- woolly rhinoceros (extinct mammal)
woolly rhinoceros, (genus Coelodonta), either of two extinct species of rhinoceros found in fossil deposits of the Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs (5.3 million to 11,700 years ago) in Europe, North Africa, and Asia. It probably evolved from an earlier form, Dicerorhinus, somewhere in northeastern
- woolly silk (arachnid physiology)
spider: Spider webs: …Uloboridae build a web of woolly (cribellate) ensnaring silk. One group within this family (genus Hyptiotes) weaves only a partial orb. The spider, attached by a thread to vegetation, holds one thread from the tip of the hub until an insect brushes the web. The spider then alternately relaxes and…
- woolly spider monkey (mammal)
woolly spider monkey, (genus Brachyteles), extremely rare primate that lives only in the remaining Atlantic forests of southeastern Brazil. The woolly spider monkey is the largest monkey in South America and is intermediate in structure and appearance between the woolly monkeys (genus Lagothrix)
- woolly tea tree
Leptospermum: The woolly tea tree (L. lanigerum) differs in having fuzzy young shoots. The shrubby New Zealand tea tree, or manuka (L. scoparium), has several cultivated varieties with white to rose-red flowers and gray-green to brownish leaves.
- woolly torch (plant)
old man cactus: …hairy cacti in cultivation include: yellow old man, or woolly torch (Cephalocereus palmeri); golden old man (Pilosocereus chrysacanthus); old woman (Mammillaria hahniana); Chilean old lady (Eriosyce senilis); and old man of the mountain (Cleistocactus trollii).
- woolly torch cactus (plant)
torch cactus: …silver, or woolly, torch (Cleistocactus strausii) is endemic to the mountains of Argentina and Bolivia. Its numerous erect columns appear whitish in colour because of their numerous dense spines. The plants bear narrow red flowers along the length of the stems.
- Woolman, Collett Everman (American business leader)
Delta Air Lines, Inc.: …for guiding the company was Collett Everman Woolman, who was vice president and general manager (1928–45), president (1945–65), and chief stockholder (at his death in 1966).
- Woolman, John (American religious leader)
John Woolman was a British-American Quaker leader and abolitionist whose Journal is recognized as one of the classic records of the spiritual inner life. Until he was 21 Woolman worked for his father, a Quaker farmer. He then moved to Mount Holly, New Jersey, to enter trade. At that time he made
- Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey (American author)
Sarah Chauncey Woolsey was an American children’s author whose vivacious and mischievous heroines presented a popular contrast to the norm of her day. Woolsey displayed a love for reading and writing stories at an early age. In 1855 she moved with her family to New Haven, Connecticut (her uncle,
- Woolsey, Theodore Dwight (American educator)
Theodore Dwight Woolsey was an American educator and scholar, president of Yale (1846–71), whose many innovations later became common in institutions of higher learning. Woolsey graduated as head of his class at Yale in 1820, and in 1831 he was appointed professor of Greek there. Elected president
- Woolson, Constance Fenimore (American writer)
Constance Fenimore Woolson was an American writer whose stories and novels are particularly notable for the sense of place they evoke. Woolson, a grandniece of James Fenimore Cooper, grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. During the Civil War she engaged in hospital work. After her father’s death in 1869,
- woolsorters’ disease (disease)
anthrax, acute, infectious, febrile disease of animals and humans caused by Bacillus anthracis, a bacterium that under certain conditions forms highly resistant spores capable of persisting and retaining their virulence for many years. Although anthrax most commonly affects grazing animals such as
- Woolston, Thomas (English theologian)
Thomas Woolston was an English religious writer and Deist. Woolston became a fellow at the University of Cambridge in 1691. After studying the work of Origen, a 3rd-century theologian of Alexandria who in his allegorical interpretation of Scripture stressed the spiritual qualities of creation over
- Woolwich (London, United Kingdom)
Woolwich, historic town in the borough of Greenwich, London. It lies on the south bank of the River Thames. Formerly a metropolitan borough of London, it was made part of the enlarged borough of Greenwich in 1965. It serves as the centre of local government for Greenwich. The site was occupied in
- Woolwich Arsenal (English football club)
Arsenal, English professional football (soccer) team based in London. Arsenal is one of the most successful squads in English football history, having played in the country’s top division (Football League First Division to 1992, Premier League thereafter) each season since 1919. In the process it
- Woolwich Polytechnic (university, Greenwich, London, United Kingdom)
Greenwich: The University of Greenwich was founded as Woolwich Polytechnic in 1890; it later became Thames Polytechnic and took on its current name and status in 1992.
- Woolworth Building (building, New York City, New York, United States)
Cass Gilbert: …an architect, designer of the Woolworth Building (1908–13) in New York City and of the United States Supreme Court Building (completed 1935) in Washington, D.C. Conscientious and prosperous, he was an acknowledged leader of the architectural profession in the United States during a period in which monumental architecture predominated.
- Woolworth Co. (American company)
Woolworth Co., former American chain of general-merchandise retail stores based on the concept of the five-and-ten (i.e., a store that sells all items in stock for 10 cents or less). Woolworth evolved into a multinational corporation with a large collection of specialty retail stores on four
- Woolworth, Frank Winfield (American merchant)
Woolworth Co.: The company was founded by Frank Winfield Woolworth (1852–1919), the originator of the five-and-ten variety store.
- wooly bear (insect larva)
woolly bear, Caterpillar of a tiger moth. The larva of the Isabella tiger moth (Isia isabella), known as the banded woolly bear, is brown in the middle and black at both ends. The width of the black bands is purported to predict the severity of the coming winter: the narrower the bands, the milder
- Woon-A-Tai, D’Pharaoh (Canadian actor)
Reservation Dogs: Synopsis: …the four main characters—Bear (D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai), Elora (Devery Jacobs), Willie Jack (Paulina Alexis), and Cheese (Lane Factor)—try to stave off boredom while they’re still grieving the recent suicide of their friend Daniel. The season starts with them stealing a truck full of Flaming Flamers chips. It ends with Elora…
- Woon-hyung Lyuh (Korean politician)
Korea: The southern zone: …of Korean Independence, headed by Woon-Hyung Lyuh (Yŏ Un-hyŏng), who was closely associated with the leftists. On September 6 the delegates attending a “national assembly” that was called by the committee proclaimed the People’s Republic of Korea. But the U.S. military government, under Lieut. Gen. John R. Hodge, the commanding…
- Woonasquatucket River (river, Rhode Island, United States)
Narragansett Bay: Pawtuxet, Taunton, and Woonasquatucket rivers. It includes Rhode (Aquidneck), Prudence, and Conanicut islands as well as Mount Hope Bay (a northeastern arm), the Providence River (a northwestern arm), and the Sakonnet River (a tidal strait that separates the island of Rhode from the mainland).
- Woonsocket (Rhode Island, United States)
Woonsocket, city, Providence county, northern Rhode Island, U.S., on the Blackstone River just south of the Massachusetts border. The first European occupation of the site was made by Richard Arnold, who built a sawmill in 1666; his brother John built a house there in 1695. Waterpower brought
- Wooster (Ohio, United States)
Wooster, city, seat (1811) of Wayne county, north-central Ohio, U.S., on Killbuck Creek, about 30 miles (50 km) southwest of Akron. The site was laid out in 1808 by John Bever, William Henry, and Joseph Larwill and named for the American Revolutionary War general David Wooster. The community claims
- Wooster, Bertie (fictional character)
Bertie Wooster, fictional character, an inane English gentleman in several comic stories and novels set in the early 20th century, written by P.G. Wodehouse. Wooster is the employer of Jeeves, a valet who is the ultimate “gentleman’s gentleman.” They first appeared together in the story
- Wooster, College of (college, Wooster, Ohio, United States)
Wooster: …is the home of the College of Wooster (1866; loosely affiliated with the Presbyterian Church [U.S.A.]) and the Ohio State University Agricultural Technical Institute (1971); the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center is just southeast. The Wayne County Historical Society and Museum houses natural-history specimens and pioneer relics and includes…
- Wootton Pillinge (town, England, United Kingdom)
Bedford: …centred on the town of Stewartby, southwest of Bedford town, utilizing the local heavy Oxford clays. Stewartby was originally known as Wootton Pillinge but was renamed for the Stewart family, who were responsible for its development as a model village in the 1920s. Although Stewartby at one time was home…
- wootz (steel) (metallurgy)
wootz (steel), Steel produced by a method known in ancient India. The process involved preparation of porous iron, hammering it while hot to release slag, breaking it up and sealing it with wood chips in a clay container, and heating it until the pieces of iron absorbed carbon from the wood and
- Wopmay Orogen (geological region, Canada)
Precambrian: Orogenic belts: …Proterozoic orogenic belts is the Wopmay Orogen, which is situated in the Arctic in the northwestern part of the Canadian Shield. This beautifully exposed belt formed within a relatively short time (between 1.97 and 1.84 billion years ago) and provides convincing evidence of tectonic activity of a modern form in…
- Wor Jackie (British football player)
Jackie Milburn was a British football (soccer) player, who, as a member of Newcastle United (1946–56), scored more than 170 goals in 354 league appearances and led the team to the Football Association (FA) Cup championship in 1951, 1952, and 1955. Milburn, who was born into a family of well-known
- Worcester (England, United Kingdom)
Worcester, city (district), administrative and historic county of Worcestershire, west-central England. Worcester is the historic county town (seat) of Worcestershire. Except for the small residential suburb of St. John’s, it lies on the east bank of the River Severn. The city has little river
- Worcester (Upper Peninsula, Michigan, United States)
Marquette, city, seat (1851) of Marquette county, Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U.S. On the shore of Lake Superior, overlooked by Sugarloaf Mountain (north), it lies about 65 miles (105 km) north-northwest of Escanaba. Founded in 1849 as Worcester and renamed for Jesuit explorer Jacques Marquette,
- Worcester (Massachusetts, United States)
Worcester, city, seat of Worcester county, central Massachusetts, U.S., on the Blackstone River, about midway between Boston and Springfield. A major commercial and industrial centre and the state’s second largest city, it is the hub of an urbanized area composed of a number of towns (townships),
- Worcester (county, Massachusetts, United States)
Worcester, county, central Massachusetts, U.S., bordered on the north by New Hampshire and on the south by Rhode Island and Connecticut. It is an upland region, the principal streams being the Nashua, Blackstone, Quinebaug, and French rivers. The county also contains Quabbin, Wachusett, and Sudbury
- Worcester (county, Maryland, United States)
Worcester, county, extreme southeastern Maryland, U.S., bordered by Delaware to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the east, Virginia to the south, the Pocomoke River to the southwest and northwest, and Dividing Creek to the west. It consists of low-lying coastal plains and includes a string of
- Worcester (South Africa)
Worcester, town, Western Cape province, South Africa. It lies in the Breë River valley, between the rugged Dutoits and Hex River mountains, east-northeast of Cape Town. Worcester was founded in 1820 and attained municipal status in 1842. It is a prominent viticultural centre, and fruit processing
- Worcester and Birmingham Railway (British railway)
railroad: Characteristics of British railroads: …a line, such as the Worcester and Birmingham Railway, had to be built on a steep grade (2.68 percent), it proved necessary to purchase American locomotives for successful adhesion.
- Worcester Art Museum (museum, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States)
Worcester Art Museum, in Worcester, Mass., one of the finest small art museums in the United States, whose chronologically arranged collections span 50 centuries and whose exhibitions are often major events in the art world. The John Chandler Bancroft collection of some 3,000 Japanese prints is
- Worcester Brown Stockings (American baseball team)
Philadelphia Phillies, American professional baseball team based in Philadelphia that plays in the National League (NL). The Phillies have won eight NL pennants and two World Series titles (1980 and 2008) and are the oldest continuously run, single-name, single-city franchise in American
- Worcester cathedral (cathedral, Worcester, England, United Kingdom)
Worcester: The cathedral has dominated every stage of Worcester’s history. Bosel, a monk from Whitby (Yorkshire), became the first bishop, in 679 or 680. In 983 Bishop Oswald (St. Oswald of York) constructed a new cathedral. The present building was begun by Bishop Wulfstan (St. Wulfstan) in…
- Worcester porcelain
Worcester porcelain, pottery ware made, under various managements, at a factory in Worcester, Eng., from 1751 until the present; the factory became the Worcester Royal Porcelain Company in 1862. Although the technical level of Worcester has been high at all periods, that between 1752 and 1783 marks
- Worcester Royal Porcelain Company (English company)
pottery: Pottery factories: …of Dorothy Doughty for the Worcester Royal Porcelain Company, in England, and those of Edward Marshall Boehm, at Trenton, New Jersey, established a new development in decorative porcelain. Characteristic of that kind of work are the American birds of Doughty issued in limited editions by the Worcester Company. They are…
- Worcester sauce (condiment)
Worcestershire sauce, fermented condiment that in its original form included tamarind, soy, garlic, red onions, anchovies, and spices. Early in the 19th century there was a fashion in England for “store sauces”—sauces that could be kept in the pantry. Among them were mushroom ketchup, Harvey’s
- Worcester v. Georgia (United States law case)
Worcester v. Georgia, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on March 3, 1832, held (5–1) that the states did not have the right to impose regulations on Native American land. Although Pres. Andrew Jackson refused to enforce the ruling, the decision helped form the basis for most subsequent law
- Worcester, Battle of (English history [1651])
The English Civil Wars—the long-drawn-out conflict between Royalists and their opponents across the British Isles, which had its roots in Scotland in 1639 and spread to Ireland and then England by 1642—finally came to an end at Worcester on September 3, 1651. The outcome ensured the survival of the
- Worcester, Edward Somerset, 2nd Marquess of (English Royalist)
Edward Somerset, 2nd marquess of Worcester was a prominent Royalist during the English Civil Wars. His father, Henry Somerset, 5th Earl of Worcester, advanced large sums of money to Charles I at the outbreak of the wars and was created Marquess of Worcester in 1643. In the following year, Edward
- Worcester, John Tibetot, 1st Earl of (English Yorkist leader)
John Tiptoft, 1st earl of Worcester was a noted English Yorkist leader during the Wars of the Roses, known for his brutality and abuse of the law and called the “butcher of England.” The son of the 1st Baron Tiptoft, he was educated at Oxford, and in 1449 he was created Earl of Worcester. In
- Worcester, John Tiptoft, 1st Earl of (English Yorkist leader)
John Tiptoft, 1st earl of Worcester was a noted English Yorkist leader during the Wars of the Roses, known for his brutality and abuse of the law and called the “butcher of England.” The son of the 1st Baron Tiptoft, he was educated at Oxford, and in 1449 he was created Earl of Worcester. In
- Worcester, Joseph Emerson (American lexicographer)
Joseph Emerson Worcester was an American lexicographer whose dictionaries rivaled those of Noah Webster in popularity and critical esteem from about 1830 to 1865. His introduction of synonyms to definitions, as well as other innovations, was assimilated by later lexicographers. (Read H.L. Mencken’s
- Worcester, Robert (English pollster)
public opinion: Components of public opinion: attitudes and values: …by the American-born political analyst Robert Worcester, who founded the London-based polling firm MORI (Market & Opinion Research International Ltd.). Values, he suggested, are “the deep tides of public mood, slow to change, but powerful.” Opinions, in contrast, are “the ripples on the surface of the public’s consciousness—shallow and easily…
- Worcester, Samuel A. (American missionary)
Worcester v. Georgia: …of white Christian missionaries, including Samuel A. Worcester, who were living in Cherokee territory in Georgia. In addition to their missionary work, the men were advising the Cherokee about resisting Georgia’s attempts to impose state laws on the Cherokee Nation, a self-governing nation whose independence and right to its land…
- Worcester, Thomas Percy, Earl of (English noble)
Thomas Percy, earl of Worcester was an English noble, brother of Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, and uncle of Sir Henry Percy, called “Hotspur,” and a party to their rebellions against Henry IV of England. Thomas Percy served with distinction in France during the reign of Edward III; he
- Worcestershire (county, England, United Kingdom)
Worcestershire, administrative and historic county of west-central England. It is located in the western portion of the Midlands region southwest of West Midlands metropolitan county. The city of Worcester is the county seat. The administrative county of Worcestershire comprises six districts:
- Worcestershire sauce (condiment)
Worcestershire sauce, fermented condiment that in its original form included tamarind, soy, garlic, red onions, anchovies, and spices. Early in the 19th century there was a fashion in England for “store sauces”—sauces that could be kept in the pantry. Among them were mushroom ketchup, Harvey’s
- word (philosophy and theology)
logos, in ancient Greek philosophy and early Christian theology, the divine reason implicit in the cosmos, ordering it and giving it form and meaning. Although the concept is also found in Indian, Egyptian, and Persian philosophical and theological systems, it became particularly significant in
- word (linguistics)
language: Grammar: …to language than sounds, and words are not to be regarded as merely sequences of syllables. The concept of the word is a grammatical concept; in speech, words are not separated by pauses, but they are recognized as recurrent units that make up sentences. Very generally, grammar is concerned with…
- Word (software)
Microsoft Word, word-processor software launched in 1983 by the Microsoft Corporation. Software developers Richard Brodie and Charles Simonyi joined the Microsoft team in 1981, and in 1983 they released Multi-Tool Word for computers that ran a version of the UNIX operating system (OS). Later that
- word accent
accent: Word accent (also called word stress, or lexical stress) is part of the characteristic way in which a language is pronounced. Given a particular language system, word accent may be fixed, or predictable (e.g., in French, where it occurs regularly at the end of words,…
- Word and Object (work by Quine)
epistemology: Commonsense philosophy, logical positivism, and naturalized epistemology: In a later work, Word and Object (1960), Quine developed a doctrine known as naturalized epistemology. According to that view, epistemology has no normative function. That is, it does not tell people what they ought to believe. Instead, its only legitimate role is to describe the way knowledge, especially…
- word formation (traditional grammar)
derivation, in descriptive linguistics and traditional grammar, the formation of a word by changing the form of the base or by adding affixes to it (e.g., “hope” to “hopeful”). It is a major source of new words in a language. In historical linguistics, the derivation of a word is its history, or
- word game
puzzle: Puzzle genres: Word puzzles, which use a play of words or language to challenge the solver, cover a large range of puzzle types, from crosswords to riddles to word search puzzles. The popular television game show Wheel of Fortune is centred on a word puzzle. Boggle, Scrabble,…
- word list
dictionary: Establishment of the word list: The goal of the big dictionaries is to make a complete inventory of a language, recording every word that can be found. The obsolete and archaic words must be included from the earlier stages of the language and even the words attested to…
- word order (grammar)
language: Structural, or grammatical, meaning: …in meaning because the different word orders distinguish what are conventionally called subject and object. In Latin the two corresponding sentences would be distinguished not by word order, which is grammatically indifferent and largely a matter of style, but by different shapes in the lexical equivalents of dog and cat.…
- word processing
word processing, operation in which a text-editing software program called a word processor is used to create a document on a computer. A word-processing system can produce a wide variety of documents, including letters, memoranda, and manuals, rapidly and at relatively low cost. The precursor of
- word processor (computing)
word processor, computer program used to write and revise documents, compose the layout of the text, and preview on a computer monitor how the printed copy will appear. The last capability is known as “what you see is what you get” (WYSIWYG; pronounced wi-zē-wig). Word processors facilitate writing
- word puzzle
puzzle: Puzzle genres: Word puzzles, which use a play of words or language to challenge the solver, cover a large range of puzzle types, from crosswords to riddles to word search puzzles. The popular television game show Wheel of Fortune is centred on a word puzzle. Boggle, Scrabble,…
- word salad (neurology)
human nervous system: Language: …sometimes neologisms and senseless “word salad.” The entire posterior language area extends into the parietal lobe and is connected to the Broca area by a fiber tract called the arcuate fasciculus. Damage to this tract may result in conduction aphasia, a disorder in which the individual can understand and…
- word stock (linguistics)
vocabulary, inventory of words used by a particular person or group or the words in a particular language or field of knowledge. The term comes from the Latin vocabulum, meaning designation or name. There are two types of vocabulary: active and passive. Active vocabulary includes the words an
- word stress
accent: Word accent (also called word stress, or lexical stress) is part of the characteristic way in which a language is pronounced. Given a particular language system, word accent may be fixed, or predictable (e.g., in French, where it occurs regularly at the end of words,…
- word weaving (literary style)
Russian literature: The Second South Slavic Influence: Known as “word weaving,” this ornamental style played with phonic and semantic correspondences. It appears in the most notable hagiography of the period, Zhitiye svyatogo Sergiya Radonezhskogo (“Life of Saint Sergius of Radonezh”) by Epifany Premudry (Epiphanius the Wise; d. between 1418 and 1422).
- word writing (linguistics)
Chinese languages: Pre-Classical characters: Logographic (i.e., marked by a letter, symbol, or sign used to represent an entire word) is the term that best describes the nature of the Chinese writing system.
- Word, liturgy of the (Christianity)
liturgy of the Word, the first of the two principal rites of the mass, the central act of worship of the Roman Catholic Church, the second being the liturgy of the Eucharist (see also Eucharist). The liturgy of the Word typically consists of three readings, the first from the Old Testament (Hebrew
- Word, The (film by Dreyer [1955])
Carl Theodor Dreyer: …Two People); and Ordet (1955; The Word), winner of the Grand Prize at the Venice Film Festival, dramatizes the complex relationship between social good and spiritual good in an ambiguous story of a hardworking, down-to-earth farm family who are burdened by the younger son’s insane delusion that he is Christ.…
- Word, The (work by Munk)
Kaj Munk: …a success, and Ordet (1932; The Word), a miracle play set among Jutland peasants, established him as Denmark’s leading dramatist. Ordet later was made into a motion picture by the Danish director Carl Dryer. For his principal character, Munk often chose a dictator, or “strong man,” whom he showed struggling…
- word-association test (psychology)
personality assessment: Word-association techniques: The list of projective approaches to personality assessment is long, one of the most venerable being the so-called word-association test. Jung used associations to groups of related words as a basis for inferring personality traits (e.g., the inferiority “complex”). Administering a word-association test…
- Word-Flaunter (work by Lucian)
Lucian: …claptrap and impudence, while in Word-Flaunter he attacks a contemporary rhetorician who is excessively fond of using an archaic and recondite vocabulary.
- Worde, Wynkyn de (English printer)
Wynkyn de Worde was an Alsatian-born printer in London, an astute businessman who published a large number of books (at least 600 titles from 1501). He was also the first printer in England to use italic type (1524). He was employed at William Caxton’s press, Westminster (the first printing
- Worden, Al (American astronaut)
Al Worden was a U.S. astronaut, pilot of the command module Endeavour on the Apollo 15 mission (July 26–August 7, 1971). Worden graduated in 1955 from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, and he earned M.S. degrees in astronautical and aeronautical engineering and in instrumentation
- Worden, Al (American astronaut)
Al Worden was a U.S. astronaut, pilot of the command module Endeavour on the Apollo 15 mission (July 26–August 7, 1971). Worden graduated in 1955 from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, and he earned M.S. degrees in astronautical and aeronautical engineering and in instrumentation
- Worden, Alfred Merrill (American astronaut)
Al Worden was a U.S. astronaut, pilot of the command module Endeavour on the Apollo 15 mission (July 26–August 7, 1971). Worden graduated in 1955 from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, and he earned M.S. degrees in astronautical and aeronautical engineering and in instrumentation
- Worden, John L (American admiral)
John L. Worden was a U.S. naval officer who commanded the Union warship Monitor against the Confederate Virginia (formerly Merrimack) in the first battle between ironclads (March 9, 1862) in the American Civil War (1861–65). Appointed a midshipman in 1834, Worden received his early naval training
- Worden, John Lorimer (American admiral)
John L. Worden was a U.S. naval officer who commanded the Union warship Monitor against the Confederate Virginia (formerly Merrimack) in the first battle between ironclads (March 9, 1862) in the American Civil War (1861–65). Appointed a midshipman in 1834, Worden received his early naval training
- Wordian Stage (stratigraphy)
Wordian Stage, second of three stages of the Middle Permian (Guadalupian) Series, made up of all rocks deposited during the Wordian Age (268.8 million to 265.1 million years ago) of the Permian Period. The name of this interval is derived from the Wordian Formation located in the Glass Mountains of
- WordNet (online database)
George A. Miller: …1980s Miller helped to develop WordNet, a sizable online database of English words that displayed semantic and lexical relationships between sets of synonymous terms. Designed to simulate the organization of human verbal memory, WordNet was a widely used linguistic research tool.
- WordPerfect (software)
Microsoft Word: …was in direct competition with WordPerfect and WordStar, both of which were introduced for PCs in 1982.
- WordPress (content management system)
WordPress, content management system (CMS) developed in 2003 by American blogger Matt Mullenweg and British blogger Mike Little. WordPress is most often used to create blogs, but the program is sufficiently flexible that it can be used to create and design any sort of website. It is also an
- Words (novel by Josipovici)
Gabriel Josipovici: The first three—The Inventory (1968), Words (1971), and The Present (1975)—were written mostly in dialogue, whereas Migrations (1977) and The Air We Breathe (1981) were composed of a series of images and sound patterns following a loosely narrative form.
- Words and Music (album by Webb)
Jimmy Webb: Later hits and works: …his solo albums, which include Words and Music (1970), Letters (1972), El Mirage (1977), and others. Several songs from his solo albums had greater commercial success when recorded by other artists.
- Words and Music (film by Taurog [1948])
Norman Taurog: Musical comedies and Boys Town: More successful was Words and Music (1948), which had Tom Drake and Rooney playing famed composers Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, respectively. The musical featured a number of songs performed by such stars as Garland and Lena Horne, the best of which was arguably Gene Kelly’s “Slaughter on…
- Words and Pictures (film by Schepisi [2013])
Juliette Binoche: …rheumatoid arthritis in the romance Words and Pictures (2013); the film featured scenes of her painting in real time, showcasing her skills as an artist.
- Words and Rules: The Ingredients of Language (work by Pinker)
Steven Pinker: In Words and Rules: The Ingredients of Language (1999) Pinker offered an analysis of the cognitive mechanisms that make language possible. Exhibiting a lively sense of humour and a talent for explaining difficult scientific concepts clearly, he argued that the phenomenon of language depended essentially on…
- Words for Readers and Writers (essays by Woiwode)
Larry Woiwode: …wrote several essay collections, including Words for Readers and Writers (2013), and a children’s book, The Invention of Lefse (2011). He also wrote several biographies, including A Legacy of Passion (2022), about the Scheel family, founders of a retail chain. What I Think I Did (2000) and A Step from…
- Words of Advice (play by Weldon)
Fay Weldon: … (1978) and the stage plays Words of Advice (1974) and Action Replay (1979).
- Words of the Mute (work by Ribeyro)
Julio Ramón Ribeyro: …three, 1977; and four, 1992; Words of the Mute). In spite of the pathetic lives of the characters he depicts, Ribeyro’s narrators maintain a critical distance, as if depicting things. The characters themselves appear not to understand, much less be able to articulate, their predicament. In Featherless Buzzards, two boys…
- Words Without Music (memoir by Glass)
Philip Glass: His 2015 memoir Words Without Music chronicles his colourful life in piquant detail.
- Words, The (work by Sartre)
Jean-Paul Sartre: Early life and writings: …brilliant autobiography, Les Mots (1963; Words), narrates the adventures of the mother and child in the park as they went from group to group—in the vain hope of being accepted—then finally retreated to the sixth floor of their apartment “on the heights where (the) dreams dwell.” “The words” saved the…
- Words, The (film by Klugman and Sternthal [2012])
Jeremy Irons: (2008), Margin Call (2011), The Words (2012), Race (2016), Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016), and Justice League (2017); a different cut of the latter film was released in 2021 as Zach Snyder’s Justice League. He also costarred as mathematician G.H. Hardy in the Srinivasa Ramanujan biopic
- words-in-freedom (poetry)
Futurism: Literature: …genres, the most significant being parole in libertà (“words-in-freedom”), also referred to as free-word poetry. It was poetry liberated from the constraints of linear typography and conventional syntax and spelling. A brief extract from Marinetti’s war poem “Battaglia peso + odore” (1912; “Battle Weight + Smell”) was appended to one…
- Wordsworth, Dorothy (English author)
Dorothy Wordsworth was an English prose writer whose Alfoxden Journal 1798 and Grasmere Journals 1800–03 are remarkable for the imaginative power of their description of nature. Her journals also shed significant light on her brother, the Romantic poet William Wordsworth, whose own work was