• Undine (work by Schreiner)

    Olive Schreiner: …she wrote two semiautobiographical novels, Undine (published 1928) and The Story of an African Farm (1883), and began From Man to Man (1926), at which she worked intermittently for 40 years but never finished.

  • Undine (work by Fouqué)

    Friedrich Heinrich Karl de la Motte, Baron Fouqué: …of the popular fairy tale Undine (1811).

  • undine (mythology)

    undine, mythological figure of European tradition, a water nymph who becomes human when she falls in love with a man but is doomed to die if he is unfaithful to her. Derived from the Greek figures known as Nereids, attendants of the sea god Poseidon, Ondine was first mentioned in the writings of

  • undisclosed agency

    agency: Disclosed and undisclosed agency: Continental European laws restrict the application of agency rules to cases where the agent acts openly in another’s name. Thus, French jurists infer from article 1984 of their Civil Code, according to which agency is the act of the agent pour le mandant…

  • Undiscovered Country (play by Stoppard)

    Tom Stoppard: … (1978), Night and Day (1978), Undiscovered Country (1980, adapted from a play by Arthur Schnitzler), and On the Razzle (1981, adapted from a play by Johann Nestroy). The Tony-winning The Real Thing (1982), Stoppard’s first romantic comedy, deals with art and reality and features a playwright as a protagonist. Arcadia,…

  • Undivine Comedy, The (work by Krasiński)

    Zygmunt Krasiński: In Nieboska komedia (1835; The Undivine Comedy) he presents a future struggle between the masses and the privileged that represents the first literary expression of class war. In his second important play, Irydion (1836; Eng. trans. Irydion)—the story of a Greek named Irydion who seeks vengeance on imperial Rome—Krasiński…

  • UNDOF (United Nations)

    Golan Heights: History: …Golan Heights, monitored by a UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF). The UNDOF mandate was renewed every six months thereafter.

  • Undoing Project: A Friendship that Changed Our Minds, The (work by Lewis)

    Michael Lewis: Human behavior, the pandemic, and beyond: Next Lewis wrote The Undoing Project: A Friendship that Changed Our Minds(2017), a window into the partnership between Israeli-born psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky and their revolutionary contributions to the field of behavioral economics—the interdisciplinary study of economic theory and other disciplines, such as biology and sociology,…

  • Undoing, The (American television miniseries)

    Hugh Grant: Later roles: In the miniseries The Undoing (2020), Grant was cast as a charming doctor whose secrets are exposed when he becomes a suspect in a murder. He then appeared with Timothée Chalamet in Wonka (2023), a family comedy inspired by Roald Dahl’s books about candy maker Willie Wonka. While…

  • Undone (poetry by Goyette)

    Sue Goyette: Mid-career: Goyette’s 2004 poetry collection Undone is divided into three sections: “Forgotten” deals with the aftermath of a marriage breakup; “Kindred” pays homage to other artists; and “Apprentice” celebrates beginning anew. “A Version of Courage” poignantly describes the seismic nature of human pain:

  • UNDP (international program)

    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations (UN) organization formed in 1965 to help countries eliminate poverty and achieve sustainable human development, an approach to economic growth that emphasizes improving the quality of life of all citizens while conserving the environment

  • Undset, Sigrid (Norwegian author)

    Sigrid Undset was a Norwegian novelist who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1928. She is best known for her trilogy Kristin Lavransdatter (1920–22), which is considered a masterpiece of Norwegian literature. Undset’s father, Ingvald Martin Undset, was an archaeologist, and her home life

  • unducted fan (engineering)

    jet engine: Turboprops, propfans, and unducted fan engines: …engine layout, identified as the unducted fan (or UDF; trademark), provides a set of very high-efficiency counter-rotating propeller blades, each blade mounted on one of either of two sets of counter-rotating low-pressure turbine stages and achieving all the advantages of the arrangement without the use of a gearbox.

  • undue influence (law)

    inheritance: Invalid wills: …if he acted under “undue influence”—i.e., coercion—or under fraud. It is difficult, however, to break a will upon such grounds. The courts, especially those of Anglo-American systems, demand strict proof that the testator, when he made the provision, was mentally unable to know what he owned or who were…

  • undulant fever (pathology)

    brucellosis, infectious disease of humans and domestic animals characterized by an insidious onset of fever, chills, sweats, weakness, pains, and aches, all of which resolve within three to six months. The disease was initially referred to as Malta fever, having been observed first in the 1850s

  • undulipodia (biology)

    cilium, short eyelashlike filament that is numerous on tissue cells of most animals and provides the means for locomotion of protozoans of the phylum Ciliophora. Cilia may be fused in short transverse rows to form membranelles or in tufts to form cirri. Capable of beating in unison, cilia move

  • Undun (song by Bachman)

    the Guess Who: International success: …hit singles “Laughing” and “Undun.” It was the next album, American Woman (1970), however, that made the Guess Who stars. Its title track, the first recording by a Canadian rock group to hit No. 1 in the United States on the Billboard Hot 100, had serendipitous origins, beginning as…

  • Undur Khan (Mongolia)

    Öndörhaan, town, eastern Mongolia. Situated on the Kerulen River, 180 miles (290 km) east of Ulaanbaatar, the town lies at a major junction of transportation routes between Ulaanbaatar and Choybalsan. Coal mining is economically important; the coalfield in the Mörön River valley, 50 miles (80 km)

  • Une (chemical element)

    meitnerium (Mt), an artificially produced element belonging to the transuranium group, atomic number 109. It is predicted to have chemical properties resembling those of iridium. The element is named in honour of Austrian-born physicist Lise Meitner. In 1982 West German physicists at the Institute

  • UNE (political party, Guatemala)

    Guatemala: Political process: …early 21st century include the National Unity ofr Hope (Unión Nacional de Esperanza; UNE), the Patriotic Party (Partido Patriota; PP), the Grand National Alliance (Gran Alianza Nacional; GANA), and the Centre of Social Action (Centro de Acción Social; CASA), which represents the interests of Indigenous people. Generally, Guatemalan voters still…

  • Une de Mai (horse)

    harness racing: The decline and rise of harness racing.: The French trotting mare Une de Mai was at one time one of the leading money winning horses in purses.

  • Une Vie sans joie (work by Renoir)

    Jean Renoir: Early years: …was made into the film Catherine, or Une Vie sans joie (Catherine: A Joyless Life), in 1923, with his wife appearing under the name of Catherine Hessling. The first film Renoir directed was La Fille de l’eau (released 1924; Whirlpool of Fate), which again starred his wife. All of his…

  • Unea (island, Papua New Guinea)

    Witu Islands: …square miles [67 square km]), Unea (Merite; 11 square miles [28 square km]), and Mundua (2 square miles [5 square km]), as well as five smaller islands. Unea is the highest of the islands, rising to 1,939 feet (591 metres). Generally forested, the islands produce some copra and cocoa and…

  • Unearth (poetry by Auster)

    Paul Auster: …penned several verse volumes including Unearth (1974) and Wall Writing (1976) as well as the essay collections White Spaces (1980) and The Art of Hunger (1982).

  • UNEF (international organization)

    Egypt: The Nasser regime: …by the presence of the UNEF stationed on the Egyptian side. In the Arab summit conferences of 1964 and 1965, Nasser had counseled restraint, but in 1966 events eluded his control. Palestinian incursions against Israel were launched with greater frequency and intensity from bases in Jordan, Lebanon, and, especially, Syria.…

  • Unemployed Fortune Teller, The (work by Simic)

    Charles Simic: Another collection, The Unemployed Fortune Teller (1994), consists of 18 prose pieces. A Fly in the Soup (2000) is a memoir.

  • unemployment

    unemployment, the condition of one who is capable of working, actively seeking work, but unable to find any work. It is important to note that to be considered unemployed a person must be an active member of the labour force and in search of remunerative work. Underemployment is the term used to

  • unemployment compensation

    unemployment insurance, a form of social insurance (q.v.) designed to compensate certain categories of workers for unemployment that is involuntary and short-term. Unemployment insurance programs were created primarily to provide financial assistance to laid-off workers during a period deemed long

  • unemployment insurance

    unemployment insurance, a form of social insurance (q.v.) designed to compensate certain categories of workers for unemployment that is involuntary and short-term. Unemployment insurance programs were created primarily to provide financial assistance to laid-off workers during a period deemed long

  • unemployment rate

    unemployment rate, percentage of unemployed individuals in an economy among individuals currently in the labour force. It is calcuated as Unemployed IndividualsTotal Labour Force × 100 where unemployed individuals are those who are currently not working but are actively seeking work. The

  • Unemployment: A Problem of Industry (work by Beveridge of Tuggal)

    William Henry Beveridge, 1st Baron Beveridge: In Unemployment: A Problem of Industry (1909), Beveridge argued that unemployment was in large measure caused by the organization of industry. His revised views, set forth in Full Employment in a Free Society (1944), were strongly influenced by Keynesian economics. Beveridge’s most notable achievement came during…

  • UNEP (international program)

    United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), organization established in 1972 to guide and coordinate environmental activities within the United Nations (UN) system. UNEP promotes international cooperation on environmental issues, provides guidance to UN organizations, and, through its scientific

  • Unequal Schools, Unequal Chances: The Challenges to Equal Opportunity in the Americas (study edited by Reimers)

    education: The role of the state: Studies such as Unequal Schools, Unequal Chances: The Challenges to Equal Opportunity in the Americas, edited by Fernando Reimers (2000), identify measures governments have implemented with successful results. These can range from the provision of health care services and supplemental nutrition to improvements in school infrastructure that provide…

  • unequal treaty (Chinese history)

    unequal treaty, in Chinese history, any of a series of treaties and agreements in which China was forced to concede many of its territorial and sovereignty rights. They were negotiated during the 19th and early 20th centuries between China and foreign imperialist powers, especially Great Britain,

  • UNESCO (international organization)

    UNESCO, specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) that was outlined in a constitution signed November 16, 1945. The constitution, which entered into force in 1946, called for the promotion of international collaboration in education, science, and culture. The agency’s permanent headquarters are

  • UNESCO Biosphere Reserve (UNESCO)

    Everglades National Park: …Dry Tortugas National Park) a Biosphere Reserve in 1976 and a World Heritage site in 1979. The park’s area has been expanded several times, most recently in 1989. It encompasses 2,357 square miles (6,105 square km), including most of Florida Bay, and preserves a unique blend of temperate and tropical…

  • Unetician A (European culture)

    history of Europe: Changing centres of wealth: The earliest Bronze Age centre, Unetician A, consisted of a complex of flat inhumation graves with modest grave goods in copper and bronze that was found in Slovakia. During Unetician B this complex continued, spreading into Bohemia and much of Germany and Poland. In this process, the original centre was…

  • Unetician B (European culture)

    history of Europe: Changing centres of wealth: During Unetician B this complex continued, spreading into Bohemia and much of Germany and Poland. In this process, the original centre was complemented by a number of extremely rich graves on its periphery, such as at Leubingen, Helmsdorf, and Straubing in central Germany and Łęki Małe…

  • Unetician Culture (European culture)

    history of Europe: The chronology of the Metal Ages: …Late phases or into the Unetician, Tumulus, and Urnfield cultures. Synchronizations of the more detailed local subdivisions, which were based on typology of metal objects and cross-associations, have employed schemes of Paul Reinecke and Oscar Montelius. Oscar Montelius’ chronology was developed on the basis of Scandinavian bronze objects and resulted…

  • uneven parallel bars (gymnastics)

    uneven parallel bars, gymnastics apparatus developed in the 1930s and used in women’s competition. The length and construction were formerly the same as for the parallel bars used in men’s gymnastics. In the modern apparatus, the top bar is 2.55 meters (8.36 feet) above the floor, while the lower

  • unevenly-grained rock (geology)

    igneous rock: Fabric: Rocks that are unevenly grained, or inequigranular, are generally characterized either by a seriate fabric, in which the variation in grain size is gradual and essentially continuous, or by a porphyritic fabric, involving more than one distinct range of grain sizes. Both of these kinds of texture are…

  • UNEXIM (Russian bank)

    Mikhail Prokhorov: In 1993 the partners formed United Export Import Bank (UNEXIM), with Prokhorov as chairman and Potanin as president. In 1995 Potanin used his ministerial connections to create an arrangement whereby Russian banks would make loans to the struggling Russian government, which would put up its mining, oil, and telecommunications holdings…

  • unexpected hanging paradox (logic)

    logic puzzle: The unexpected hanging: …his forehead was smudged? A final example might be the paradox of the unexpected hanging, a remarkable puzzle that first became known by word of mouth in the early 1940s. One form of the paradox is the following: A prisoner has been sentenced on Saturday. The judge…

  • Unexpected Man, The (play by Reza)

    Yasmina Reza: …hit, L’Homme du hasard (1995; The Unexpected Man), was a two-character play set on a train traveling from Paris to Frankfurt. Following long monologues by a self-absorbed male author and his female seatmate and fan, the play ends with a brief dialogue between the two that centres on people’s need…

  • Unexpected medical bills? The No Surprises Act can keep you out of debt

    Medical bills can be confusing, especially if you sought care for an unexpected condition or injury. You could find yourself wary of opening bills and explanations of benefits (EOBs) that roll in afterward, especially if you’re discovering the care was considered out-of-network or otherwise

  • unexplained aerial phenomenon

    unidentified flying object (UFO), any aerial object or optical phenomenon not readily identifiable to the observer. UFOs became a major subject of interest following the development of rocketry after World War II and were thought by some researchers to be intelligent extraterrestrial life visiting

  • unexploded ordnance (weapon)

    Convention on Cluster Munitions: Unexploded ordnance (UXO) generated by cluster munitions, used extensively by NATO forces in the Kosovo conflict, resulted in more than 150 post-combat casualties. Reports by Human Rights Watch and the International Committee of the Red Cross found that an estimated 10 percent of the 289,000…

  • unfair competition (law)

    advertising fraud: Lanham Act and state laws: …one of two legal theories: unfair competition or commercial disparagement.

  • Unfaithful (film by Lyne [2002])

    Richard Gere: …2008 he reteamed with his Unfaithful (2002) costar Diane Lane in Nights in Rodanthe, a romantic drama based on a novel by Nicholas Sparks. Gere’s later films include Amelia (2009), a biopic about the American aviator Amelia Earhart (played by Hilary Swank), and the crime drama

  • Unfaithful, The (film by Sherman [1947])

    Vincent Sherman: Women’s pictures: Sheridan was also notable in The Unfaithful (1947), playing a woman who kills an intruder, allegedly in self-defense; it was loosely based on W. Somerset Maugham’s novel The Letter.

  • Unfaithfully Yours (film by Sturges [1948])

    Preston Sturges: Films of the mid-1940s to mid-1950s: At Twentieth Century-Fox Sturges made Unfaithfully Yours (1948), a dark comedy that defied Hollywood conventions for the genre and failed commerically as a consequence. Rex Harrison starred as a symphony conductor who suspects his wife (Linda Darnell) of cheating on him, and as he is conducting, he imagines three scenarios…

  • UNFCCC (international treaty)

    global warming policy: The UN Framework Convention and the Kyoto Protocol: …by two major treaties: the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) of 1992 and the associated 1997 Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCCC (named for the city in Japan where it was concluded).

  • UNFICYP (United Nations military force)

    Cyprus: Security: …peacekeeping troops in Cyprus (UNFICYP) who police the demilitarized zone that divides the country; the United Kingdom also maintains two sovereign military bases in Cyprus.

  • Unfiltered (American radio program)

    Rachel Maddow: …and soon became cohost of Unfiltered with Lizz Winstead and Chuck D. After that show’s cancellation in 2005, she was given her own, self-titled weekday show, which aired originally for one hour and later for two. She quickly built her reputation as an issue-oriented, fair-minded, left-leaning “policy wonk.” While continuing…

  • Unfinished Dance, The (film by Koster [1947])

    Henry Koster: Films of the 1940s: …Grayson, and Jimmy Durante, and The Unfinished Dance (1947), starring O’Brien as a dance student who idolizes a ballerina (Cyd Charisse); the latter marked the last time Koster worked with Pasternak. Leaving behind the light musicals that had thus far defined his career, Koster then made The Bishop’s Wife (1947).…

  • Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins (album by Lennon and Ono)

    Yoko Ono: Cut Piece, Bottoms, and other projects from the 1960s: …cover of their musique-concrète-based album Unfinished Music No. 1: Two Virgins (1968) controversially featured a photograph of them naked—and they wed the following year.

  • Unfinished Symphony (work by Schubert)

    Franz Schubert: Maturity of Franz Schubert: …time, destined to obscurity: the Symphony in B Minor (Unfinished), which speaks from Schubert’s heart. Two movements and a half-finished scherzo were completed in October and November 1822. In November of the same year Schubert composed a piano fantasia in which the variations are on a theme from his song…

  • unfolded protein response (cellular mechanism)

    endoplasmic reticulum: …signaling mechanism known as the unfolded protein response (UPR) is activated. The response is adaptive, such that UPR activation triggers reductions in protein synthesis and enhancements in ER protein-folding capacity and ER-associated protein degradation. If the adaptive response fails, cells are directed to undergo apoptosis (programmed cell death).

  • Unfolding, The (novel by Homes)

    A.M. Homes: …first novel in 10 years, The Unfolding. A political satire, it centres on a Republican who is upset that Democrat Barack Obama was elected president of the United States.

  • Unforgettable (film by Di Novi [2017])

    Katherine Heigl: In the thriller Unforgettable (2017) Heigl played a woman who terrorizes her ex-husband’s fiancée. In addition to her starring turns, she had roles in the ensemble romantic comedies New Year’s Eve (2011) and The Big Wedding (2013). She voiced a squirrel in the computer-animated comedy The Nut Job…

  • Unforgettable Fire, The (album by U2)

    Bono: U2: …had even greater success with The Unforgettable Fire in 1984. The next year, the band was approached by Jack Healy, head of Amnesty International USA, and was asked to join the “Conspiracy of Hope” tour to bring attention to human rights violations and encourage fans to fight them. Afterward Bono…

  • Unforgettable with Love (album by Cole)

    Natalie Cole: …1991 with the release of Unforgettable with Love, a double album that featured her father’s classics, including “Smile,” “The Very Thought of You,” and “Mona Lisa.” A commercial and critical success, it was Cole’s first album to reach number one and earned three Grammy Awards. The title track was digitally…

  • Unforgivable, The (film by Fingscheidt [2021])

    Sandra Bullock: Later work: In her next film, The Unforgivable (2021), Bullock portrayed a convicted murderer who searches for redemption and her younger sister after being released from prison. She returned to comedy with The Lost City (2022), about a romance writer who is kidnapped. She also featured in the action-comedy Bullet Train…

  • Unforgiven (film by Eastwood [1992])

    Unforgiven, American revisionist western film, released in 1992, that was directed by and starred Clint Eastwood. It won four Academy Awards as well as both critical and popular praise for its uncompromising approach to the mythology and pathology of the genre in a brutal story that laid bare the

  • Unforgiven, The (film by Huston [1960])

    John Huston: Films of the 1960s of John Huston: …return to form for Huston, The Unforgiven (1960) starred Audrey Hepburn in the only western role of her career, as a Native American who has been raised by a Texas settler family. The troubled history of the making of Huston’s next film, The Misfits (1961), became a staple of Hollywood…

  • Unfortunate Traveller; or, The Life of Jacke Wilton, The (work by Nashe)

    Thomas Nashe: The Unfortunate Traveller is a brutal and realistic tale of adventure narrated with speed and economy. The book describes the travels through Germany and Italy of its rogue hero, Jacke Wilton, who lives by his wits and witnesses all sorts of historic events before he…

  • Unfortunate Woman: A Journey, An (novel by Brautigan)

    Richard Brautigan: His final novel, An Unfortunate Woman: A Journey, was posthumously published first in French as Cahier d’un retour de troie (1994) and then in English (2000). Several of Brautigan’s early writings, which he gave to his friend Edna Webster before leaving Oregon for San Francisco and which were…

  • UNFP (political party, Morocco)

    Mehdi Ben Barka: …party to found the left-wing National Union of Popular Forces (UNFP). He was widely considered as a likely president for a possible Republic of Morocco. When Morocco and Algeria had a brief war in 1963, Ben Barka sided with Algeria and went into exile. He was subsequently accused of high…

  • UNFPA (international fund)

    United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), trust fund under the jurisdiction of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Established in 1969, the UNFPA is the largest international source of assistance for population programs and the leading United Nations (UN) organization for the

  • unfree tenure (medieval law)

    feudal land tenure: …were divided into free and unfree. Of the free tenures, the first was tenure in chivalry, principally grand sergeanty and knight service. The former obliged the tenant to perform some honourable and often personal service; knight service entailed performing military duties for the king or other lord, though by the…

  • Unfriended (film by Gabriadze [2014])

    found footage: …films are the horror movie Unfriended (2014) and the mystery Searching (2018).

  • Unfrosted: The Pop-Tart Story (film by Seinfeld [2024[)

    Jerry Seinfeld: Later activities: …directed his first feature film, Unfrosted: The Pop-Tart Story. The comedy, which he also cowrote and starred in, was inspired by the rivalry between cereal companies General Foods and Kellogg’s to create a breakfast cake.

  • unfused tetanus (physiology)

    muscle: Twitch and tetanus responses: …with the stimulation, causing an unfused tetanus. It is possible to stimulate the muscle at a frequency between these extremes so that the tension developed by the muscle remains constant. This latter type of contraction is called a fused tetanus, and the rate of stimulation that produces it is called…

  • Ung Ing (prime minister of Thailand)

    Paetongtarn Shinawatra is a Thai businesswoman and politician who serves as the 31st prime minister of Thailand (2024– ). She is the daughter of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and the second woman to hold the office, following her aunt, Yingluck Shinawatra. Paetongtarn was born into a

  • Ung Lich (emperor of Annam)

    Ham Nghi was the emperor of Annam (now Vietnam) in 1884–86 who rejected the role of a figurehead in the French colonial regime. Ung Lich was a nephew of the emperor Tu Duc, whose death in 1883 led to a disputed succession. After several equally legitimate heirs had been assassinated or deposed, Ung

  • Ung må verden ennu være (work by Grieg)

    Nordahl Grieg: …some consider his best novel, Ung må verden ennu være (“The World Must Still Be Young”), which exhibits his political passion and wholehearted identification with the Russians. The novel, set in England, Russia, Spain, and Norway, affirms Grieg’s particular espousal of a romanticism conjoined with a well-developed sense of reality.…

  • Ungar, Stu (American poker player)

    poker: The World Series of Poker: …Thomas (“Amarillo Slim”) Preston, and Stu Ungar.

  • Ungaretti, Giuseppe (Italian poet)

    Giuseppe Ungaretti was an Italian poet, founder of the Hermetic movement (see Hermeticism) that brought about a reorientation in modern Italian poetry. Born in Egypt of parents who were Italian settlers, Ungaretti lived in Alexandria until he was 24; the desert regions of Egypt were to provide

  • Ungava (peninsula, Quebec, Canada)

    Ungava, peninsular section of northern Quebec province, Canada, bounded by the Hudson Strait (north), Ungava Bay and Labrador (east), the Eastmain River (south), and the Hudson Bay (west). Physically, Ungava is a part of the Canadian Shield, a rocky, glacial-scoured plateau characterized by

  • Ungava Bay (bay, Quebec, Canada)

    Ungava Bay, inlet off the Hudson Strait, on the northeast coast of Nord-du-Québec region, northern Quebec province, Canada. The bay is approximately 200 miles (320 km) long, 160 miles (260 km) wide at the mouth, and has a maximum depth of 978 feet (298 m). It is fed by several large rivers, notably

  • Ungava Lake (lake, Quebec, Canada)

    lake: Basins formed by wind action, animal activity, and meteorites: …known in craters, however, including Ungava Lake in Quebec. In many other cases it has not been possible to definitely confirm that basins that have the appearance of meteorite craters have indeed been produced by meteorite impact. Controversial ones include the bay lakes of southeast North America.

  • Ungava-Quebec Crater (crater, Quebec, Canada)

    Ungava-Quebec Crater, geologically young crater, produced by an impact event involving a meteorite, located in the northwestern part of the Ungava Peninsula, northern Quebec province, Canada. First recognized as an impact structure in 1950, the crater is 3.4 km (2.1 miles) in diameter and has a rim

  • Unge, Wilhelm (Swedish inventor)

    rocket and missile system: The 19th century: …the turn of the century, Wilhelm Unge invented a device described as an “aerial torpedo.” Based upon the stickless Hale rocket, it incorporated a number of design improvements. One of these was a rocket motor nozzle that caused the gas flow to converge and then diverge. Another was the use…

  • Ungeduld des Herzens (novel by Zweig)

    Stefan Zweig: …novel, Ungeduld des Herzens (1938; Beware of Pity), and translated works of Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, and Émile Verhaeren.

  • Unger, Eva (British author, critic, and translator)

    Eva Figes was an English novelist, social critic, and translator who reacted against traditional realist literature by inventing new forms for her own works. Figes received a B.A. with honours from Queen Mary College in London in 1953 and subsequently worked for various publishing companies until

  • Unger, Johann Friedrich (German publisher)

    history of publishing: Germany: …in Tübingen and Stuttgart; and Johann Friedrich Unger in Berlin, all of whom had a share in publishing Schiller and Goethe. Unger also published the magnificent translation of Shakespeare by August von Schlegel (8 vol., 1797–1810).

  • Ungerleider, Leslie G. (American scientist)

    photoreception: Central processing of visual information: …the 1980s American cognitive scientists Leslie G. Ungerleider and Mortimer Mishkin formulated the idea that there are two processing streams emanating from V1—a dorsal stream leading to the visual cortex of the parietal lobe and a ventral stream leading to the visual regions of the temporal lobe. The dorsal stream…

  • Ungern-Sternberg, Baron Roman von (Russian military leader)

    Mongolia: Independence and revolution: …units under the command of Baron Roman von Ungern-Sternberg (known as the “Mad Baron”) entered Mongolia from eastern Siberia, advanced on Niislel Khüree, drove out the Chinese occupation forces, and in February 1921 restored the Bogd Khan to the throne under the baron’s control.

  • Ungewitter, Richard (German author)

    nudism: …and was soon followed by Richard Ungewitter’s seminal work Die Nacktheit (1906; Nakedness), which went through several printings. Nudism spread through Europe after World War I and became established in North America during the 1930s. The American League of Physical Culture was founded in 1929 to promote nudism. In the…

  • Unggi (North Korea)

    Unggi, city, extreme northeastern North Korea. It lies 16 miles (26 km) southwest of the estuary of the Tumen River, which forms North Korea’s boundary with Russia. Until Unggi’s port was opened in 1921, it was a poor village, but it developed rapidly during the Japanese occupation (1910–45) as a

  • unglazed porcelain (pottery)

    porcelain: …fired without a glaze, called biscuit porcelain, was introduced in Europe in the 18th century. It was generally used for figures. In the 19th century biscuit porcelain was called Parian ware. Some soft-paste porcelains, which remain somewhat porous, require a glaze. After the body has been fired, the glaze, usually…

  • Ungnad, Count Jan (Slavic noble)

    biblical literature: Slavic versions: …Protestantism among the southern Slavs, Count Jan Ungnad set up a press in 1560 at Urach that issued a translation of the New Testament in both Glagolitic (1562–63) and Cyrillic (1563) characters. The efforts of the Serbian leader Vuk Karadžić to establish the Serbo-Croatian vernacular on a literary basis resulted…

  • Unguarded Hour, The (film by Wood [1936])

    Sam Wood: Films with the Marx Brothers: The Unguarded Hour (1936) was a complicated but stagy mystery starring Franchot Tone and Loretta Young.

  • Unguarded Hours (novel by Wilson)

    A.N. Wilson: Wilson’s next two novels, Unguarded Hours (1978) and Kindly Light (1979), chronicle the misadventures of a man who begins a career in organized religion.

  • unguis (zoology)

    hoof: …upper portion is called the unguis; it completely surrounds the end of the toe, extending down and forming a rim around the bottom of the hoof. A somewhat softer plate, called the subunguis, covers the bottom of the toe and is extensively developed in hoofed animals to form a tough…

  • Unguja (island, Tanzania)

    Zanzibar, island in the Indian Ocean, lying 22 miles (35 km) off the coast of east-central Africa. In 1964 Zanzibar, together with Pemba Island and some other smaller islands, joined with Tanganyika on the mainland to form the United Republic of Tanzania. Area 600 square miles (1,554 square km).

  • Unguja (Tanzania)

    Zanzibar, city and port of the island of Zanzibar, Tanzania. The island’s principal port and commercial centre, it is on the western side of the island behind a well-protected natural deepwater harbour. In 1824 Sultan Saʿīd ibn Sulṭān of Oman established his capital there, shifting it from Muscat

  • Ungulata (mammal)

    ungulate, any hoofed mammal. Although the term may be used to refer to any member of the grandorder Ungulata, which is recognized as a formal level of classification in some taxonomies, in common usage it was widely applied to a diverse group of placental mammals that were characterized as hoofed

  • ungulate (mammal)

    ungulate, any hoofed mammal. Although the term may be used to refer to any member of the grandorder Ungulata, which is recognized as a formal level of classification in some taxonomies, in common usage it was widely applied to a diverse group of placental mammals that were characterized as hoofed

  • unguligrade posture (locomotion)

    foot: …dog and cat), and (3) unguligrade, in which only a hoof (the tip of one or two digits) touches the ground—a specialization of running animals (e.g., horse and deer).