• Stoclet House (building, Brussels, Belgium)

    Josef Hoffmann: …important early work, and his Stoclet House (1905) in Brussels is considered his masterpiece. The exterior of that opulent structure achieved a monumental elegance not often associated with design based on straight lines and white squares and rectangles.

  • Stoddard, Elizabeth (American author)

    Richard Henry Stoddard: His wife Elizabeth was a novelist and poet, and their house was a leading gathering place for writers and artists in the last 30 years of the 19th century. Stoddard’s autobiography, Recollections Personal and Literary, was published in 1903.

  • Stoddard, Richard Henry (American critic and editor)

    Richard Henry Stoddard was an American poet, critic, and editor, more important as a figure in New York literary circles in the late 19th century than for his own verse. Abraham Lincoln, An Horatian Ode (1865) and parts of Songs of Summer (1857) and The Book of the East (1867) can still be read

  • Stoddart, Fraser (British-American chemist)

    Fraser Stoddart was a Scottish-American chemist who was the first to successfully synthesize a mechanically interlocked molecule, known as a catenane, thereby helping to establish the field of mechanical bond chemistry. Stoddart’s research enabled the development of self-assembly processes and

  • Stoddart, J. Fraser (British-American chemist)

    Fraser Stoddart was a Scottish-American chemist who was the first to successfully synthesize a mechanically interlocked molecule, known as a catenane, thereby helping to establish the field of mechanical bond chemistry. Stoddart’s research enabled the development of self-assembly processes and

  • Stoddart, Sir James Fraser (British-American chemist)

    Fraser Stoddart was a Scottish-American chemist who was the first to successfully synthesize a mechanically interlocked molecule, known as a catenane, thereby helping to establish the field of mechanical bond chemistry. Stoddart’s research enabled the development of self-assembly processes and

  • Stoecker, Adolf (German politician)

    Adolf Stoecker was a cleric, conservative politician, and reformer who founded the German Christian Social Party and promoted political antisemitism in Germany. An army chaplain during the Franco-German War (1870–71), Stoecker secured appointment as a court preacher at the cathedral in Berlin in

  • Stoeckl, Eduard de, Baron (Russian minister)

    Alaska Purchase: …year after the war’s conclusion, Baron Eduard de Stoeckl, Russian minister to the United States, was instructed by Emperor Alexander II to open negotiations for its sale. The cost and logistical difficulties of supplying the territory had made it an economic liability to the Russians, who were additionally struggling with…

  • Stœng Trêng (Cambodia)

    Stœng Trêng, town, northeastern Cambodia. Stœng Trêng lies at the confluence of the San, Kŏng, and Mekong rivers. It is linked to Phnom Penh, the national capital, and to Laos by a national highway. The area around Stœng Trêng is inhabited by the mountain Mon-Khmer, valley Khmer, and Lao-Tai

  • Stoermer Coleman, Zendaya Maree (American actor, singer, and dancer)

    Zendaya is an American actor, singer, and dancer who first gained fame for comedic roles on the Disney Channel and later transitioned to more complex and critically acclaimed parts such as Rue Bennett in the HBO series Euphoria, for which she won two Emmy Awards. Over the years the popular star,

  • Stoff und Leben (work by Oberth)

    Hermann Oberth: In 1959 he published Stoff und Leben (“Material and Life”). Oberth posited in this work that materialism, the philosophy on which communism is based, is incorrect and further that aspects of human life such as the soul could not be explained by material reason.

  • Stoffels, Hendrickje (Dutch model)

    Rembrandt: Domestic turmoil: In 1649 Hendrickje Stoffels, a young woman from Breedevoort in the eastern part of Gelderland, succeeded Dirckx, first in the function of housekeeper, later in Rembrandt’s affection. The problems associated with Titus’s inheritance prevented Rembrandt from marrying the young Stoffels, who bore him a child and lived…

  • Stofflet, Jean-Nicolas (French peasant)

    Wars of the Vendée: Jean-Nicolas Stofflet were joined by royalist nobles such as Charles Bonchamps, Marquis de Bonchamps, Maurice Gigost d’Elbée, François-Athanase Charette de La Contrie, and Henri du Vergier, Count de La Rochejaquelein. In May the rebels (about 30,000 strong) took the towns of Thouars, Parthenay, and Fontenay,…

  • Stoglavy Sobor (religious council)

    Macarius: …reform was consolidated by the Stoglavy Sobor (Council of the Hundred Chapters) at Moscow in 1551, when his new codification of Russian church law, administration, and rites was approved by the assembly of bishops. The Russianizing of Orthodoxy also had its aesthetic consequence in the development of a Muscovite religious…

  • Stohler, Georg W. (zoologist and botanist)

    Georg W. Steller was a German-born zoologist and botanist who served as a naturalist aboard the ship St. Peter during the years 1741–42, as part of the Great Northern Expedition, which aimed to map a northern sea route from Russia to North America. During that expedition, while stranded on what is

  • Stoiber, Edmund (German politician)

    Edmund Stoiber is a German politician who was leader of Bavaria’s Christian Social Union (CSU) from 1999 to 2007. Stoiber finished law school at age 30 and joined the CSU, the Bavarian partner of the federal Christian Democratic Union (CDU). Three years later he was elected to the Bavarian state

  • Stoic, The (novel by Dreiser)

    Theodore Dreiser: Life: …helped him complete most of The Stoic, the long-postponed third volume of his Yerkes trilogy, in the weeks before his death. Both The Bulwark and The Stoic were published posthumously (1946 and 1947, respectively). A collection of Dreiser’s philosophical speculations, Notes on Life, appeared in 1974.

  • stoichiometric compound (chemistry)

    nonstoichiometric compound: …berthollide compounds in distinction from daltonides (in which the atomic ratios are those of small integers), nonstoichiometric compounds are best known among the transition elements. Several of them are important as components of solid-state electronic devices, such as rectifiers, thermoelectric generators, photodetectors, thermistors, and magnets useful in high-frequency circuits.

  • stoichiometry (chemistry)

    stoichiometry, in chemistry, the determination of the proportions in which elements or compounds react with one another. The rules followed in the determination of stoichiometric relationships are based on the laws of conservation of mass and energy and the law of combining weights or volumes. See

  • Stoichkov, Hristo (Bulgarian football player)

    Hristo Stoichkov is a Bulgarian football (soccer) player who was an explosive striker, noted for his fierce competitiveness. Stoichkov began his soccer career early. By age 12 he was playing for Maritza Plovdiv in the Bulgarian second division, where his goal-scoring prowess earned him a contract

  • Stoicism

    Stoicism, a school of thought that flourished in Greek and Roman history of Classical antiquity. It was one of the loftiest and most sublime philosophies in the record of Western civilization. In urging participation in human affairs, Stoics have always believed that the goal of all inquiry is to

  • Stoilov, Konstantin (prime minister of Bulgaria)

    Konstantin Stoilov was a Bulgarian statesman, founder and leader of the conservative People’s Party, and prime minister of Bulgaria (1887, 1894–99) who played an important role in establishing the country’s democratic institutions and in fostering Bulgaria’s increased involvement with western

  • Stojadinović, Milan (premier of Yugoslavia)

    Milan Stojadinović was a Serbian politician, Yugoslav minister of finance from 1922 to 1926, and premier and foreign minister of Yugoslavia from 1935 to 1939. After graduation from the University of Belgrade in 1910, he studied in Germany, England, and France and then served in the Serbian ministry

  • Stojakovic, Peja (basketball player)

    Sacramento Kings: …by forwards Chris Webber and Peja Stojakovic, had the best record in the NBA and reached the Western Conference finals, which it lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in an exciting seven-game series.

  • Stojko, Elvis (Canadian figure skater)

    Elvis Stojko is a Canadian figure skater whose outstanding jumping ability helped him win three world titles (1994, 1995, and 1997) and two Olympic silver medals (1994 and 1998). By the time he was two and a half, Stojko knew he wanted to skate. In 1988 he was Canadian junior national champion, and

  • stoke (physics)

    viscosity: …centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system, called the stokes in Britain and the stoke in the U.S., is named for the British physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes. The stoke is defined as one centimetre squared per second.

  • Stoke Mandeville Hospital (hospital, Aylesbury, England, United Kingdom)

    Buckinghamshire: Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury is internationally known for its treatment of spinal-cord injuries and has hosted the World Stoke Mandeville Wheelchair Games—the forerunner of the Paralympic Games—since 1948. The town of Olney, in north Buckinghamshire, was the home of the 18th-century poet William Cowper.

  • Stoke Newington (locality, London, United Kingdom)

    Hackney: Stoke Newington was a site of Paleolithic settlement, and it later became a Saxon village. Roman remains were discovered in the 18th century in the Hackney Marshes in the eastern part of the borough, an area that now contains football (soccer) and cricket fields. Shoreditch…

  • Stoke Poges (historical village, England, United Kingdom)

    Stoke Poges, town (parish), South Bucks district, administrative and historic county of Buckinghamshire, southeastern England. It lies on the lower slopes of the Chiltern Hills, just north of Slough. Stoke Poges, situated just west of Greater London, has become a fashionable residential area, with

  • Stoke, Battle of (English history)

    United Kingdom: Dynastic threats: …triumphant in war; at the Battle of Stoke, de la Pole was killed and Simnel captured and demoted to a scullery boy in the royal kitchen. Ten years later Henry had to do it all over again, this time with a handsome Flemish lad named Perkin Warbeck, who for six…

  • Stoke-on-Trent (city and unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)

    Stoke-on-Trent, city and unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Staffordshire, west-central England, consisting of the industrial ceramic-producing area known as the Potteries. Ceramics is the chief industry, although metalworking, glass, and rubber are also important. The city of

  • Stoke-upon-Trent (historical town, England, United Kingdom)

    pottery: Porcelain: …of Minton’s was founded at Stoke-upon-Trent in 1793 by Thomas Minton, a Caughley engraver said to have devised for Spode the Broseley Blue Dragon and Willow patterns that are still in use. Like Coalport, the factory was much occupied in copying the work of Sèvres. From 1848 to 1895 they…

  • Stoker (film by Park Chan-wook [2013])

    Nicole Kidman: Roles from the early 2010s: In the psychological horror film Stoker (2013), Kidman appeared as the emotionally distant mother of a troubled teenage girl.

  • stoker (machine)

    stoker, machine for feeding coal or other solid fuel into a furnace, usually supporting the fuel during combustion. A good stoker also supplies air for combustion and regulates the rate of burning and, in large installations, disposes of the ashes. Use of stokers affords substantial fuel savings

  • Stoker, Abraham (Irish writer)

    Bram Stoker was an Irish writer best known as the author of the Gothic horror tale Dracula (1897). Stoker was the third of seven children born to Abraham Stoker, Sr., a civil servant at Dublin Castle, and Charlotte Thornley Stoker, a descendant of a Protestant family from western Ireland. Due to

  • Stoker, Bram (Irish writer)

    Bram Stoker was an Irish writer best known as the author of the Gothic horror tale Dracula (1897). Stoker was the third of seven children born to Abraham Stoker, Sr., a civil servant at Dublin Castle, and Charlotte Thornley Stoker, a descendant of a Protestant family from western Ireland. Due to

  • stokes (physics)

    viscosity: …centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system, called the stokes in Britain and the stoke in the U.S., is named for the British physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes. The stoke is defined as one centimetre squared per second.

  • Stokes lines (physics)

    Stokes lines, radiation of particular wavelengths present in the line spectra associated with fluorescence and the Raman effect, named after Sir George Gabriel Stokes, a 19th-century British physicist. A molecule in its ground state is excited by a photon to a short-lived intermediate state. When

  • Stokes mortar (weaponry)

    artillery: Mortars: The prototype of the modern mortar was a three-inch weapon developed by the Englishman Wilfred Stokes in 1915. This consisted of a smooth-bored tube, resting upon a baseplate and supported by a bipod, that had a fixed firing pin at its breech end. The bomb was a simple cylinder…

  • Stokes of Leyland, Donald Gresham Stokes, Baron (British automobile executive)

    Donald Gresham Stokes, Baron Stokes was a British automobile executive who presided over the merger that resulted in British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd. (later renamed BL Public Limited Company), the largest automaker in England. Although Stokes had done well as managing director of Leyland

  • Stokes shift (physics)

    Stokes lines: …absorbed light is called the Stokes shift.

  • Stokes’s law (physics)

    Stokes’s law, mathematical equation that expresses the drag force resisting the fall of small spherical particles through a fluid medium. The law, first set forth by the British scientist Sir George G. Stokes in 1851, is derived by consideration of the forces acting on a particular particle as it

  • Stokes’s theorem (mathematics)

    mathematics: Linear algebra: …of a theory to which Stokes’s law (a special case of which is Green’s theorem) is central. The Gauss-Green-Stokes theorem, named after Gauss and two leading English applied mathematicians of the 19th century (George Stokes and George Green), generalizes the fundamental theorem of the calculus to functions of several variables.…

  • Stokes, Carl (American lawyer and politician)

    Carl Stokes was an American lawyer and politician, who became the first African American to serve as mayor of a major U.S. city, having been elected to that office in Cleveland, Ohio (1967–71). A young child when his father died, Stokes held a number of odd jobs to help support his family. He

  • Stokes, Carl Burton (American lawyer and politician)

    Carl Stokes was an American lawyer and politician, who became the first African American to serve as mayor of a major U.S. city, having been elected to that office in Cleveland, Ohio (1967–71). A young child when his father died, Stokes held a number of odd jobs to help support his family. He

  • Stokes, David (American political scientist)

    political science: Behavioralism: …1960s, and David Butler and Donald Stokes—one of the authors of The American Voter—adapted much of the American study in Political Change in Britain: Forces Shaping Electoral Choice (1969). They found that political generation (the era in which one was born) and “duration of partisanship” also predict party identification—that is,…

  • Stokes, Donald Gresham Stokes, Baron (British automobile executive)

    Donald Gresham Stokes, Baron Stokes was a British automobile executive who presided over the merger that resulted in British Leyland Motor Corporation, Ltd. (later renamed BL Public Limited Company), the largest automaker in England. Although Stokes had done well as managing director of Leyland

  • Stokes, Maurice (American basketball player)

    Sacramento Kings: …as forwards Jack Twyman and Maurice Stokes (whose enduring friendship, especially after Stokes became disabled, is one of professional sport’s most engaging stories). As the NBA continued to grow through the 1950s, the Royals relocated to the much larger city of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1957, adding center-forward Wayne Embry to…

  • Stokes, Sir George Gabriel, 1st Baronet (British mathematician and physicist)

    Sir George Gabriel Stokes, 1st Baronet was a British physicist and mathematician noted for his studies of the behaviour of viscous fluids, particularly for his law of viscosity, which describes the motion of a solid sphere in a fluid, and for Stokes’s theorem, a basic theorem of vector analysis.

  • Stokes, Wilfred (British inventor)

    artillery: Mortars: …weapon developed by the Englishman Wilfred Stokes in 1915. This consisted of a smooth-bored tube, resting upon a baseplate and supported by a bipod, that had a fixed firing pin at its breech end. The bomb was a simple cylinder packed with explosive and fitted with a shotgun cartridge at…

  • Stokes, William (Irish physician)

    William Stokes was a physician and the leading representative of the Irish, or Dublin, school of anatomical diagnosis, which emphasized clinical examination of patients in forming a diagnosis. He was also the author of two important works in the emerging field of cardiac and pulmonary diseases. Son

  • Stokes-Adams syndrome (heart disease)

    cardiology: …the vernacular of cardiology—for example, Adams-Stokes syndrome, a type of heart block named for Irish physicians Robert Adams and William Stokes; Austin Flint murmur, named for the American physician who discovered the disorder; and tetralogy of Fallot, a combination of congenital heart defects named for French

  • Stokesay (England, United Kingdom)

    Stokesay, village (“parish”), administrative and historic county of Shropshire, Eng., best known for its castle (1240), one of the most notable fortified manor houses of England. It was fortified against Welsh marauders, and the south tower was added by the Ludlows, a landowning family who

  • Stokowski, Leopold (British conductor)

    Leopold Stokowski was a virtuoso British-born U.S. conductor known for his flamboyant showmanship and the rich sonorities of his orchestras and for his influence as a popularizer of classical music. Stokowski was trained at the Royal College of Music, London, and Queen’s College, Oxford, and held

  • STOL airplane

    STOL airplane, any of several fixed-wing aircraft capable of taking off and landing on runways considerably shorter than those needed by conventional aircraft. Most aircraft of this type require a runway no more than 150 metres (500 feet) long, which is about 10 times shorter than the average

  • stola (clothing)

    dress: Ancient Rome: …of the chiton called a stola. As time passed, women took to wearing several garments one on top of the other, while the garments themselves were made of finer fabrics and were more lavishly decorated. The feminine cloak, the palla, resembled the Greek himation.

  • Stolberg, Christian, Graf zu (German poet)

    Friedrich Leopold, Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg: Stolberg and his brother Christian, noblemen who were actually Danish subjects, studied law at Halle and at Göttingen, where in 1772 both became members of the Göttinger Hain, a group that met to discuss their poems and to further the ideals of friendship, virtue, freedom, love of fatherland, and…

  • Stolberg-Stolberg, Friedrich Leopold, Graf zu (German poet)

    Friedrich Leopold, Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg was a German lyric poet of the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress) and early Romantic periods. Stolberg and his brother Christian, noblemen who were actually Danish subjects, studied law at Halle and at Göttingen, where in 1772 both became members of the

  • Stolbova, Peace of (Sweden-Russia [1617])

    Treaty of Stolbovo, (1617), peace settlement concluded between Sweden and Russia ending Sweden’s intervention in Russia’s internal political affairs and blocking Russia from the Baltic Sea. In 1610 Muscovite leaders, faced with a succession crisis, a war with Poland, and peasant uprisings (Time of

  • Stolbovo, Treaty of (Sweden-Russia [1617])

    Treaty of Stolbovo, (1617), peace settlement concluded between Sweden and Russia ending Sweden’s intervention in Russia’s internal political affairs and blocking Russia from the Baltic Sea. In 1610 Muscovite leaders, faced with a succession crisis, a war with Poland, and peasant uprisings (Time of

  • stole (ecclesiastical garb)

    stole, ecclesiastical vestment worn by Roman Catholic deacons, priests, and bishops and by some Anglican, Lutheran, and other Protestant clergy. An ecclesiastical stole is usually made of silk and is 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 cm) wide and about 8 feet (2.4 meters) long. It is typically the same color

  • stolen base (baseball)

    baseball: Advancing base runners and scoring: …plays in baseball is the stolen base. A base runner may advance at his own risk on the bases at any time the ball is in play by stealing a base. To steal a base, a batter will take a “lead”—that is, advance a few steps off the base and…

  • Stolen Generations (Australian government policy)

    William Ferguson: The Aborigines Protection Board, the Aborigines Progressive Association, and the Day of Mourning: …resettled became known as the Stolen Generations). After the amendment of the Aborigines Protection Act (1909) in 1936 granted even more power to the Aborigines Protection Board, Ferguson began fighting back, founding the Aborigines Progressive Association (APA) in 1937 to organize the political struggle for Aboriginal rights. The association’s main…

  • Stolen Holiday (film by Curtiz [1937])

    Michael Curtiz: The breakthrough years: That year he directed Stolen Holiday, starring Francis and Claude Rains; Mountain Justice, with a much less-distinguished cast; and the forgettable comedy The Perfect Specimen, in which Flynn portrayed a sheltered heir to a fortune. Curtiz’s most-notable film of the year was Kid Galahad (also released as The Battling…

  • Stolen Kisses (film by Truffaut [1968])

    Jean-Pierre Léaud: …at Twenty), Baisers volés (1968; Stolen Kisses), Domicile conjugale (1970; Bed and Board), and L’Amour en fuite (1979; Love on the Run). Léaud was perfectly suited to play the part of Doinel, an engaging and innocent young man who is not particularly well equipped to meet the responsibilities of adult…

  • Stolen Life, A (film by Bernhardt [1946])

    Curtis Bernhardt: Early years in Hollywood: A Stolen Life (1946) is more convincing, with Bette Davis portraying twin sisters who both love Glenn Ford. In 1947 Bernhardt directed Possessed, featuring Joan Crawford in an Academy Award-nominated turn as a mentally unstable woman.

  • Stolen or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects, Convention on (United Nations)

    illicit antiquities: International responses: …the Unification of Private Law) Convention on Stolen or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects. Intended to remedy some of the deficiencies of the UNESCO convention, it had been ratified by more than 30 countries by the early 21st century.

  • Stolica (mountain, Slovakia)

    Carpathian Mountains: Physiography of the Carpathian Mountains: …Ore Mountains (Slovenské Rudohorie), with Stolica (4,846 feet) as the highest peak; they are built of metamorphic rocks and of sedimentaries of the Paleozoic Era (more than 250 million years old). Also found there are tableland areas of Mesozoic limestones, about 150 million years old, containing such large caves as…

  • Stolidobranchia (tunicate order)

    tunicate: Annotated classification: Order Stolidobranchia Gill with longitudinal vessels, folded. Class Appendicularia (or Larvacea) Adult small, pelagic, retaining larval notochord and tail; pharynx simple with two gill openings; no distinct atrium; about 70 species. Class Thaliacea

  • Stoll, Anton (Austrian choirmaster)

    Ave Verum Corpus, K 618: …Verum Corpus was written for Anton Stoll, choirmaster in the town of Baden, where Mozart’s wife, Constanze, often visited the spa. Unlike the dramatic and famously unfinished Requiem in D Minor, K 626, on which Mozart was working at the same time, Ave Verum Corpus is of humble mien and…

  • Stollen (musical form)

    minnesinger: …two identical sections, called individually Stollen and collectively Aufgesang, and a third section, or Abgesang (the terms derive from the later meistersingers); the formal ratio between Aufgesang and Abgesang is variable. The basic aab pattern was subject to much variation (see Bar form).

  • Stöller, Georg W. (zoologist and botanist)

    Georg W. Steller was a German-born zoologist and botanist who served as a naturalist aboard the ship St. Peter during the years 1741–42, as part of the Great Northern Expedition, which aimed to map a northern sea route from Russia to North America. During that expedition, while stranded on what is

  • Stoller, Michael (American songwriter and record producer)

    Leiber and Stoller: …2011, Los Angeles, California) and Mike Stoller (in full Michael Stoller; b. March 13, 1933, Belle Harbor, New York, U.S.), working primarily for Atlantic Records, were perhaps the most successful writers and producers of the 1950s.

  • Stoller, Mike (American songwriter and record producer)

    Leiber and Stoller: …2011, Los Angeles, California) and Mike Stoller (in full Michael Stoller; b. March 13, 1933, Belle Harbor, New York, U.S.), working primarily for Atlantic Records, were perhaps the most successful writers and producers of the 1950s.

  • stolon (biology)

    Basidiomycota: …typically filamentous fungi composed of hyphae. Most species reproduce sexually with a club-shaped spore-bearing organ (basidium) that usually produces four sexual spores (basidiospores). Basidia are borne on fruiting bodies (basidiocarps), which are large and conspicuous in all but the yeasts, rusts, and smuts.

  • stolon (biology)

    stolon, in biology, a special slender horizontal branch serving to propagate the organism. In botany a stolon—also called a runner—is a slender stem that grows horizontally along the ground, giving rise to roots and aerial (vertical) branches at specialized points called nodes. In zoology, stolons

  • stolon (plant)

    plant reproductive system: Reproduction by special asexual structures: …belong such flowering-plant structures as stolons, rhizomes, tubers, corms, and bulbs, as well as the tubers of liverworts, ferns, and horsetails, the dormant buds of certain moss stages, and the leaves of many succulents.

  • stolon (zoology)

    stolon: In zoology, stolons of certain invertebrate animals are horizontal extensions that produce new individuals by budding. Fungi spread by means of horizontal filaments (hyphae) that are also called stolons.

  • Stolonifera (invertebrate order)

    cnidarian: Annotated classification: Order Stolonifera Polyps of colony connected by stolons. Skeletons of spicules or horny external cuticle. Shallow tropical and temperate seas. Order Telestacea Long axial polyps bear lateral polyps. Skeleton of spicules fused with a horny material. Tropical. Order Gorgonacea

  • stolonization (physiology)

    annelid: Reproduction: In syllids, stolonization may produce one or more stolons, or stems, containing developing gametes; epitoky is controlled by a nerve ganglion in the proventriculus part of the digestive tract. Epitokous females produce a pheromone that stimulates the male to spawn. The presence of the sperm in the…

  • Stolothrissa tanganicae (fish)

    clupeiform: Reproduction: The eggs of the Tanganyika sardine (Stolothrissa tanganicae), a species that spawns at the surface in open areas of freshwater environments, hatch in 24 to 36 hours. The eggs constantly sink from the surface to a depth of 75 to 150 metres (250 to 500 feet) at a temperature…

  • Stolp (Poland)

    Słupsk, city, Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland. It lies along the Słupia River, 11 miles (18 km) from the Baltic coast. A manufacturing centre producing mainly furniture for export, it is situated on the Gdynia-Szczecin railway line. The Museum of Middle Pomerania is a notable

  • Stoltenberg, Jens (prime minister of Norway and secretary-general of NATO)

    Jens Stoltenberg is a Norwegian Labour Party politician who served as prime minister of Norway (2000–01, 2005–13) and secretary-general (2014–24) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Stoltenberg, the son of politician and one-time foreign minister (1987–89) Thorvald Stoltenberg,

  • Stoltenhoff (island, Atlantic Ocean)

    Tristan da Cunha: 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, and Stoltenhoff are…

  • Stolypin land reform (Russian agricultural history)

    Stolypin land reform, (1906–17), measures undertaken by the Russian government to allow peasants to own land individually. Its aim was to encourage industrious peasants to acquire their own land, and ultimately to create a class of prosperous, conservative, small farmers that would be a stabilizing

  • Stolypin, Pyotr Arkadyevich (Russian statesman)

    Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin was a conservative statesman who, after the Russian Revolution of 1905, initiated far-reaching agrarian reforms to improve the legal and economic status of the peasantry as well as the general economy and political stability of imperial Russia. Appointed governor of the

  • Stolze, F. (German inventor)

    gas-turbine engine: Origins: …an 1872 patent granted to F. Stolze of Germany. Dubbed the fire turbine, his machine consisted of a multistage, axial-flow air compressor that was mounted on the same shaft as a multistage, reaction turbine. Air from the compressor passed through a heat exchanger, where it was heated by the turbine…

  • Stolze, Wilhelm (German stenographer)

    shorthand: Modern symbol systems: Wilhelm Stolze invented his system at about the same time as Gabelsberger and along similar lines. In 1885 Ferdinand Schrey, a Berlin merchant, attempted to simplify the Gabelsberger system. Sometime later the Stolze and Schrey methods were merged and became the leading system in Germany…

  • Stolze-Schrey shorthand (German shorthand system)

    shorthand: Modern symbol systems: …system of importance was the Stolze-Schrey method. Wilhelm Stolze invented his system at about the same time as Gabelsberger and along similar lines. In 1885 Ferdinand Schrey, a Berlin merchant, attempted to simplify the Gabelsberger system. Sometime later the Stolze and Schrey methods were merged and became the leading system…

  • Stölzel, Heinrich (German craftsman)

    wind instrument: Trumpet-type aerophones: About 1815, either Heinrich Stölzel or Friedrich Blühmel, both of Berlin, invented the valved orchestral horn. When the valve was opened by depressing a key, it deflected the airstream into extra tubing, changing the effective length of the tube and lowering its pitch. The two valves of the…

  • stoma (plant anatomy)

    stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally more numerous on the underside of leaves. They provide for the exchange of gases between the outside air and the branched system of interconnecting air canals within the leaf. A

  • stoma (medicine)

    speech: Substitutes for the larynx: …(breastbone), creating a permanent tracheal stoma (or aperture) through which the air enters and leaves the lungs. The oral cavity is reconnected directly to the esophagus. Having lost his pulmonary activator (air from the lungs) and laryngeal sound generator, such an alaryngeal patient is without a voice (aphonic) and becomes…

  • stomach (anatomy)

    stomach, saclike expansion of the digestive system, between the esophagus and the small intestine; it is located in the anterior portion of the abdominal cavity in most vertebrates. The stomach serves as a temporary receptacle for storage and mechanical distribution of food before it is passed into

  • stomach cancer (pathology)

    stomach cancer, a disease characterized by abnormal growth of cells in the stomach. The incidence of stomach cancer has decreased dramatically since the early 20th century in countries where refrigeration has replaced other methods of food preservation such as salting, smoking, and pickling.

  • stomach oil (biology)

    procellariiform: Stomach oil: Most tubinares, when handled or threatened, eject the oily contents of the stomach with some force. In some species, notably the cliff-nesting fulmars, this habit, a fear reaction that also serves to lighten the bird for flight, has been exploited as a defensive…

  • stomach poison (chemistry)

    insecticide: Modes of penetration: Stomach poisons have gradually been replaced by synthetic insecticides, which are less dangerous to humans and other mammals.

  • stomach pump (medicine)

    coma: …that may be treated by gastric lavage (stomach pump) in its early stages; alcohol combined with barbiturates is a common cause of coma in suicide attempts. Large doses of barbiturates alone will also produce coma by suppressing cerebral blood flow, thus causing anoxia. Gastric lavage soon after the drug is…

  • stomach ulcer (pathology)

    peptic ulcer: …men than in women, but stomach ulcers affect women more frequently. The symptoms of gastric and duodenal ulcer are similar and include a gnawing, burning ache and hungerlike pain in the mid-upper abdomen, usually experienced from one to three hours after meals and several hours after retiring.

  • stomacher (garment)

    stomacher, ornamental garment worn at the front of the upper body by men and women from the end of the 15th until the late 18th century. At the end of the 15th century, men’s jackets often had a V-opening allowing for a decorative front-piece, or stomacher, and women’s gowns were laced over an open

  • stomacher brooch (ornament)

    jewelry: 17th century: …form spread throughout Europe: the stomacher brooch, which covered a woman’s entire bodice, from neckline to waist. With its heavily bejeweled composition of scrolls, leaves, and pendants on a gold framework that followed the curves of the body, even extending under the armpits, this jewel usually contained no fewer than…