- Niles, Hezekiah (American newspaper editor)
Hezekiah Niles was an editor and newspaper publisher who was one of the foremost figures in early American journalism. At age 17 Niles, the son of Quakers, was apprenticed to a printer in Philadelphia, and, upon his release from his apprenticeship three years later, he went to Wilmington, Delaware,
- Niles, John Jacob (American musician)
John Jacob Niles was an American folksinger, folklorist, and composer of solo and choral songs. Niles came from a musical family. His great-grandfather was a composer, organist, and cello manufacturer; his mother, Lula Sarah Niles, taught him music theory. He was attracted to folk songs while
- Nilestown (Ohio, United States)
Niles, city, Trumbull county, northeastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Mahoning River, about midway between Youngstown and Warren, and is a part of the Mahoning industrial complex. Ruben Harmon, the first white settler (1797), and others discovered deposits of coal, iron ore, and limestone there.
- nilgai (mammal)
nilgai, (Boselaphus tragocamelus), the largest Asian antelope (family Bovidae). The nilgai is indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, and Hindus accord it the same sacred status as cattle (both belong to the subfamily Bovinae). Accordingly, the nilgai is the only one of the four Indian antelopes
- Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (biosphere reserve, India)
Raman Sukumar: Sukumar also helped design the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, the first of its kind in India, which was established in 1986. There he conducted research on climate change, tropical forests, and wildlife conservation.
- Nilgiri Hills (region, India)
Nilgiri Hills, mountainous region of Tamil Nadu state, southeastern India. The peaks of the Nilgiri rise abruptly from the surrounding plains to an elevation of about 6,000–8,000 feet (1,800–2,400 meters); one of them, Doda Betta (8,652 feet [2,637 meters]), is the highest point in Tamil Nadu. Part
- Nilgiri ibex (mammal)
tahr: The Nilgiri tahr, or Nilgiri ibex (H. hylocrius, or, by some classifications, Nilgiritragus hylocrius), of southern India, is dark brown with a grizzled saddle-shaped patch on its back; its body size is comparable to that of the Himalayan species. The Arabian tahr (H. jayakari) is the…
- Nilgiri marten (mammal)
marten: The Nilgiri marten (M. gwatkinsii) is similar to the yellow-throated marten. However, it is slightly longer on average, and the throat patch ranges in colour from yellow to orange. Its body length extends from 55 to 65 cm (22 to 26 inches), with a tail that…
- Nilgiri tahr (mammal)
tahr: The Nilgiri tahr, or Nilgiri ibex (H. hylocrius, or, by some classifications, Nilgiritragus hylocrius), of southern India, is dark brown with a grizzled saddle-shaped patch on its back; its body size is comparable to that of the Himalayan species. The Arabian tahr (H. jayakari) is the…
- Nilgiritragus hylocrius (mammal)
tahr: The Nilgiri tahr, or Nilgiri ibex (H. hylocrius, or, by some classifications, Nilgiritragus hylocrius), of southern India, is dark brown with a grizzled saddle-shaped patch on its back; its body size is comparable to that of the Himalayan species. The Arabian tahr (H. jayakari) is the…
- Nilling: Prose Essays on Noise, Pornography, The Codex, Melancholy, Lucretius, Folds, Cities and Related Aporias (essays by Robertson)
Lisa Robertson: Essays: …varied collection of essays called Nilling: Prose Essays on Noise, Pornography, The Codex, Melancholy, Lucretius, Folds, Cities and Related Aporias (2012). Robertson’s poetic and essayistic writings often connect her aesthetic approach to concepts of utopia while acknowledging the dangers inherent in utopian projects. Robertson connects questions of poetry and politics…
- Nilo-Hamites (people)
Kalenjin, any member of the Kipsikis (Kipsigis), Nandi, Pokot, or other related peoples of west-central Kenya, northern Tanzania, and Uganda who speak Southern Nilotic languages of the Nilo-Saharan language family. The Kalenjin peoples probably expanded into the Rift Valley about ad 1500. During
- Nilo-Hamitic languages
Nilo-Saharan languages: Gender: …to these languages as “Nilo-Hamitic.” But, as Greenberg pointed out in his classificatory work, the mere presence of gender points only toward typological similarities between languages. What is at the heart of a genetic relationship (and a presumed common historical origin from the same ancestral language) is a resemblance…
- Nilo-Saharan languages
Nilo-Saharan languages, a group of languages that form one of the four language stocks or families on the African continent, the others being Afro-Asiatic, Khoisan, and Niger-Congo. The Nilo-Saharan languages are presumed to be descended from a common ancestral language and, therefore, to be
- Nilópolis (Brazil)
Nilópolis, city and suburb of Rio de Janeiro city, Rio de Janeiro estado (state), southeastern Brazil. It lies in the Guandu-Mirim River valley, at 92 feet (28 metres) above sea level. Originally situated 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Rio de Janeiro, Nilópolis experienced significant growth from
- Nilot (people)
Nilot, any member of several east-central African peoples living in South Sudan, northern Uganda, and western Kenya. The name refers to the area in which they live, mostly the region of the upper Nile and its tributaries, and to a linguistic unity that distinguishes them from their neighbours who
- Nilotes (people)
Nilot, any member of several east-central African peoples living in South Sudan, northern Uganda, and western Kenya. The name refers to the area in which they live, mostly the region of the upper Nile and its tributaries, and to a linguistic unity that distinguishes them from their neighbours who
- Nilotic languages
Nilotic languages, group of related languages spoken in a relatively contiguous area from northwestern Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan, and western Ethiopia southward across Uganda and Kenya into northern Tanzania. Nilotic languages are part of the Eastern Sudanic subbranch of
- Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige (work by Lagerlöf)
Selma Lagerlöf: …powerfully told historical tale; and Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige, 2 vol. (1906–07; The Wonderful Adventures of Nils and Further Adventures of Nils), a geography reader for children.
- Nilson, Johann Esaiss (German artist)
pottery: Tin-glazed ware: …the the Rococo engravings of J.E. Nilson (1721–88), which were also popular at many of the porcelain factories. The Rococo style, which spread from France to Germany about the second quarter of the 18th century, is reflected both in the forms and the decoration.
- Nilson, Lars Fredrik (Swedish chemist)
scandium: …calling it ekaboron, Swedish chemist Lars Fredrik Nilson in 1879 discovered its oxide, scandia, in the rare-earth minerals gadolinite and euxenite, and Swedish chemist Per Teodor Cleve later in 1879 identified scandium as the hypothetical ekaboron. Scandium is found in small proportions, generally less than 0.2 percent, in many of…
- Nilsson Schmilsson (album by Nilsson)
Harry Nilsson: Fame as songwriter and singer: …appeared on his gold-selling album Nilsson Schmilsson (1971), produced by Richard Perry, who had won acclaim for his work with Barbra Streisand. “Without You” garnered Nilsson the Grammy for best pop male vocal performance. The album also featured the whimsically quirky “Coconut”
- Nilsson Sings Newman (album by Nilsson)
Harry Nilsson: Fame as songwriter and singer: …Nilsson recorded the critically acclaimed Nilsson Sings Newman (1970). He also wrote and recorded the original score for an animated television movie musical, The Point, which included the hit “Me and My Arrow” (1971). Nilsson’s only number-one hit was his cover of Badfinger’s “Without You,” which appeared on his gold-selling…
- Nilsson, Birgit (Swedish singer)
Birgit Nilsson was a Swedish operatic soprano, celebrated as a Wagnerian interpreter and known for her powerful, rich voice. On the advice of a local choirmaster, she went to study with Joseph Hislop in Stockholm, where she joined the Royal Opera and made her debut in 1946 as Agathe in Carl Maria
- Nilsson, Dan-Eric (Swedish zoologist)
photoreception: Refracting, reflecting, and parabolic optical mechanisms: …genus Macropipus by Swedish zoologist Dan-Eric Nilsson, has optical elements that use a combination of a single lens and a parabolic mirror. The lens focuses an image near the top of the clear zone (similar to an apposition eye), but oblique rays are intercepted by a parabolic mirror surface that…
- Nilsson, Harry (American singer-songwriter)
Harry Nilsson was an American singer-songwriter of immense talent. A self-taught musician who rose from working in a bank to become an international star, Nilsson had the distinction of once being cited by Beatles John Lennon and Paul McCartney as their favorite recording artist. Despite his fame
- Nilsson, Märta Birgit (Swedish singer)
Birgit Nilsson was a Swedish operatic soprano, celebrated as a Wagnerian interpreter and known for her powerful, rich voice. On the advice of a local choirmaster, she went to study with Joseph Hislop in Stockholm, where she joined the Royal Opera and made her debut in 1946 as Agathe in Carl Maria
- Nilus Of Ancyra, Saint (Greek abbot)
Saint Nilus of Ancyra ; feast day November 12) was a Greek Byzantine abbot and author of extensive ascetical literature that influenced both Eastern and Western monasticism. He also participated in the prevalent theological controversies concerning the Trinity and the person and work of Christ. A
- Nilus of Rossano, St. (abbot)
St. Nilus of Rossano ; feast day September 26) was an abbot and promoter of Greek monasticism in Italy who founded several communities of monks in the region of Calabria following the Greek rule of St. Basil of Caesarea. A supporter of the regular successors to the papal crown in their
- Nilus the Ascetic (Greek abbot)
Saint Nilus of Ancyra ; feast day November 12) was a Greek Byzantine abbot and author of extensive ascetical literature that influenced both Eastern and Western monasticism. He also participated in the prevalent theological controversies concerning the Trinity and the person and work of Christ. A
- Nilus the Younger, St. (abbot)
St. Nilus of Rossano ; feast day September 26) was an abbot and promoter of Greek monasticism in Italy who founded several communities of monks in the region of Calabria following the Greek rule of St. Basil of Caesarea. A supporter of the regular successors to the papal crown in their
- Nilus, Serge (Russian writer)
Protocols of the Elders of Zion: …to a religious tract by Serge Nilus, a tsarist civil servant. They were translated into German, French, English, and other European languages and soon came to be a classic of antisemitic literature. In the United States Henry Ford’s private newspaper, Dearborn Independent, often cited them as evidence of a Jewish…
- nim (tree)
neem, (Azadirachta indica), fast-growing tree of the mahogany family (Meliaceae), valued as a medicinal plant, as a source of organic pesticides, and for its timber. Neem is likely native to the Indian subcontinent and to dry areas throughout South Asia. It has been introduced to parts of Africa,
- nim (game)
nim, ancient game of obscure origin in which two players alternate in removing objects from different piles, with the player who removes the last object winning in the normal play variant and losing in another common variant. In its generalized form, any number of objects (counters) are divided
- NIMA (United States government agency)
intelligence: The United States: The National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA) was created in 1996 under the aegis of the Department of Defense to produce imagery intelligence for the U.S. military and other government agencies.
- Nima Yushij (Iranian writer)
Persian literature: Modern Iran: Nima Yushij was the first to propose a radical renewal of Persian poetry, not only of its contents but also of its prosody and imagery, but he found the opposing forces of tradition to be very strong. His earliest poems, influenced by French Romanticism and…
- Nimach (India)
Neemuch, city, northwestern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is located in an upland plateau region on a barren basaltic ridge at an elevation of 1,640 feet (500 metres). The city site was the location of a palace in the district of the Ajmer province. Originally a part of the territory of
- Nimandi (Hindu sect)
Nimbarka: …founded the devotional sect called Nimbarkas, Nimandi, or Nimavats, who worshipped the deity Krishna and his consort, Radha.
- Nimatron (mathematical device)
number game: Nim and similar games: … and an associate; their automatic Nimatron was exhibited at the New York World’s Fair in 1940.
- Nimavat (Hindu sect)
Nimbarka: …founded the devotional sect called Nimbarkas, Nimandi, or Nimavats, who worshipped the deity Krishna and his consort, Radha.
- Nimba otter shrew (mammal)
otter shrew: ruwenzorii) and the Nimba otter shrew (M. lamottei), which weigh 60 to 150 grams and have a body 12 to 20 cm long and a shorter tail. The water-repellent fur of all three is soft and dense. The feet are webbed in the Ruwenzori otter shrew but unwebbed…
- Nimba Range (mountains, Africa)
Nimba Range, mountain chain extending in a southwest–northeast direction along the Guinea–Côte d’Ivoire–Liberia border. It reaches its highest elevation at Mount Nimba (5,748 feet [1,752 metres]). Surrounded by lowland rain forest to the south and savanna to the north, the mountains are the source
- Nimba, Mount (mountain, West Africa)
Côte d’Ivoire: Relief: …mountain ranges, whose highest point, Mount Nimba (5,748 feet [1,752 metres]; see also Nimba Range), is situated in the Mount Nimba Strict Nature Reserve (designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1982), where the borders of the three countries meet.
- Nimbaditya (Indian philosopher)
Nimbarka was a Telugu-speaking Brahman, yogi, philosopher, and prominent astronomer who founded the devotional sect called Nimbarkas, Nimandi, or Nimavats, who worshipped the deity Krishna and his consort, Radha. Nimbarka has been identified with Bhaskara, a 9th- or 10th-century philosopher and
- Nimbarka (Hindu sect)
Nimbarka: …founded the devotional sect called Nimbarkas, Nimandi, or Nimavats, who worshipped the deity Krishna and his consort, Radha.
- Nimbarka (Indian philosopher)
Nimbarka was a Telugu-speaking Brahman, yogi, philosopher, and prominent astronomer who founded the devotional sect called Nimbarkas, Nimandi, or Nimavats, who worshipped the deity Krishna and his consort, Radha. Nimbarka has been identified with Bhaskara, a 9th- or 10th-century philosopher and
- nimbostratus (meteorology)
cloud: feet), are stratocumulus, stratus, and nimbostratus. A cloud that extends through all three heights is called a cumulonimbus. A cloud at the surface is called a fog.
- nimbus (art)
halo, in art, radiant circle or disk surrounding the head of a holy person, a representation of spiritual character through the symbolism of light. In Hellenistic and Roman art the sun-god Helios and Roman emperors often appear with a crown of rays. Because of its pagan origin, the form was avoided
- Nimby (sociology)
NIMBY, a colloquialism signifying one’s opposition to the locating of something considered undesirable in one’s neighborhood. The phrase “not in my backyard,” shortened to “NIMBY,” seems to have appeared first in the mid-1970s. It was used in the context of the last major effort by electric
- NIMBY (sociology)
NIMBY, a colloquialism signifying one’s opposition to the locating of something considered undesirable in one’s neighborhood. The phrase “not in my backyard,” shortened to “NIMBY,” seems to have appeared first in the mid-1970s. It was used in the context of the last major effort by electric
- Nimeiri, Gaafar Mohamed el- (president of The Sudan)
Gaafar Mohamed el-Nimeiri was a major general, commander of the armed forces, and president of Sudan (1971–85). After graduating from the Sudan Military College in 1952, Nimeiri acted as commander of the Khartoum garrison and led campaigns against rebels in southern Sudan. He joined in a number of
- Nimeiry, Gaafar Mohamed el- (president of The Sudan)
Gaafar Mohamed el-Nimeiri was a major general, commander of the armed forces, and president of Sudan (1971–85). After graduating from the Sudan Military College in 1952, Nimeiri acted as commander of the Khartoum garrison and led campaigns against rebels in southern Sudan. He joined in a number of
- Nîmes (France)
Nîmes, city, Gard département, Occitanie région, southern France, south-southwest of Lyon. Situated at the foot of some barren hills called the Monts Garrigues to the north and west of the city, Nîmes stands in a vine-planted plain extending south and east. Named after Nemausus, the genie of a
- NIMH (United States agency)
mental health: National agencies: …possible the creation of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in 1949 within what later became the Department of Health and Human Services. State hospital systems were reorganized with increased budgets, while significant federal funds were made available for research, training, and clinical facilities. NIMH is the major funding…
- Nimi’ipuu (people)
Nez Percé, North American Indian people whose traditional territory centred on the lower Snake River and such tributaries as the Salmon and Clearwater rivers in what is now northeastern Oregon, southeastern Washington, and central Idaho, U.S. They were the largest, most powerful, and best-known of
- Nimitz (Amercian ship)
Operation Eagle Claw: …helicopters that left the USS Nimitz, two experienced mechanical failure and could not continue, and the entire group was hindered by a low-level dust storm that severely reduced visibility. The six remaining helicopters landed at Desert One more than 90 minutes late. There another helicopter was deemed unfit for service,…
- Nimitz, Chester W (United States admiral)
Chester W. Nimitz was the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet during World War II. One of the navy’s foremost administrators and strategists, he commanded all land and sea forces in the central Pacific area. A graduate (1905) of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Nimitz served in World War I as
- Nimitz, Chester William (United States admiral)
Chester W. Nimitz was the commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet during World War II. One of the navy’s foremost administrators and strategists, he commanded all land and sea forces in the central Pacific area. A graduate (1905) of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Nimitz served in World War I as
- Nimitz-class aircraft carrier (naval ship)
warship: Large carriers: Beginning in 1975, 10 Nimitz-class carriers superseded the Enterprise. These 81,600-ton carriers were powered by only two nuclear reactors, yet they reached speeds comparable to the Enterprise, and their uranium cores needed replacement only once every 13 years. The smaller propulsion system created more room for the storage of…
- nimonic (metallurgy)
materials science: Alloying: ” Superalloys are high-strength, often complex alloys that are resistant to high temperatures and severe mechanical stress and that exhibit high surface stability. They are commonly classified into three major categories: nickel-based, cobalt-based, and iron-based. Nickel-based superalloys predominate in the turbine section of jet engines. Although…
- Nimoy, Leonard (American actor)
Leonard Nimoy was an American actor known for his portrayal of the stoic, cerebral Mr. Spock in the science fiction television and film franchise Star Trek. Nimoy, the second son of Jewish immigrants from Izyaslav, Russian Empire (now in Ukraine), grew up in a tenement in Boston’s West End
- Nimoy, Leonard Simon (American actor)
Leonard Nimoy was an American actor known for his portrayal of the stoic, cerebral Mr. Spock in the science fiction television and film franchise Star Trek. Nimoy, the second son of Jewish immigrants from Izyaslav, Russian Empire (now in Ukraine), grew up in a tenement in Boston’s West End
- nimravid (extinct mammal family)
sabre-toothed cat: …to the fossil record, the Nimravidae were extant from about 37 million to 7 million years ago. Only distantly related to felids, they include the genera Hoplophoneus, Nimravus, Dinictis, and Barbourofelis. The Machairodontinae, extant from about 12 million to less than 10,000 years ago, include the more familiar Smilodon as…
- Nimravidae (extinct mammal family)
sabre-toothed cat: …to the fossil record, the Nimravidae were extant from about 37 million to 7 million years ago. Only distantly related to felids, they include the genera Hoplophoneus, Nimravus, Dinictis, and Barbourofelis. The Machairodontinae, extant from about 12 million to less than 10,000 years ago, include the more familiar Smilodon as…
- Nimravus (extinct mammal)
sabre-toothed cat: …they include the genera Hoplophoneus, Nimravus, Dinictis, and Barbourofelis. The Machairodontinae, extant from about 12 million to less than 10,000 years ago, include the more familiar Smilodon as well as Homotherium and Meganteron. Sabre-toothed cats roamed North America and Europe throughout the Miocene and
- Nimrod (biblical figure)
Nimrod, legendary biblical figure of the book of Genesis. Nimrod is described in Genesis 10:8–12 as “the first on earth to be a mighty man. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord.” The only other references to Nimrod in the Bible are in Micah 5:6, where Assyria is called the land of Nimrod, and in
- Nimrūd (ancient city, Iraq)
Calah, ancient Assyrian city situated south of Mosul in northern Iraq. The city was first excavated by A.H. (later Sir Austen) Layard during 1845–51 and afterward principally by M.E.L. (later Sir Max) Mallowan (1949–58). Founded in the 13th century bce by Shalmaneser I, Calah remained unimportant
- Nimwegen (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
- Nimwegen, 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,
- Nimzo-Indian Defence (chess)
Aron Nimzowitsch: …theories of play, including the Nimzowitsch-Indian defense.
- Nimzowitsch, Aron (Latvian chess player)
Aron Nimzowitsch was a Latvian-born chess master and theoretician who was renowned for his book My System (1925) but failed to win a world championship, despite many attempts. (Read Garry Kasparov’s Britannica essay on chess & Deep Blue.) Nimzowitsch learned to play chess from his father, a
- Nimzowitsch-Indian defense (chess)
Aron Nimzowitsch: …theories of play, including the Nimzowitsch-Indian defense.
- Nin, Anaïs (French author)
Anaïs Nin was a French-born author of novels and short stories whose literary reputation rests on the eight published volumes of her personal diaries. Her writing shows the influence of the Surrealist movement and her study of psychoanalysis under Otto Rank. Brought to New York City by her mother
- Niña (ship)
caravel: …in 1492 were caravels, the Niña and the Pinta.
- Nina (ancient city, Iraq)
Nanshe: …religion, Sumerian city goddess of Nina (modern Surghul, Iraq) in the southeastern part of the Lagash region of Mesopotamia. According to tradition, Nanshe’s father Enki (Akkadian: Ea) organized the universe and placed her in charge of fish and fishing. Nanshe was also described as a divine soothsayer and dream interpreter.…
- Nina (film by Mort [2016])
Zoe Saldaña: … in the badly received biopic Nina (2016). Her other credits during this time include the thrillers Live by Night (2016) and I Kill Giants (2017) and the horror comedy Vampires vs. the Bronx (2020).
- Nina Ricci (fashion house)
Robert Ricci: …of the renowned Parisian couturier Nina Ricci, which was equally acclaimed for its elegant haute couture and for its perfumes.
- Ninan Cuyuchi (Inca noble)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Civil war on the eve of the Spanish conquest: …several candidates for the throne: Ninan Cuyuchi who was in Tumipampas with his father; Atahuallpa (’Ataw Wallpa), who was also in the north; Huascar (Washkar), who was apparently in Cuzco; Manco Inca (Manqo ’Inka), whose mother belonged to ’Iñaqa (the royal corporation of Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui); Topa Huallpa (Thupa Wallpa);…
- Ninazu (Sumerian deity)
Ninazu, in Mesopotamian religion, Sumerian deity, the city god of Enegir, which was located on the Euphrates River between Larsa and Ur in the southern orchard region. Ninazu was also the city god of Eshnunna (modern Tall al-Asmar in eastern Iraq). Ninazu, whose name means “Water Knower,” was
- Nine (musical by Marshall)
Marion Cotillard: …2009 Cotillard also appeared in Nine. The musical featured an all-star cast that included Daniel Day-Lewis, Penélope Cruz, Nicole Kidman, and Kate Hudson.
- nine (number)
number symbolism: 9: In contrast to 8, the number 9 often represents pain or sadness. The 16th-century Catholic theologian Peter Bungus pointed out that the Ninth Psalm predicts the coming of the Antichrist. In Islamic cosmology the universe is made from nine spheres—the traditional eight of Ptolemy,…
- nine ball (pocket billiard game)
billiards: Pocket billiards, or pool: Nine ball is often played in professional pool tournaments. In this game the object is to pocket the 9 ball after the cue ball first makes contact with the lowest-numbered ball on the table. As long as a shot first contacts the lowest ball, any…
- Nine Chains to the Moon (work by Fuller)
R. Buckminster Fuller: Legacy: Fuller’s book Nine Chains to the Moon (1938) is an outline of his general technological strategy for maximizing the social applications of energy resources. He further developed this and other themes in such works as No More Secondhand God (1962), Utopia or Oblivion (1969), Operating Manual for…
- Nine Chapters (Chinese mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: The textual sources: …Chinese is Jiuzhang suanshu (The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art), which contains arithmetic, algebraic, and geometric algorithms, presented in relation to problems, some of which evoke the duties of the civil administration: surveying fields (areas), levying taxes according to various types of grains (ratios), determining wages for civil…
- Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art, The (Chinese mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: The textual sources: …Chinese is Jiuzhang suanshu (The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art), which contains arithmetic, algebraic, and geometric algorithms, presented in relation to problems, some of which evoke the duties of the civil administration: surveying fields (areas), levying taxes according to various types of grains (ratios), determining wages for civil…
- Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Procedures, The (Chinese mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: The textual sources: …Chinese is Jiuzhang suanshu (The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art), which contains arithmetic, algebraic, and geometric algorithms, presented in relation to problems, some of which evoke the duties of the civil administration: surveying fields (areas), levying taxes according to various types of grains (ratios), determining wages for civil…
- Nine Clans (Asian history)
history of Central Asia: The Uyghur empire: This new empire comprised many tribes and seems to have been headed by a smaller tribal confederation standing under Uyghur leadership. This federation is referred to in Chinese sources as the Nine Clans (Jiuxing), whereas Islamic sources and the Orhon inscriptions call it…
- Nine Heroes (tapestry)
tapestry: 14th century: …same Parisian workshop is the Nine Heroes. This set is not a religious narrative but illustrates the chivalric text Histoire des neuf preux (“Story of the Nine Heroes”) by the early 14th-century wandering minstrel, or jongleur, Jacques de Longuyon.
- Nine Hours to Rama (film by Robson [1963])
Mark Robson: Later films: Next was Nine Hours to Rama (1963), an ambitious drama about the events leading up to Gandhi’s assassination. Robson reteamed with Newman on The Prize (1963), a political thriller adapted from Irving Wallace’s sensationalist best seller. Von Ryan’s Express (1965) was one of Frank Sinatra’s better films,…
- Nine Inch Nails (American rock act)
Nine Inch Nails, American alternative rock act known for dark and tortured industrial rock songs. Nine Inch Nails was essentially a stage name for singer and multi-instrumentalist Trent Reznor (b. Michael Trent Reznor, May 17, 1965, Mercer, Pennsylvania, U.S.). Nine Inch Nails began in Cleveland in
- Nine Lives (album by Aerosmith)
Aerosmith: The band’s next release, Nine Lives (1997), reached the top of the Billboard album chart, and the single “Pink” garnered a Grammy.
- Nine Men’s Morris (game)
Nine Men’s Morris, board game of great antiquity, most popular in Europe during the 14th century and played throughout the world in various forms. The board is made up of three concentric squares and several transversals, making 24 points of intersection. In modern play the diagonal lines of the
- Nine Officers’ Plot (Turkish history)
Turkey: Political repressions: …an alleged plot (the so-called Nine Officers’ Plot) was unearthed; some of the accused were so clearly innocent that punishment ultimately fell upon the accuser, but it appears that there indeed had been a conspiracy of some sort.
- Nine Oguz (Asian history)
history of Central Asia: The Uyghur empire: This new empire comprised many tribes and seems to have been headed by a smaller tribal confederation standing under Uyghur leadership. This federation is referred to in Chinese sources as the Nine Clans (Jiuxing), whereas Islamic sources and the Orhon inscriptions call it…
- Nine Perfect Strangers (American television miniseries)
David E. Kelley: He reteamed with Kidman on Nine Perfect Strangers (2021), a miniseries that was also adapted from a Moriarty novel; it centres on a group of people who seek help from a mysterious guru at a wellness retreat. In 2022 Kelley created and cowrote Anatomy of a Scandal, a miniseries that…
- Nine to Five (film by Higgins [1980])
Lily Tomlin: Tomlin rebounded with Nine to Five (1980), a hugely popular comedy about coworkers (Tomlin, Jane Fonda, and Dolly Parton) who decide to kill their sexist boss (Dabney Coleman). A series of comedies followed, though they were less successful. During that time Tomlin also starred in the one-woman Broadway…
- Nine Types of Light (album by TV on the Radio)
TV on the Radio: …returned to the studio for Nine Types of Light (2011), an ambitious departure that traded the driving bass of Dear Science for torch-song lyrics and rock-ballad instrumentation. The band addressed loss on the cathartic Seeds (2014).
- Nine Ways (ancient Greece)
ancient Greek civilization: Athens’s moves northward: …colonizing expedition sent to the Nine Ways, the site of the later Amphipolis, was less successful. If silver was one coveted commodity, ship-building timber was another, and the desire for the latter was a large part of Athens’s motive for getting a foothold in the Amphipolis region. The Nine Ways…
- Nine Women (short stories by Grau)
Shirley Ann Grau: …The Wind Shifting West (1973), Nine Women (1985), and Selected Stories (2003).
- Nine Worthies of London (work by Johnson)
Richard Johnson: …Johnson’s life, though in his Nine Worthies of London (1592) he referred to himself as an apprentice. He may have been employed in the household of Queen Anne, wife of King James I. Among his many other works is a book of ballads, The Crowne Garland of Golden Roses (1612).