japan. The federation was founded in 1989 and absorbed its predecessors—including the General Council of Trade Unions of Japan (Sōhyō), the Japanese Confederation of Labour (Dōmei), and others—and brought together both
- Nihon ryōiki (Japanese literature)
Japanese literature: Prose: …fanciful inspiration going back to Nihon ryōiki (822; Miraculous Stories from the Japanese Buddhist Tradition), an account of Buddhist miracles in Japan compiled by the priest Kyōkai. Priests probably used these stories, written in Chinese, as a source of sermons with the intent of persuading ordinary Japanese, incapable of reading…
- Nihon Shakaitō (political party, Japan)
Social Democratic Party of Japan (SDPJ), leftist party in Japan that supports an evolving socialized economy and a neutralist foreign policy. Japan’s first socialist parties appeared in the mid-1920s; moderate factions of the country’s labour movement combined to form the Social Mass Party (Shakai
- Nihon Shintō (political party, Japan)
Hosokawa Morihiro: …of the reform political party Japan New Party (Nihon Shintō) and was the prime minister of Japan in 1993–94.
- Nihon Shirīzu (baseball)
Japan Series, in baseball, a seven-game play-off between champions of the two professional Japanese baseball leagues, the Central League and the Pacific League. Baseball in Japan was established on a professional basis in 1934, and by 1936 seven professional teams had been organized. A system of
- Nihon shoki (Japanese chronicles)
Nihon shoki, (Japanese: “Chronicles of Japan”), text that, together with the Kojiki (q.v.), comprises the oldest official history of Japan, covering the period from its mythical origins to ad 697. The Nihon shoki, written in Chinese, reflects the influence of Chinese civilization on Japan. It was
- Nihon Tetsudō Gurūpu (Japanese organization)
Japan Railways Group, principal rail network of Japan, consisting of 12 corporations created by the privatization of the government-owned Japanese National Railways (JNR) in 1987. The first railroad in Japan, built by British engineers, opened in 1872, between Tokyo and Yokohama. After some initial
- Nihon Yushutsunyū Ginkō (bank, Tokyo, Japan)
Export-Import Bank of Japan, one of the principal government-funded Japanese financial institutions, which provides a wide range of services to support and encourage Japanese trade and overseas investment. Headquarters are in Tokyo. The Japan Export Bank was established in 1950; its name was
- Nihon-gi (Japanese chronicles)
Nihon shoki, (Japanese: “Chronicles of Japan”), text that, together with the Kojiki (q.v.), comprises the oldest official history of Japan, covering the period from its mythical origins to ad 697. The Nihon shoki, written in Chinese, reflects the influence of Chinese civilization on Japan. It was
- Nihon-kai (sea, Pacific Ocean)
Sea of Japan, marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean. It is bounded by Japan and Sakhalin Island to the east and by Russia and Korea on the Asian mainland to the west. Its area is 377,600 square miles (978,000 square km). It has a mean depth of 5,748 feet (1,752 metres) and a maximum depth of
- nihonga (Japanese art movement)
Japanese art: Japanese-style painting: …at the beginning of the nihonga (“Japanese painting”) movement, in which traditional Japanese pigments were used but with a thematic repertoire much expanded. Format was no longer limited to scroll or screen and included occasional Western framed paintings. Shimomura’s portrait of Okakura Kakuzō pays homage to Okakura’s role as a…
- nihonium (chemical element)
nihonium (Nh), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 113. In 2004 scientists at the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science in Saitama, Japan announced the production of one atom of element 113, which was formed when bismuth-209 was fused with zinc-70. Extremely
- Nihonmachi (community, San Francisco, California, United States)
San Francisco: People of San Francisco: …of the Japanese community is Japantown (Nihonmachi), a few blocks east of Fillmore Street, now an ambitious commercial and cultural centre. Though the rising generation of Japanese Americans go to Japantown as visitors, bound for church services, social or cultural events (such as the annual cherry blossom festival), or to…
- NII (American company)
National Intergroup, Inc. (NII), American holding company established in 1983 to facilitate the diversification of National Steel Corporation. Formerly headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pa., NII moved to Dallas, Texas, in 1991, and National Steel moved to Mishawaka, Ind., in 1992. The steel company was
- NII-3 (Soviet institution)
space exploration: Soviet Union: …which five years later became Scientific-Research Institute 3 (NII-3). In its early years the organization did not work directly on space technology, but ultimately it played a central role in Soviet rocket development.
- Niigata (Japan)
Niigata, city, capital of Niigata ken (prefecture), north-central Honshu, Japan. Niigata lies on the coastal edge of the Echigo Plain at the mouth of the Shinano River. It was an important rice port in feudal times and has continued as the country’s leading port along the Sea of Japan, carrying on
- Niigata (prefecture, Japan)
Niigata, ken (prefecture), north-central Honshu, Japan. It lies along the Sea of Japan (East Sea) and includes the offshore islands of Sado and Awa. Niigata, along the central coast, is the prefectural capital and largest city. Silt deposited by the Shinano and Agano rivers in the central part of
- Niihama (Japan)
Niihama, city, Ehime ken (prefecture), Shikoku, Japan. It lies on the Inland Sea coast. Originally a small fishing village, it grew after 1691 as a transit port for copper from an inland copper mine to Ōsaka. The foundation of modern smelting works (1883) and a hydroelectric company (1913) laid the
- Niihau (island, Hawaii, United States)
Niihau, volcanic island, Kauai county, Hawaii, U.S. Niihau lies 17 miles (27 km) southwest of Kauai island. The smallest of the populated Hawaiian Islands, Niihau has an area of 70 square miles (180 square km). King Kamehameha IV sold it for $10,000 in 1863 to Elizabeth Sinclair of Scotland. Her
- Niin vaihtuivat vuoden ajat (work by Manner)
Eeva Liisa Manner: In her next collection, Niin vaihtuivat vuoden ajat (1964; “Thus Changed the Seasons”), she moved away from the general theme of Western civilization and depicted with grace and simplicity the minute phenomena of nature as proof of an underlying cosmic harmony. A later book of poetry, Kamala Kissa (1976;…
- Niiname-sai (religious festival)
Shintō: Varieties of festival, worship, and prayer: …Harvest Festival), Autumn Festival (Aki Matsuri, or Niiname-sai; Harvest Festival), an Annual Festival (Rei-sai), and the Divine Procession (Shinkō-sai). The Divine Procession usually takes place on the day of the Annual Festival, and miniature shrines (mikoshi) carried on the shoulders are transported through the parish. The order of rituals…
- Niinistö, Sauli (president of Finland)
Sauli Niinistö is a Finnish lawyer and politician who became Finland’s first conservative head of state since the 1950s when he was elected president in 2012. He easily won reelection in 2018 and oversaw the accession of Finland to NATO in 2023. After earning a law degree from the University of
- Niinistö, Sauli Väinämö (president of Finland)
Sauli Niinistö is a Finnish lawyer and politician who became Finland’s first conservative head of state since the 1950s when he was elected president in 2012. He easily won reelection in 2018 and oversaw the accession of Finland to NATO in 2023. After earning a law degree from the University of
- Niislel Khureheh (national capital, Mongolia)
Ulaanbaatar, capital and largest city of Mongolia. It is situated on the Tuul River on a windswept plateau at an elevation of 4,430 feet (1,350 metres). The city originated as a seasonal migratory abode of the Mongolian princes and in 1639 finally attained permanence on the present site with the
- Niitsu (Japan)
Niitsu, former city, central Niigata ken (prefecture), north-central Honshu, Japan, lying on the Niigata Plain. In 2005 it was merged administratively with Niigata city (about 5 miles [8 km] northwest). Oil was discovered southeast of Niitsu in the 17th century, and exploitation began in 1898.
- Nijhoff, Martinus (Dutch poet)
Martinus Nijhoff was the greatest Dutch poet of his generation, who achieved not only an intensely original imagery but also an astounding command of poetic technique. In his first volume, De wandelaar (1916; “The Wanderer”), his negative feelings of isolation and noninvolvement are symbolized in
- Nijinska, Bronislava (American dancer, choreographer, and teacher)
Bronislava Nijinska was a Russian-born U.S. dancer, choreographer, and teacher. She trained at the Imperial Ballet School in St. Petersburg and joined the Mariinsky Theatre company in 1908. She danced with the Ballets Russes in Paris from 1909, as did her brother, Vaslav Nijinsky. She choreographed
- Nijinsky (film by Ross [1980])
Herbert Ross: Films of the 1980s: Nijinsky (1980), a biography of legendary Russian ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky (George De La Pena), failed to tap into the success of The Turning Point. Pennies from Heaven (1981), an ambitious adaptation of Dennis Potter’s acclaimed British Broadcasting Corporation series, was celebrated by many critics…
- Nijinsky, Vaslav (Russian dancer)
Vaslav Nijinsky was a Russian-born ballet dancer of almost legendary fame, celebrated for his spectacular leaps and sensitive interpretations. After a brilliant school career, Nijinsky became a soloist at the Mariinsky Theater in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1907, appearing in such classical ballets
- Nijlen, Jan van (Belgian poet)
Jan van Nijlen was one of the most distinguished Flemish poets of his generation. Of a retiring nature, van Nijlen, a high official with the Ministry of Justice in Brussels, usually published his verse in limited editions. Among his early volumes were Het angezicht der aarde (1923; “The Face of the
- Nijmegen (Netherlands)
Nijmegen, gemeente (municipality), eastern Netherlands, on the Waal River (southern arm of the Rhine). It originated as the Roman settlement of Noviomagus and is the oldest town in the Netherlands. Often an imperial residence in the Carolingian period, it became a free city and later joined the
- Nijmegen marches (Dutch sporting event)
hiking: The Nijmegen marches in the Netherlands, organized by the Dutch League of Physical Culture, are open to the world in both civilian and military categories. The test comprises four separate days’ consecutive walking over distances up to 35 miles (56 km) each day, with about 12,000…
- Nijmegen, Treaties of (European history)
Treaties of Nijmegen, peace treaties of 1678–79 that ended the Dutch War, in which France had opposed Spain and the Dutch Republic (now the Netherlands). France gained advantages by arranging terms with each of its enemies separately. Although negotiations had begun in 1676, the first treaty,