- Wright, Mickey (American golfer)
Mickey Wright was an American golfer who is widely considered the sport’s greatest female competitor, known for her record-setting play in the 1950s and ’60s. Wright had begun playing golf by age 12. In 1952 she won the U.S. Golfing Association junior girls’ championship. She attended Stanford
- Wright, Milton (American minister)
Wright brothers: Early family life: …Orville were the sons of Milton Wright, an ordained minister of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, and Susan Catherine Koerner Wright, whom Milton had met while he was training for the ministry and while Susan was a student at a United Brethren college in Hartsville, Indiana. Two…
- Wright, Nigel (Canadian political chief-of-staff)
Stephen Harper: Majority government of Stephen Harper: …by Harper’s chief of staff, Nigel Wright, from his own funds. Harper expressed surprise at the news of Wright’s gift and suggested that his chief of staff had acted alone in his “deception”; however, journalists reported that numerous other Conservative Party members had some knowledge of the transaction. Wright was…
- Wright, Orville (American aviator)
Wright brothers: …Dayton, Ohio) and his brother Orville Wright (August 19, 1871, Dayton—January 30, 1948, Dayton) also built and flew the first fully practical airplane (1905).
- Wright, Patience (American artist)
Patience Wright was an American sculptor of wax figures who achieved fame in the American colonies and England. Patience Lovell was born into a prosperous Quaker farm family. In 1748 she married Joseph Wright. Little is known of her life from then until 1769, when she was left a widow with five
- Wright, Philip Quincy (American political scientist)
Quincy Wright was an American political scientist and authority on international law known for classic studies of war and international relations. Wright received his B.A. from Lombard College, Galesburg, Ill., in 1912 and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1915. He taught at Harvard
- Wright, Quincy (American political scientist)
Quincy Wright was an American political scientist and authority on international law known for classic studies of war and international relations. Wright received his B.A. from Lombard College, Galesburg, Ill., in 1912 and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1915. He taught at Harvard
- Wright, Richard (British artist)
Richard Wright is a British painter and installation artist who creates directly on gallery walls his intricately detailed and visually arresting abstract paintings. Each of his works is site-specific and temporary, emphasizing the essential fragility and ephemeral nature of his art. In 2009,
- Wright, Richard (American writer)
Richard Wright was a novelist and short-story writer who inaugurated the tradition of protest explored by other Black writers after World War II. From the late 1930s through the 1950s—most notably in his novel Native Son (1940) and his autobiography, Black Boy (1945)—Wright was a dominant voice
- Wright, Richard William (British musician)
Pink Floyd: …Birmingham, West Midlands), keyboard player Rick Wright (in full Richard Wright; b. July 28, 1945, London—d. September 15, 2008, London), and guitarist David Gilmour (b. March 6, 1944, Cambridge).
- Wright, Rick (British musician)
Pink Floyd: …Birmingham, West Midlands), keyboard player Rick Wright (in full Richard Wright; b. July 28, 1945, London—d. September 15, 2008, London), and guitarist David Gilmour (b. March 6, 1944, Cambridge).
- Wright, Robin (American actress)
Sean Penn: …appeared with his second wife—Robin Wright (married 1996; divorced 2010)—in She’s So Lovely (1997), for which he was named best actor at the Cannes film festival, and later garnered Oscar nominations for Sweet and Lowdown (1999) and I Am Sam (2001). Another impressive directorial effort came with The Pledge.…
- Wright, Sewall (American geneticist)
Sewall Wright was an American geneticist, one of the founders of population genetics. He was the brother of the political scientist Quincy Wright. Wright was educated at Lombard College, Galesburg, Ill., and at the University of Illinois, Urbana, and, after earning his doctorate in zoology at
- Wright, Sir Almroth Edward (British bacteriologist and immunologist)
Sir Almroth Edward Wright was a British bacteriologist and immunologist best known for advancing vaccination through the use of autogenous vaccines (prepared from the bacteria harboured by the patient) and through antityphoid immunization with typhoid bacilli killed by heat. Wright received his
- Wright, Susan Catherine Koerner (American homemaker)
Wright brothers: Early family life: …United Brethren in Christ, and Susan Catherine Koerner Wright, whom Milton had met while he was training for the ministry and while Susan was a student at a United Brethren college in Hartsville, Indiana. Two boys, Reuchlin (1861–1920) and Lorin (1862–1939), were born to the couple before Wilbur was born…
- Wright, Tim (American musician)
Pere Ubu: November 19, 1950), and Tim Wright (b. 1952, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.—d. August 4, 2013). Later members included Tony Maimone (b. September 27, 1952, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.), Jim Jones (b. March 12, 1950—d. February 18, 2008), Chris Cutler (b. January 4, 1947), Mayo Thompson (b. February 26, 1944), Anton Fier…
- Wright, Tom (architect)
Burj al-ʿArab: …that was designed by architect Tom Wright and completed in 1999.
- Wright, Warren (American horsebreeder and racehorse owner)
Warren Wright was an American financier, owner and breeder of Thoroughbred racehorses, and proprietor of Calumet Farm. Wright was educated in public schools and in business college and, starting in 1890, worked for more than 25 years in the firm that his father had founded, the Calumet Baking
- Wright, Wilbur (American aviator)
Wright brothers: Wilbur Wright (April 16, 1867, near Millville, Indiana, U.S.—May 30, 1912, Dayton, Ohio) and his brother Orville Wright (August 19, 1871, Dayton—January 30, 1948, Dayton) also built and flew the first fully practical airplane (1905).
- Wright, Will (American game designer)
electronic artificial life game: …and cofounder of Maxis Software William (Will) Wright is associated with the development of commercial A-life games. His first commercial A-life release was SimEarth (1990), a world-builder simulation for personal computers (PCs) in which players select from various landforms and climates for their planet, seed the planet with very primitive…
- Wright, Willard Huntington (American critic, editor, and author)
S.S. Van Dine was an American critic, editor, and author of a series of best-selling detective novels featuring the brilliant but arrogant sleuth Philo Vance. Wright was educated at St. Vincent and Pomona colleges in California, at Harvard University, and in Munich and Paris. Pursuing a career as a
- Wright, William (American game designer)
electronic artificial life game: …and cofounder of Maxis Software William (Will) Wright is associated with the development of commercial A-life games. His first commercial A-life release was SimEarth (1990), a world-builder simulation for personal computers (PCs) in which players select from various landforms and climates for their planet, seed the planet with very primitive…
- Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (United States Air Force base, Ohio, United States)
Dayton Accords: The road toward peace: …Union (EU) met at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base on the outskirts of Dayton, Ohio, a site chosen to reduce the ability of participants to negotiate via the media rather than the bargaining table. The peace conference was led by Holbrooke and cochaired by EU Special Representative Carl Bildt and…
- Wrigley Building (building, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
William Wrigley, Jr.: Wrigley’s Chicago headquarters, the Wrigley Building, became a noted architectural landmark of that city.
- Wrigley Field (baseball park, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Wrigley Field, baseball stadium in Chicago that, since 1916, has been home to the Cubs, the city’s National League (NL) team. Built in 1914, it is one of the oldest and most iconic Major League Baseball parks in the United States. The stadium was designed by brothers Zachary Taylor Davis and
- Wrigley’s Spearmint chewing gum
William Wrigley, Jr.: …advertising to boost sales of Wrigley’s Spearmint chewing gum, which he introduced in 1893. By 1908, sales of Wrigley’s Spearmint were more than $1,000,000 a year. In 1911 Wrigley took over Zeno Manufacturing, the company that made his chewing gum, and established the Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company. His company became…
- Wrigley, Philip K. (American manufacturer)
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League: … owner and chewing gum magnate Philip K. Wrigley. He started the league out of a concern that men’s major league baseball would suffer when players were called for military service. The “Belles of the Ball Game,” however, delivered such a high level of play that, at the league’s peak in…
- Wrigley, William, Jr. (American manufacturer)
William Wrigley, Jr. was an American salesman and manufacturer whose company became the largest producer and distributor of chewing gum in the world. Wrigley went to work as a traveling soap salesman for his father’s company at age 13. In 1891 he went to Chicago as a soap distributor and there
- Wrigleyville (neighborhood, Chicago, Illinois, Unites States)
Wrigley Field: …neighbourhood around the stadium—known as Wrigleyville—also became more developed, especially from the 1990s. Although home to numerous bars and restaurants, the area was largely residential, which added to the stadium’s appeal but also resulted in resistance to some proposed changes. Notably, in 1988, only after threatening to move were the…
- Wrinch, Dorothy Maud (British-American mathematician and biochemist)
Dorothy Maud Wrinch was a British American mathematician and biochemist who contributed to the understanding of the structure of proteins. Shortly after her birth in Argentina, where her British father was employed as an engineer, Wrinch’s family returned to England. Wrinch grew up in Surbiton, a
- Wrinkle in Time, A (novel by L’Engle)
A Wrinkle in Time, novel for young adults by Madeleine L’Engle, published in 1962. It won a Newbery Medal in 1963. Combining theology, fantasy, and science, it is the story of travel through space and time to battle a cosmic evil. With their neighbour Calvin O’Keefe, young Meg Murry and her brother
- Wrinkle in Time, A (film by DuVernay [2018])
Ava DuVernay: …director of the adventure fantasy A Wrinkle in Time (2018). It was based on the award-winning 1962 book of the same name by Madeleine L’Engle and featured a multicultural cast that included Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, and Mindy Kaling.
- wrinkled bark beetle (insect)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Rhysodidae (wrinkled bark beetles) Small, slender, brownish beetles; about 350 species, mostly tropical. Sometimes considered a subgroup (tribe Rhysodini) of family Carabidae. Family Trachypachidae A few species in Europe and North America. Suborder Archostemata
- Wriothesley, Henry (English noble)
Henry Wriothesley, 2nd earl of Southampton was one of the Roman Catholic English nobles who conspired for the release of Mary, Queen of Scots. Henry Wriothesley was the third and only surviving son of the 1st Earl of Southampton and was born into great privilege (King Henry VIII himself was one of
- Wriothesley, Henry (English noble)
Henry Wriothesley, 3rd earl of Southampton was an English nobleman and William Shakespeare’s patron. Henry Wriothesley succeeded to his father’s earldom in 1581 and became a royal ward under the care of Lord Burghley. Educated at the University of Cambridge and at Gray’s Inn, London, he was 17
- Wriothesley, Thomas (English noble)
Thomas Wriothesley, 4th earl of Southampton was a major supporter of both Charles I and Charles II of England. The only surviving son of the 3rd Earl, Thomas attended St. John’s College, Cambridge. When the dispute began between Charles I and Parliament, he took the side of the latter, but soon the
- Wriothesley, Thomas (English statesman)
Thomas Wriothesley, 1st earl of Southampton was an influential minister of state during the last years of the reign of King Henry VIII of England. The son of one herald, William Writh, or Wriothesley, and nephew and cousin to two others, Thomas Wriothesley was well-placed for a career in the royal
- wrist (robotics)
automation: The robot manipulator: …large links, and (2) a wrist, consisting of two or three compact joints. Attached to the wrist is a gripper to grasp a work part or a tool (e.g., a spot-welding gun) to perform a process. The two manipulator sections have different functions: the arm-and-body is used to move and…
- wrist (anatomy)
wrist, complex joint between the five metacarpal bones of the hand and the radius and ulna bones of the forearm. The wrist is composed of eight or nine small, short bones (carpal bones) roughly arranged in two rows. The wrist is also made up of several component joints: the distal radioulnar joint,
- wrist shot
ice hockey: Rules and principles of play: …hockey: the slap shot, the wrist shot, and the backhander. The slap shot has been timed at more than 100 miles an hour (160 km an hour). The slap shot differs from the wrist shot in that the player brings his stick back until it is nearly perpendicular with the…
- wristlet watch (timekeeping device)
Rolex: …his company’s future on the wristwatch. He came up with the brand name Rolex, registered it as a trademark in 1908, and set out to make wristwatches that were both manly and fashionable. In 1914, in an early display of his considerable talent for generating publicity, Wilsdorf had the British…
- wristwatch (timekeeping device)
Rolex: …his company’s future on the wristwatch. He came up with the brand name Rolex, registered it as a trademark in 1908, and set out to make wristwatches that were both manly and fashionable. In 1914, in an early display of his considerable talent for generating publicity, Wilsdorf had the British…
- writ (law)
writ, in common law, order issued by a court in the name of a sovereign authority requiring the performance of a specific act. The most common modern writs are those, such as the summons, used to initiate an action. Other writs may be used to enforce the judgment of a court (attachment, delivery)
- writ of assize (law)
assize: The term also designated certain writs operable in such courts. In modern times courts of assize are criminal courts that deal with the most serious crimes.
- writ of mandamus (law)
mandamus, originally a formal writ issued by the English crown commanding an official to perform a specific act within the duty of the office. It later became a judicial writ issued from the Court of Queen’s Bench, in the name of the sovereign, at the request of an individual suitor whose interests
- Write Away (work by George)
Elizabeth George: …published several short-story collections and Write Away (2004), a guide for aspiring writers. The Edge of Nowhere (2012), about the supernatural happenings on an island near Seattle, was her first effort aimed at young adults. Other books in the series included The Edge of Water (2014) and The Edge of…
- write-once read-many (computer science)
CD-ROM: …CDs are also known as WORM discs, for “Write Once Read Many.” A rewritable version based on excitable crystals and known as CD-RW was introduced in the mid-1990s. Because both CD-R and CD-RW recorders originally required a computer to operate, they had limited acceptance outside of use as computer software…
- write-once read-many disc (computer science)
CD-ROM: …CDs are also known as WORM discs, for “Write Once Read Many.” A rewritable version based on excitable crystals and known as CD-RW was introduced in the mid-1990s. Because both CD-R and CD-RW recorders originally required a computer to operate, they had limited acceptance outside of use as computer software…
- Write-Top (computer)
tablet computer: …Research’s Z88 and Linus Technologies’ Write-Top, which were introduced in 1987. The Z88 accepted input through a keyboard that was part of the main tablet unit, while the Write-Top accepted input through a stylus. Weighing 0.9 kg (2 pounds), the Z88 was much more portable than the Write-Top, which weighed…
- Writer (album by King)
Carole King: …solo, and her debut album, Writer, was released in 1970.
- Writer as Migrant, The (essays by Ha Jin)
Ha Jin: Literary works: In 2008 Jin published The Writer as Migrant, which comprises three essays on literary exiles. His other nonfiction work includes The Banished Immortal (2019), a biography of the Chinese poet Li Bai. In addition, with Chinese composer Tan Dun, he cowrote the libretto for Tan’s opera The First Emperor…
- Writer’s Diary, A (work by Dostoyevsky)
Fyodor Dostoyevsky: A Writer’s Diary and other works: In 1873 Dostoyevsky assumed the editorship of the conservative journal Grazhdanin (“The Citizen”), where he published an irregular column entitled “Dnevnik pisatelya” (“The Diary of a Writer”). He left Grazhdanin to write Podrostok (1875; A Raw Youth, also known…
- Writer’s Luck (memoir by Lodge)
David Lodge: …from 1935 to 1975, and Writer’s Luck (2018), set in 1976–91.
- writerly (literature)
readerly and writerly: writerly, opposite types of literary text, as defined by the French critic Roland Barthes in his book S/Z (1970). Barthes used the terms lisible (“readerly”) and scriptible (“writerly”) to distinguish, respectively, between texts that are straightforward and demand no special effort to understand and those…
- Writers of the ’60s (literary movement)
Ukraine: Literature: …writers, known as the “Writers of the ’60s,” broke with Socialist Realism in the post-Stalinist period, but in the 1970s the Communist Party took new measures to repress literature that deviated from the approved style.
- Writers’ Union of the U.S.S.R.
Writers’ Union of the U.S.S.R., organization formed in 1932 by a decree of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union that abolished existing literary organizations and absorbed all professional Soviet writers into one large union. The union supported Communist Party policies
- writing
writing, form of human communication by means of a set of visible marks that are related, by convention, to some particular structural level of language. This definition highlights the fact that writing is in principle the representation of language rather than a direct representation of thought
- Writing Across the Landscape: Travel Journals 1960–2010 (work by Ferlinghetti)
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: …on travel were collected as Writing Across the Landscape: Travel Journals 1960–2010 (2015), and a number of his exchanges with Ginsberg were published as I Greet You at the Beginning of a Great Career: The Selected Correspondence of Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Allen Ginsberg, 1955–1997 (2015). Shortly before his 100th birthday,…
- writing against culture (anthropological movement)
anthropology: Culture and the humanities: …the 1990s by the “writing against culture” movement, which expressed misgivings about a common form of anthropological thought that imposed excessive and disadvantaging “otherness” on the cultures and peoples studied. This movement implicitly reasserted the humanist universalism of anthropology and pointed up how other cultures were described in terms…
- writing culture (anthropological movement)
anthropology: Culture and the humanities: …challenged anthropology with the “writing culture” movement, which pointed up the biases implicit in the anthropologist’s positioning in field research, and his or her choice of voices to hear and materials to write about in the ethnographic text. Geertz thus enabled many anthropologists of all persuasions to recognize the…
- Writing Degree Zero (work by Barthes)
Roland Barthes: His first book, Le Degré zéro de l’écriture (1953; Writing Degree Zero), was a literary manifesto that examined the arbitrariness of the constructs of language. In subsequent books—including Mythologies (1957), Essais critiques (1964; Critical Essays), and La Tour Eiffel (1964; The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies)—he applied the…
- writing desk (furniture)
desk, a table, frame, or case with a sloping or horizontal top particularly designed to aid writing or reading, and often containing drawers, compartments, or pigeonholes. The first desks were probably designed for ecclesiastical use. Early English desks derived from the church lectern were
- Writing for Social Scientists (work by Becker)
Howard S. Becker: …a sociology of writing in Writing for Social Scientists (1986), phrasing his points in the context of practical advice on how to write about sociological research. Those concepts were broadened in Tricks of the Trade (1998), which discussed effective and meaningful research methods in the social sciences. Becker’s later books…
- writing implement
Braille: Writing Braille by hand is accomplished by means of a device called a slate that consists of two metal plates hinged together to permit a sheet of paper to be inserted between them. Some slates have a wooden base or guide board onto which the…
- Writing in a State of Siege (work by Brink)
South Africa: Literature: …South Africa and wrote, in Writing in a State of Siege (1983), about how unsuccessful the National Party had been in silencing South African writers:
- writing manual (calligraphy)
calligraphy: Writing manuals and copybooks (16th to 18th century): From the 16th through 18th centuries two types of writing books predominated in Europe: the writing manual, which instructed the reader how to make, space, and join letters, as well as, in some books, how to choose…
- writing system (communications)
writing: Writing as a system of signs: A writing system may be defined as any conventional system of marks or signs that represents the utterances of a language. Writing renders language visible; while speech is ephemeral, writing is concrete and, by comparison, permanent. Both speaking and writing depend upon the underlying structures of…
- Writing to Save a Life: The Louis Till File (biography by Wideman)
John Edgar Wideman: Books and teaching career: In 2016 Wideman published Writing to Save a Life: The Louis Till File, a biography of the father of Emmett Till, a Black teenager whose murder in 1955 catalyzed the emerging civil rights movement. The book was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in general nonfiction.…
- Writing’s on the Wall, The (album by Destiny’s Child)
Beyoncé: Early life and Destiny’s Child: ” Its follow-up album, The Writing’s on the Wall (1999), earned the group two Grammy Awards and sold more than eight million copies in the United States. Survivor (2001), the group’s third album, reached the number one spot on the Billboard 200 chart. By this time the group’s lineup,…
- Writings on Music (work by Praetorius)
wind instrument: Trumpet-type aerophones: …clearly depicted in Michael Praetorius’s Syntagma musicum (1619). Praetorius’s illustration of trombones, for example, features crooks inserted between the slide and bell sections. Terminal crooks were common on trumpets from the 17th through the 19th century. They were also used, singly and in combination, on the horn until the mid-18th…
- Writings, The (biblical literature)
Ketuvim, the third division of the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament. Divided into four sections, the Ketuvim include: poetical books (Psalms, Proverbs, and Job), the Megillot, or Scrolls (Song of Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations of Jeremiah, Ecclesiastes, and Esther), prophecy (Daniel), and history (Ezra,
- Written on the Body (novel by Winterson)
Jeanette Winterson: …included Sexing the Cherry (1989); Written on the Body (1992); Art and Lies (1994), about dehumanization and the absence of love in society; Gut Symmetries (1997); and The PowerBook (2000). She later published Lighthousekeeping (2004), an exploration of the nature of storytelling told through the tale of an orphaned girl…
- Written on the Wind (film by Sirk [1956])
Douglas Sirk: From All That Heaven Allows to Imitation of Life: …range of critics, as would Written on the Wind (1956), which followed There’s Always Tomorrow (1955). A sweeping melodrama with a stellar cast (Hudson, Robert Stack, Lauren Bacall, and Dorothy Malone), Written on the Wind is arguably Sirk’s masterpiece. Malone won a best supporting actress Academy Award for her performance…
- Wrobel, Ignaz (German writer)
Kurt Tucholsky was a German satirical essayist, poet, and critic, best-known for his cabaret songs. After studying law and serving in World War I, Tucholsky left Germany in 1924 and lived first in Paris and after 1929 in Sweden. He contributed to Rote Signale (1931; “Red Signals”), a collection of
- Wrocław (Poland)
Wrocław, city, capital of Dolnośląskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland. It lies along the Oder River at its confluence with the Oława, Ślęza, Bystrzyca, and Widawa rivers. A large industrial center situated in Dolny Śląsk (Lower Silesia), Wrocław is the fourth largest city in Poland.
- WROE
rules of engagement: …to constrain military action, and wartime ROE (WROE), which do not limit military responses to offensive actions.
- wrong (ethics)
ethics: …human actions can be judged right or wrong.
- Wrong Box, The (film by Forbes [1966])
Michael Caine: in Berlin (1966), Gambit (1966), The Wrong Box (1966), Hurry Sundown (1967), and The Italian Job (1969).
- Wrong Cops (film by Dupieux [2013])
Marilyn Manson: Acting career: …in the independent short comedy Wrong Cops (2013), acting the part of a young street hustler who becomes involved with a drug-dealing police officer.
- Wrong Is Right (film by Brooks [1982])
Richard Brooks: Later work: …big screen, Brooks returned with Wrong Is Right (1982), a satire about the media that was largely ignored by moviegoers, despite the presence of Sean Connery. His last movie was Fever Pitch (1985), starring Ryan O’Neal as a gambling addict. The drama was a commercial and critical failure, and Brooks…
- Wrong Man, The (film by Hitchcock [1956])
Alfred Hitchcock: The Paramount years: Rear Window to North by Northwest: The bleak The Wrong Man (1956) was based on the Kafkaesque but true (and nationally publicized) story of Queens musician Manny Balestrero (Henry Fonda), who was wrongfully arrested in 1953 for robbing an insurance company and had great difficulty proving his innocence. Shot in many of the…
- wrongful birth (law)
tort: Gray areas: …involved the so-called wrongful conception, wrongful birth, and wrongful life actions, appearing first in the United States (from about the early 1970s) and later in Europe. The harmful event is typically negligence on the part of a doctor who fails to carry out effectively a sterilization operation, with the result…
- wrongful conception (law)
tort: Gray areas: …development has involved the so-called wrongful conception, wrongful birth, and wrongful life actions, appearing first in the United States (from about the early 1970s) and later in Europe. The harmful event is typically negligence on the part of a doctor who fails to carry out effectively a sterilization operation, with…
- wrongful life (law)
tort: Gray areas: wrongful life actions, appearing first in the United States (from about the early 1970s) and later in Europe. The harmful event is typically negligence on the part of a doctor who fails to carry out effectively a sterilization operation, with the result that an “unwanted”…
- Wrotham (England, United Kingdom)
pottery: 17th-century slipware: …trailed slip were made at Wrotham, Kent, and in London during the first half of the 17th century. Wrotham is noted principally for drinking mugs with two or more handles, known as tygs; and London for dishes with such pious exhortations as “Fast and Pray,” obviously inspired by the Puritans.…
- wrought iron (metallurgy)
wrought iron, one of the two forms in which iron is obtained by smelting; the other is cast iron (q.v.). Wrought iron is a soft, ductile, fibrous variety that is produced from a semifused mass of relatively pure iron globules partially surrounded by slag. It usually contains less than 0.1 percent
- wrought zinc (metallurgy)
zinc processing: Wrought zinc and zinc alloys: Rolled zinc strip and sheet is utilized in dry batteries and in the building trade. The usual method of fabrication consists of continuous strip casting followed by in-line rolling mills. At room temperature, unalloyed zinc recrystallizes into its hcp structure…
- wrought-aluminum alloy
aluminum processing: Wrought alloys: Wrought alloys are identified by a four-digit system. Again, the first numeral indicates the major alloying element or group of elements. (See table.)
- Wroxton College (college, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom)
Fairleigh Dickinson University: The university also operates Wroxton College in Oxfordshire, England, and has programs in Tel Aviv, Israel, and Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Important facilities include the George Rothman Institute of Entrepreneurial Studies and the School of Hotel, Restaurant, and Tourism Management. In addition to undergraduate studies, the university offers a…
- Wroztokach (work by Orkan)
Władysław Orkan: …Poland, he wrote the novel W roztokach (1903; “In the Mountain Valleys”), which presents a gloomy image of the country’s poorest districts and their inhabitants. Drzewiej (1912; “In the Old Days”) lyrically describes the life of the Tatra region’s first settlers. Listy ze wsi, 2 vol. (1925–27; “Letters from a…
- wrybill (bird)
wrybill, (Anarhynchus frontalis), New Zealand bird of the plover family, Charadriidae (order Charadriiformes), with the bill curved about 20° to the right. This unique bill configuration is present even in the newly hatched chicks. The wrybill feeds by probing under stones and by sweeping its bill
- wrybill plover (bird)
wrybill, (Anarhynchus frontalis), New Zealand bird of the plover family, Charadriidae (order Charadriiformes), with the bill curved about 20° to the right. This unique bill configuration is present even in the newly hatched chicks. The wrybill feeds by probing under stones and by sweeping its bill
- wrymouth (fish)
perciform: Annotated classification: Family Cryptacanthodidae (wrymouths) Pelvic fins absent, mouth oblique. Marine, northern Atlantic and Pacific. 1 genus (Cryptacanthodes), 4 species. Family Stichaeidae (pricklebacks) Includes families Chirolophidae, Lumpenidae, Xiphiodontidae, Cebidichthyidae. Eel-like; body usually scaled; dorsal fin with spines only or some soft rays at
- wryneck (pathology)
torticollis, abnormality in which the neck is in a twisted, bent position such that the head is pulled to one side and the chin points to the other. In infants the most common causes of torticollis include congenital shortening of muscles on one side of the neck, malposition of the fetus in the
- wryneck (bird)
wryneck, either of two species of birds that constitute the subfamily Jynginae of the woodpecker family (Picidae) but may be separated as the family Jyngidae. Wrynecks are gray-brown birds of open woods and brushlands, named for their habit of twisting their necks snakily when alarmed. They flick
- WSF (international sports organization)
squash rackets: History: The World Squash Federation (WSF) promotes the game and coordinates tours and championships between nations. The WSF membership has grown to over 115 nations, each of which also belongs to one of five regional squash federations.
- WSLF (Somalian organization)
eastern Africa: War in the Ogaden: …and 15,000 fighters of the Western Somali Liberation Front (WSLF). His forces began infiltrating into the Ogaden in May–June 1977, and overt warfare began in July. By September 1977 Mogadishu controlled 90 percent of the Ogaden and had followed retreating Ethiopian forces into non-Somali regions of Harerge, Bale, and Sidamo.
- WSOP (card game)
The World Series of Poker consists of a series of poker events that culminate with a winner being crowned annually in the United States. The main event is a Texas hold’em game, and its winner is considered the poker world champion. The roots of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) championship date
- WSP (American organization)
Women Strike for Peace (WSP), organization that evolved out of an international protest against atmospheric nuclear testing held on November 1, 1961. On that day between 12,000 and 50,000 women in various nations demonstrated to protest nuclear testing and to voice concern, in particular, about the
- WSPU (British organization)
Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU), militant wing of the British woman suffrage movement. WSPU was founded in Manchester in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst. Along with the more conservative National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), founded in 1897, the WSPU sought votes for women in a