- sand food (plant)
Lennooideae: … occur in southwestern North America: sand food (P. sonorae) and desert Christmas tree (P. arenarium). The succulent underground stems of sand food were used as food by Native Americans in what is now Arizona.
- sand food subfamily (plant subfamily)
Lennooideae, the sand food subfamily of the family Boraginaceae, composed of two genera and four species of parasitic plants. The unusual plants inhabit desert regions in Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, and the southwestern United States, and many are considered rare. Though formerly treated as its
- sand fox (mammal)
fox: Classification: rueppelli (sand fox) Big-eared fox of the deserts of northern Africa southward to Sudan; also found in Saudi Arabia and southwestern Asia; weight usually 2 or 3 kg, length to 80 cm, including tail; coat sandy or silvery gray with black patches on the face. V.…
- sand fulgurite (mineral)
fulgurite: Sand fulgurites, the more common, are branching, more or less cylindrical tubes that are about one centimetre (one-half inch) to several centimetres in diameter; they are commonly less than 3 metres (10 feet) long but sometimes reach 20 m (66 ft). The central cavity is…
- sand gazelle (mammal)
gazelle: Asian gazelles: gazella), the goitred, or sand, gazelle (G. subgutturosa), the Arabian gazelle (G. arabica; now extinct), the Saudi gazelle (G. saudiya; now extinct in the wild), the Queen of Sheba’s gazelle (G. bilkis; now extinct), and the dorcas gazelle (G. dorcas). The dorcas gazelle also ranges into North…
- sand grouse (bird)
sandgrouse, (order Pteroclidiformes), any of 16 species of birds of Asian and African deserts. According to some systems of classification, sandgrouse are ranked with the plovers within the order Charadriiformes. Sandgrouses are about 22 to 40 cm (about 9 to 16 inches) long and have gray or brown
- Sand Hills (region, Nebraska, United States)
Sand Hills, region of grass-covered, stabilized sand dunes in the High Plains of north-central Nebraska, U.S. Extending 265 miles (425 km) across Nebraska and a portion of southern South Dakota, it covers some 19,300 square miles (50,000 square km). It lies mostly to the north of the Platte and
- sand hopper (crustacean)
sand flea, any of more than 60 terrestrial crustaceans of the family Talitridae (order Amphipoda) that are notable for their hopping ability. The European sand flea (Talitrus saltator), which is about 1.5 cm (0.6 inch) long, lives on sand beaches near the high-tide mark, remaining buried in the
- Sand Island (island, Pacific Ocean)
Midway Islands: …two main islands—Eastern (Green) and Sand islands. Its total land area is 2.4 square miles (6.2 square km). The climate is subtropical, with cool and wet winters and warm and dry summers.
- Sand Island (United States territory, Pacific Ocean)
Johnston Atoll, unincorporated territory of the United States in the central Pacific Ocean, about 825 miles (1,330 km) southwest of Honolulu. It consists of four small islands on a raised coral atoll formation that are partially enclosed on the north and west by a 7.5-mile (12-km) semicircular
- sand lance (fish)
sand lance, any of about 18 species of marine fishes of the family Ammodytidae (order Perciformes). Sand lances are slim, elongated, usually silver fishes especially abundant in northern seas. Although eel-like in shape and movement, they are not true eels. The species range from about 20 to 46
- sand love grass (plant)
love grass: sand love grass (E. trichodes), and weeping love grass (E. curvula) are forage species in southern North America. Weeping love grass, native to South Africa, was introduced elsewhere as an ornamental and later was used to reclaim abandoned or eroded areas formerly under cultivation. Stink…
- sand martin (bird)
martin: The sand martin, or bank swallow (Riparia riparia), a 12-centimetre (5-inch) brown and white bird, breeds throughout the Northern Hemisphere; it makes nest burrows in sandbanks. The house martin (Delichon urbica), blue-black above and white-rumped, is common in Europe. The African river martin (Pseudochelidon eurystomina) of…
- sand mountain
sand mountain, isolated mountain of sand formed in an open desert area by the action of strong winds blowing from various directions. These huge accumulations of sand may reach up to 300 metres (1,000 feet) in height in Saudi Arabia and in the Namib Desert. They generally remain stable for
- sand painting
sand painting, type of art that exists in highly developed forms among the Navajo and Pueblo Indians of the American Southwest and in simpler forms among several Plains and California Indian tribes. Although sand painting is an art form, it is valued among the Indians primarily for religious rather
- Sand Pebbles, The (film by Wise [1966])
The Sand Pebbles, American war film, released in 1966, that proved controversial for its parallels to the ongoing Vietnam War (1954–75). Steve McQueen earned his only Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of an alienated and disillusioned sailor. The Sand Pebbles opens in 1926 as China is
- Sand Point (Florida, United States)
Titusville, city, seat (1879) of Brevard county, east-central Florida, U.S., about 35 miles (55 km) east of Orlando. The city, on the Intracoastal Waterway, is situated on the west bank of the Indian River (a lagoon separated from the Atlantic Ocean by barrier islands) and is linked (via a causeway
- sand quillwort (plant)
quillwort: Major species: Sand quillwort (I. histrix), an inconspicuous terrestrial European species, has very narrow 5–7-cm (2–3-inch-) long leaves that curl back to the ground from a fat white tufted base.
- sand rat (rodent)
sand rat, either of two species of gerbils in the genus
- sand reed (plant)
beach grass, (genus Ammophila), genus of two species of sand-binding plants in the grass family (Poaceae). American beach grass (Ammophila breviligulata) grows along the Atlantic coast and in the Great Lakes region of North America. European beach grass (A. arenaria) is native to temperate coasts
- Sand River (river, Zimbabwe)
Precambrian: Structure and occurrence of granulite-gneiss belts: …strip between greenstone-granite belts, the Sand River gneisses that occupy a small area between greenstone-granite belts in Zimbabwe, and the Napier Complex in Enderby Land in Antarctica. Granulite-gneiss belts are commonly surrounded by younger, mostly Proterozoic belts that contain remobilized relicts of the Archean rocks, and the granulites and gneisses…
- Sand River and Bloemfontein conventions (South African history)
Sand River and Bloemfontein conventions, conventions of 1852 and 1854, respectively, between Great Britain and the Voortrekkers (Boers), who after 1835 had invaded the interior of Southern Africa north of the Orange River as part of the Great Trek. The conventions guaranteed their right to govern
- sand sea (desert feature)
erg, in a desert region, area of large accumulation of sand, generally in the bottom of a huge basin in which a former river piled up alluvium. Ergs are areas of actively shifting dunes, “fossilized” dunes, or extensive sand sheets. The sand is generally loose and is extremely difficult to cross.
- sand shark (fish)
sand shark, any of three species of sharks of the genera Carcharias and Odontaspis in the family Odontaspididae. Sand sharks are found mainly in shallow water, usually at or near the bottom, along tropical and temperate ocean coastlines. They range from about 2.2 to 4.5 metres (7.2 to 14.8 feet) in
- sand sheet (geology)
sedimentary rock: Formation of sandstones today: …comes from detailed study of sand bodies forming at the present time. One of the clues to origin is the overall shape of the entire sand deposit. Inland desert sands today cover vast areas as a uniform blanket; some ancient sandstones in beds a few hundred metres thick but 1,600…
- sand shrimp (crustacean)
shrimp: The common European shrimp, or sand shrimp, Crangon vulgaris (Crago septemspinosus), occurs in coastal waters on both sides of the North Atlantic and grows to about 8 cm (3 inches); it is gray or dark brown with brown or reddish spots. The shrimp Peneus setiferus feeds on small plants and…
- sand skink (lizard)
skink: Sand skinks (Scincus), also called sandfish, run across and “swim” through windblown sand aided by fringes of scales on their toes. Their countersunk lower jaw, scales that partially cover the ear openings, specialized nasal openings, and fringes on the eyelids allow them to move through…
- sand smelt (fish)
silversides, any of several species of small slim schooling fish of the family Atherinidae (order Atheriniformes), found in freshwater and along coasts around the world in warm and temperate regions. Silversides are named for the wide silvery stripe usually present on each side. They have two
- Sand Springs (Oklahoma, United States)
Sand Springs, city, Tulsa county, northeastern Oklahoma, U.S., near a spring in the Osage Hills. First settled in 1833 by Creek Indians, who called it Adams Springs after U.S. President John Quincy Adams, the area was renamed Sand Springs by oilman Charles Page, who bought land on the site and
- sand stargazer (fish)
stargazer: …(electric stargazers) and Dactyloscopidae (sand stargazers), both of the order Perciformes. Stargazers habitually bury themselves in the bottom. They have tapered bodies and big, heavy, flat heads. Their mouths slant vertically, their lips are fringed, and their eyes are on top of the head (hence the common name).
- sand table (metallurgy)
mineral processing: Gravity separation: …spirals or impact forces on shaking tables. Spirals consist of a vertical spiral channel with an oval cross section. As the pulp flows from the top to the bottom of the channel, heavier particles concentrate on the inner side of the stream, where they can be removed through special openings.…
- sand tiger (fish family)
sand tiger shark, any of three species of sharks classified in the genera Carcharias and Odontaspis in family Odontaspididae (order Lamniformes), named for their predatory habits and tendency to frequent inshore habitats in tropical and temperate oceans worldwide. The name sand tiger shark
- sand tiger shark (fish family)
sand tiger shark, any of three species of sharks classified in the genera Carcharias and Odontaspis in family Odontaspididae (order Lamniformes), named for their predatory habits and tendency to frequent inshore habitats in tropical and temperate oceans worldwide. The name sand tiger shark
- sand trap (golf)
golf: Procedure: …putting green are obstacles called bunkers, depressions filled with sand (sand traps). Some holes require the player to cross streams or ponds. Both bunkers and bodies of water are termed hazards.
- sand volcano (geology)
soil liquefaction: Liquefaction may also contribute to sand blows, which are also known as sand boils or sand volcanoes. Sand blows often accompany the liquefaction of sandy or silty soil. With the collapse of the soil’s granular structure, the density of the soil increases. This increased pressure squeezes the water out of…
- sand wasp (insect)
sand wasp, (tribe Bembicini), any of a group of wasps in the subfamily Bembicinae (family Crabronidae, order Hymenoptera) that are solitary, stout-bodied insects about 2 to 2.5 cm (about 0.8 to 1 inch) long. The horse-guard (Bembix carolina) of the southern United States often hunts for flies
- sand wedge (golf club)
Gene Sarazen: …golf club known as the sand wedge. This specialized club allows golfers to more easily hit out of sand traps (bunkers). The introduction of the sand wedge to the game lowered scores and eventually led to the redesign of many golf courses in order to keep them at their previous…
- Sand, George (French novelist)
George Sand was a French Romantic writer known primarily for her so-called rustic novels. She was brought up at Nohant, near La Châtre in Berry, the country home of her grandmother. There she gained the profound love and understanding of the countryside that were to inform most of her works. In
- Sand, Karl (German radical and assassin)
Carlsbad Decrees: …the dramatist August Kotzebue by Karl Sand, a member of a radical student organization—to persuade the German governments to combine for the suppression of liberal and nationalistic tendencies within their states. The conference agreed to Metternich’s urgent disciplinary measures. He proposed that (1) the Diet of the German Confederation (Bund)…
- Sand, the (desert, Arabia)
Rubʿ al-Khali, vast desert region in the southern Arabian Peninsula, constituting the largest portion of the Arabian Desert. It covers an area of about 250,000 square miles (650,000 square km) in a structural basin lying mainly in southeastern Saudi Arabia, with lesser portions in Yemen, Oman, and
- sand-lime brick
brick and tile: Sand-lime brick: Sand-lime brick is a product that uses lime instead of cement. It is usually a white brick made of lime and selected sands, cast in molds and cured. Production is limited, with greater use in the United States and Germany.
- Sand-Reckoner, The (work by Archimedes)
Aristarchus of Samos: Archimedes said in his Sand-Reckoner that Aristarchus had proposed a new theory which, if true, would make the universe vastly larger than was then believed. (This is because a moving Earth should produce a parallax, or annual shift, in the apparent positions of the fixed stars, unless the stars…
- sandae (Korean theater)
South Korea: The arts: …own local versions of the sandae masked play and dances. Today the sandae is performed by villagers in Gyeonggi and South Gyeongsang provinces as well as in parts of North Korea. Performers are males. Masks cover either the whole head or the face and are made from paper or gourds…
- sandae togamgug (Korean theater)
South Korea: The arts: …own local versions of the sandae masked play and dances. Today the sandae is performed by villagers in Gyeonggi and South Gyeongsang provinces as well as in parts of North Korea. Performers are males. Masks cover either the whole head or the face and are made from paper or gourds…
- Sandage, Allan (American astronomer)
Allan Sandage was an American astronomer who led an extensive effort to determine Hubble’s constant, the rate at which the universe is expanding. He also did important early work on quasi-stellar radio sources (quasars), very distant starlike objects that can be strong emitters of radio waves.
- Sandage, Allan Rex (American astronomer)
Allan Sandage was an American astronomer who led an extensive effort to determine Hubble’s constant, the rate at which the universe is expanding. He also did important early work on quasi-stellar radio sources (quasars), very distant starlike objects that can be strong emitters of radio waves.
- sandai-hihō (Buddhism)
Nichiren Buddhism: …this concept, known as the sandai-hihō (“three great secret laws [or mysteries]”). The first, the honzon, is the chief object of worship in Nichiren temples and is a ritual drawing showing the name of the Lotus Sutra surrounded by the names of divinities mentioned in the sutra (discourse of the…
- Sandakan (Malaysia)
Sandakan, city and port, eastern Sabah, East Malaysia, northeastern Borneo. It is located on an inlet of the Sulu Sea, near the mouth of the Kinabatangan River, on the heavily indented east coast. The capital of British North Borneo (now Sabah) until 1947, it is the commercial heart of the state.
- Sandakinduru Katava (Ceylonese dance-drama)
South Asian arts: Masked drama: …plays are especially famous: the Sandakinduru Katava and the Gothayimbala Katava. The former deals with the legendary idyllic love between a half-human, half-bird couple singing and dancing in a forest. The King of Banaras comes hunting and, attracted by the beautiful Kinduri, kills her husband and makes advances to her.…
- sandal (footwear)
sandal, type of footwear consisting of a sole secured to the foot by straps over the instep, toes, or ankle. The oldest known example of a sandal dates from about 10,900 years before the present, is made of sagebrush bark, and comes from what is now the U.S. state of Oregon. Sandals have also been
- sandalwood (plant)
sandalwood, (genus Santalum), genus of about 25 species of semiparasitic plants of the family Santalaceae, especially the fragrant wood of the true, or white, sandalwood, Santalum album. The group is distributed throughout southeastern Asia, Australia, and islands of the South Pacific. A true
- Sandalwood (island, Indonesia)
Sumba, island, one of the Lesser Sunda Islands, southern Nusa Tenggara Timur provinsi (East Nusa Tenggara province), southern Indonesia, in the Indian Ocean across the Sumba Strait from Flores and west of Timor across the Savu Sea. Sumba has an area of 4,306 square miles (11,153 square km) and
- Sandalwood Death (novel by Mo Yan)
Mo Yan: …the novels Tanxiang xing (2001; Sandalwood Death), Shengsi pilao (2006; Life and Death Are Wearing Me Out), and Wa (2009; Frog). Wan shu de ren (2020; A Late Bloomer) contains 12 novellas.
- Sandalwood English (language)
bêche-de-mer: The term Bêche-de-Mer has also come to designate the pidgin English language spoken in these regions.
- sandalwood family (plant family)
Santalaceae, the sandalwood family (order Santalales), which includes about 44 genera and more than 1,000 species of semiparasitic shrubs, herbs, and trees, distributed in tropical and temperate regions. The majority of the Santalaceae are root parasites; the others are stem parasites. In some
- Sandalwood Island (island, Fiji)
Vanua Levu Island, second largest island of Fiji, bordering the Koro Sea in the South Pacific Ocean, 40 miles (64 km) northeast of the island of Viti Levu. Sighted by the Dutch navigator Abel Janszoon Tasman in 1643, the volcanic Vanua Levu (“Great Land”) was formerly called Sandalwood Island. It
- sandalwood order (plant order)
Santalales, the sandalwood order of flowering plants, consisting of 7 or 14 families, 151 genera, and about 1,990 species. All the families in Santalales are parasitic to some degree, attaching to either roots or branches of their hosts. They include Santalaceae, Loranthaceae, Balanophoraceae,
- sandarac (resin)
sandarac, brittle, faintly aromatic, translucent resin, usually available in the form of small, pale yellow, dusty tears; it is used as incense and in making a spirit varnish for coating paper, leather, and metal. The initial film is brittle, but it can readily be modified to yield elastic films by
- sandarach (resin)
sandarac, brittle, faintly aromatic, translucent resin, usually available in the form of small, pale yellow, dusty tears; it is used as incense and in making a spirit varnish for coating paper, leather, and metal. The initial film is brittle, but it can readily be modified to yield elastic films by
- Sandawe (people)
Sandawe, a people living near Kondoa, Tanzania, between the Bubu and Mponde rivers, and speaking one of the three branches of the Khoisan languages. Many aspects of their culture show the influence of their Bantu neighbours. Their isolated wooden houses with roofs of clay are built in the lee of
- Sandawe language
Khoisan languages: Classification of the Khoisan languages: Sandawe of Tanzania has a distant relationship to the Central group, but the place of Hadza even in relation to Sandawe has always been unclear; and the status of Kwadi, an extinct language of Namibe (formerly Moçâmedes) in southwestern Angola, remains uncertain. Kwadi may be…
- Sanday, Edgar (prime minister of France)
Edgar Faure was a French lawyer and politician, premier (1952, 1955–56), and a prominent Gaullist during the Fifth Republic. The son of a military doctor, Faure studied Russian at the Paris School of Eastern Languages, later graduating from the Paris faculty of law and practicing in the capital.
- Sanday, William (British biblical scholar)
William Sanday was a New Testament scholar, one of the pioneers in introducing to English students and the Anglican world the mass of work done by continental scholars in biblical criticism, particularly through his principal writings, Commentary on Romans (1895, with Arthur C. Headlam), and
- sandbank model (astronomy)
comet: The modern era: … observed on Earth, the “sandbank” model suggested that a comet was simply a cloud of meteoritic particles held together by its own gravity. Interplanetary gases were adsorbed on the surfaces of the dust grains and escaped when the comet came close to the Sun and the particles were heated.…
- sandbar (geology)
sandbar, submerged or partly exposed ridge of sand or coarse sediment that is built by waves offshore from a beach. The swirling turbulence of waves breaking off a beach excavates a trough in the sandy bottom. Some of this sand is carried forward onto the beach and the rest is deposited on the
- Sandberg, Inger (Swedish author)
children’s literature: National and modern literature: The Sandbergs, Inger and Lasse, have advanced the Beskow tradition in a series of lovely picture books. Fantasy has been well served by Lindgren, Edith Unnerstad, Holmberg, Hellsing, and others. Children’s poetry is a lively contemporary art, one distinguished poet being Britt G. Hallqvist.
- Sandberg, Lasse (Swedish author)
children’s literature: National and modern literature: The Sandbergs, Inger and Lasse, have advanced the Beskow tradition in a series of lovely picture books. Fantasy has been well served by Lindgren, Edith Unnerstad, Holmberg, Hellsing, and others. Children’s poetry is a lively contemporary art, one distinguished poet being Britt G. Hallqvist.
- Sandberg, Ryne (American baseball player)
Chicago Cubs: …Billy Williams (1959–74); second baseman Ryne Sandberg (1982–94, 1996–97); pitcher Ferguson (“Fergie”) Jenkins (1966–73, 1982–83); and third baseman Ron Santo (1960–73).
- Sandberg, Sheryl (American business executive)
Sheryl Sandberg is an American technology executive who was the chief operating officer (COO) of the social networking company Facebook from 2008 to 2022. Sandberg sat on Facebook’s (now Meta) board of directors starting in 2012 and announced her departure from the board in January 2024. Although
- Sandberg, Sheryl Kara (American business executive)
Sheryl Sandberg is an American technology executive who was the chief operating officer (COO) of the social networking company Facebook from 2008 to 2022. Sandberg sat on Facebook’s (now Meta) board of directors starting in 2012 and announced her departure from the board in January 2024. Although
- Sandbian Stage (stratigraphy)
Sandbian Stage, first of three internationally defined stages of the Upper Ordovician Series, encompassing all rocks deposited during the Sandbian Age (458.4 million to 453 million years ago) of the Ordovician Period. In 2002 the International Commission on Stratigraphy established the Global
- Sandbox (missile)
rocket and missile system: Antiship: The SS-N-12 Sandbox, introduced in the 1970s on the Kiev-class antisubmarine carriers, was apparently an improved Shaddock. The SS-N-19 Shipwreck, a small, vertically launched, flip-out wing supersonic missile with a range of about 390 miles, appeared in the 1980s.
- sandbox tree (plant)
sandbox tree, (Hura crepitans), large tree in the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae) native through most of tropical America. The sandbox tree is among the largest trees of tropical America and is interesting for its pumpkin-shaped seed capsules that explode with a loud report, scattering the seeds.
- Sandbox, The (play by Albee)
The Sandbox, one-act play by Edward Albee, published in 1959 (with The Death of Bessie Smith) and produced in 1960. It is a trenchant satire on false values and the lack of love and empathy in the American family. For his expanded one-act play The American Dream (1961), Albee used the characters he
- sandbur (plant genus)
sandbur, (genus Cenchrus), genus of about 20 to 25 species of grasses native to warm sandy areas of North America, North Africa, Asia, Europe, and the South Pacific. The plants can be used for forage when young, but they later form rounded sharp-spined burs that can catch on the coats of or scratch
- Sandburg’s Lincoln (American television miniseries)
Hal Holbrook: Abraham Lincoln in the miniseries Sandburg’s Lincoln(1974–76); the role earned him one of five career Emmy Awards. He also appeared on such television shows as The West Wing, The Sopranos, ER, Sons of Anarchy, and Grey’s Anatomy. His most notable film roles included Deep Throat in All the President’s Men…
- Sandburg, Carl (American poet and historian)
Carl Sandburg was an American poet, historian, novelist, and folklorist. From the age of 11, Sandburg worked in various occupations—as a barbershop porter, a milk truck driver, a brickyard hand, and a harvester in the Kansas wheat fields. When the Spanish-American War broke out in 1898, he enlisted
- sanddab (fish)
sanddab, any of certain edible, American Pacific flatfishes of the genus Citharichthys (family Paralichthyidae). As in other flatfishes, sanddabs have both eyes on the same side of the head; as in other paralichthyids, the eyes are usually on the left side. The most common species of sanddab is the
- Sande (African secret society)
African religions: Ritual and religious specialists: The Sande secret society of the Mande-speaking peoples is an important example, because its religious vision and political power extend across Liberia, Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire, and Guinea. The Sande initiate girls by teaching them domestic skills and sexual etiquette, as well as the religious significance…
- Sande, Earl (American jockey)
Earl Sande was a U.S. jockey who won the Kentucky Derby three times. One of his Derby-winning mounts, Gallant Fox in 1930, also won the Preakness and the Belmont Stakes, thereby gaining the coveted U.S. Triple Crown. Besides Gallant Fox, Sande’s other Kentucky Derby winners were Zev in 1923 and
- Sandeau, Jules (French author)
Léonard-Sylvain-Julien Sandeau was a prolific French novelist, best remembered for his collaborations with more famous writers. As a young man, Sandeau became the lover of Amandine-Aurore-Lucie Dudevant (later known as George Sand) and worked with her on the novel Rose et Blanche (1831; “Red and
- Sandeau, Léonard-Sylvain-Julien (French author)
Léonard-Sylvain-Julien Sandeau was a prolific French novelist, best remembered for his collaborations with more famous writers. As a young man, Sandeau became the lover of Amandine-Aurore-Lucie Dudevant (later known as George Sand) and worked with her on the novel Rose et Blanche (1831; “Red and
- Sandefjord (Norway)
Sandefjord, town, southeastern Norway. Located near the mouth of the Oslo Fjord at the head of Sandefjord Fjord, an inlet of the Skagerrak, Sandefjord was established in the 14th century, and it received its charter in 1845. In the early 1900s it became one of the world’s major whaling centres, but
- Sandel, Cora (Norwegian author)
Norwegian literature: The 20th century: …one of several writers—among them Cora Sandel and Aksel Sandemose—who opened new horizons for Norwegian prose before and after World War II, each in distinctive ways. Vesaas, who wrote in Nynorsk, has been called Norway’s most provincial international writer: his works are firmly rooted in the Norwegian countryside, but their…
- Sandel, Michael (American philosopher)
communitarianism: Varieties of communitarianism: … and the American political theorist Michael Sandel were among the most prominent scholars of this brand of communitarianism. Other political theorists and philosophers who were often cited as communitarians in this sense, or whose work exhibited elements of such communitarian thinking, included Shlomo Avineri, Seyla Benhabib, Avner de-Shalit, Jean Bethke…
- Sandelin Museum (museum, Saint-Omer, France)
Saint-Omer: The Sandelin Museum, housing a collection of ceramics and Flemish paintings, is in an elegant 18th-century building. The town was heavily damaged during World Wars I and II.
- Sandeman, Robert (Scottish minister)
Robert Sandeman was a British cleric and leader of the Glasite (later called Sandemanian) sect, dissenters from the established Presbyterian Church. From 1736 to 1744 Sandeman was a linen manufacturer. He married (1737) Catherine, daughter of John Glas, who founded the Glasites. Sandeman became an
- Sandemanian (Protestant sect)
Sandemanian, member of a Christian sect founded in about 1730 in Scotland by John Glas (1695–1773), a Presbyterian minister in the Church of Scotland. Glas concluded that there was no support in the New Testament for a national church because the kingdom of Christ is essentially spiritual. He also
- Sandemose, Aksel (Norwegian novelist)
Aksel Sandemose was a Danish-born Norwegian experimental novelist whose works frequently elucidate the theme that the repressions of society lead to violence. Sandemose went to sea in his teens, jumped ship in Newfoundland, and worked in a lumber camp before returning to Denmark with memories of
- sander (tool)
sander, portable power tool used for smoothing, polishing, or cleaning a surface, as of wood, plastic, or metal. Sanders are also used to roughen surfaces in preparation for finishing. There are three main types of power sanders: the disk sander, the belt sander, and the orbital sander. In the disk
- Sander vitreus (fish)
walleyed pike, fish that is a type of pikeperch
- Sander, August (German photographer)
August Sander was a German photographer who attempted to produce a comprehensive photographic document of the German people. The son of a mining carpenter, Sander apprenticed as a miner in 1889. Acquiring his first camera in 1892, he took up photography as a hobby and, after military service,
- Sander, Heidemarie Jiline (German fashion designer)
Jil Sander is a German fashion designer and founder of the Jil Sander label, noted for her luxurious understated clothing and influence on minimalist fashion. After graduating in 1963 from a textile-engineering school in Krefeld, Germany, Sander worked for a time in fashion journalism, first at
- Sander, Jil (German fashion designer)
Jil Sander is a German fashion designer and founder of the Jil Sander label, noted for her luxurious understated clothing and influence on minimalist fashion. After graduating in 1963 from a textile-engineering school in Krefeld, Germany, Sander worked for a time in fashion journalism, first at
- Sander, Nicholas (English scholar)
Nicholas Sanders was an English Roman Catholic scholar, controversialist, and historian of the English Reformation. He was educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford, at which university he became a lecturer in canon law. He left England shortly after the accession of Elizabeth I in order to be
- sanderling (bird)
sanderling, (Calidris alba; sometimes Crocethia alba), abundant shorebird, a worldwide species of sandpiper belonging to the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). Sanderlings nest on barrens near the sea around the North Pole, and they winter on sandy beaches virtually everywhere. About 20
- Sanders of the River (film by Korda [1935])
Zoltan Korda: He then helmed the drama Sanders of the River (1935), which starred Paul Robeson as an African chief and Nina Mae McKinney as his queen. Zoltan and his brother argued over the film’s portrayal of colonialism, and Alexander, as the producer, ultimately edited the movie so that it glorified the…
- Sanders, Alexander (American Wiccan leader)
Wicca: Origins and development: …these occultists was the Englishman Alexander Sanders (1926–88), who founded Alexandrian Wicca, and the California-based Victor Anderson (1917–2001) and Cora Anderson (1915–2008), who spearheaded the Feri tradition. By the 1960s the word Wicca had emerged as a general term for this new religion, although there was some internal contestation as…
- Sanders, Ashton (American actor)
Moonlight: …act, Chiron (now played by Ashton Sanders) is in high school, where he is bullied by Terrel (Patrick Decile). His mother has sunk deeper into addiction, and he continues to be cared for by Teresa, though his mentor Juan is dead. One night on the beach, Chiron has a sexual…
- Sanders, B. (Danish manufacturer)
button: …as the stamped-steel type by B. Sanders, a Danish manufacturer in England. The two shells, thin metal disks enclosing a small piece of cloth or pasteboard, were crimped together on the edges. Sanders also originated the canvas shank. By 1830 fabric-covered buttons were being made mechanically. Also coming into use…