- adhesion contract (law)
contract: Contracts of adhesion: Familiar examples of adhesion contracts are contracts for transportation or service concluded with public carriers and utilities and contracts of large corporations with their suppliers, dealers, and customers. In such circumstances a contract becomes a kind of private legislation, in the sense that the stronger party to a…
- adhesion molecule (biochemistry)
Gerald Maurice Edelman: …1975 he discovered substances called cell adhesion molecules (CAMs), which “glue” cells together to form tissues. Edelman found that, as the brain develops, CAMs bind neurons together to form the brain’s basic circuitry. His work led to the construction of a general theory of brain development and function called neuronal…
- adhesive (chemistry)
adhesive, any substance that is capable of holding materials together in a functional manner by surface attachment that resists separation. “Adhesive” as a general term includes cement, mucilage, glue, and paste—terms that are often used interchangeably for any organic material that forms an
- adhesive atelectasis (pathology)
atelectasis: Adhesive atelectasis is seen in premature infants who are unable to spontaneously breathe and in some infants after only a few days of developing breathing difficulties; their lungs show areas in which the alveoli, or air sacs, are not expanded with air. These infants usually…
- adhesive pad (anatomy)
gecko: The pads of their long toes are covered with small plates that are in turn covered with numerous tiny hairlike processes that are forked at the end. These microscopic hooks cling to small surface irregularities, enabling geckos to climb smooth and vertical surfaces and even to…
- adhesive tissue tape
therapeutics: Wound treatment: …together easily and without tension, tape is very useful. Although it is comfortable, easy to apply, and avoids the marks left by sutures, tape may come loose or be removed by the patient and is less successful if much wound edema occurs.
- adhidaivata (Indian philosophy)
Indian philosophy: Roles of sacred texts, mythology, and theism: …interpret difficult Vedic mythologies: the adhidaivata (pertaining to the deities), the aitihasika (pertaining to the tradition), the adhiyajna (pertaining to the sacrifices), and the adhyatmika (pertaining to the spirit). Such interpretations apparently prevailed in the Upanishads; the myths were turned into symbols, though some of them persisted as models and…
- Adhikāranandin (Hindu mythology)
Nandi, bull vahana (“mount”) of the Hindu god Shiva, identified as the god’s vehicle since the Kushan dynasty (c. 1st century ce). Most Shaivite temples have the figure of a humped white bull reclining on a raised platform and facing the entrance door of the shrine so that he may perpetually gaze
- adhipati-pratyaya (Buddhist philosophy)
pratyaya: …(4) the superior cause (adhipati-pratyaya), which refers to all causes, except those stated above, that are effective to produce a thing or not to hinder the existence of it. In the latter sense, every existence can be a cause of all existences except itself.
- adhiyajna (Indian philosophy)
Indian philosophy: Roles of sacred texts, mythology, and theism: … (pertaining to the tradition), the adhiyajna (pertaining to the sacrifices), and the adhyatmika (pertaining to the spirit). Such interpretations apparently prevailed in the Upanishads; the myths were turned into symbols, though some of them persisted as models and metaphors.
- adhocracy (social science)
adhocracy, an organizational design whose structure is highly flexible, loosely coupled, and amenable to frequent change. Adhocracy arises out of the need of formal organizations to be able to recognize, understand, and solve problems in highly complex and turbulent environments. The concept is of
- Adhruḥ, arbitration of (Islamic history [658–659])
fitnah: … (657), which the arbitration at Adhruḥ (659) attempted to resolve, was disastrous: it split ʿAlī’s forces, some of his followers (Khawārij) refusing to acknowledge the validity of human arbitration in a case which they felt could be rightly decided only by God. ʿAlī’s position was also undermined when the arbitrators…
- Adhur-Narses (Sāsānian prince)
Hormizd II: …powerful nobles killed his son Adhur-Narses, who had assumed the throne, and imprisoned another son, Hormizdas. In 324 Hormizdas escaped to the court of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great.
- adhyasa (Indian philosophy)
Advaita: …innate habit of superimposition (adhyasa), by which a thou is ascribed to the I (I am tired; I am happy; I am perceiving). The habit stems from human ignorance (ajnana or avidya), which can be avoided only by the realization of the identity of brahman. Nevertheless, the empirical world…
- adhyatmavidya (Indian philosophy)
Indian philosophy: Roles of sacred texts, mythology, and theism: …systems that may be called adhyatmavidya, or sciences of spirituality, the sacred texts play a much greater role than they do in the logical systems (anvikshikividya). In the case of the former, Shankara, a leading Advaita Vedanta philosopher (c. 788–820 ce), perhaps best laid down the principles: reasoning should be…
- adhyatmika (Indian philosophy)
Indian philosophy: Roles of sacred texts, mythology, and theism: …to the sacrifices), and the adhyatmika (pertaining to the spirit). Such interpretations apparently prevailed in the Upanishads; the myths were turned into symbols, though some of them persisted as models and metaphors.
- Adī (people)
Arunachal Pradesh: People of Arunachal Pradesh: The Adi, who constitute the largest tribal group in the state, live in the central region. The Mishmi inhabit the northeastern hills, and the Wancho, Nocte, and Tangsa are concentrated in the southeastern district of Tirap. Throughout the state, the tribal peoples generally share similar rural…
- Adi Brahmo Samaj (Hinduism)
Brahmo Samaj, theistic movement within Hinduism, founded in Calcutta [now Kolkata] in 1828 by Ram Mohun Roy. The Brahmo Samaj does not accept the authority of the Vedas, has no faith in avatars (incarnations), and does not insist on belief in karma (causal effects of past deeds) or samsara (the
- Adi Da (religious leader)
Adidam: …who changed his name to Adi Da (Sanskrit: “One Who Gives from the Divine Source”) in 1994, it has undergone a number of name changes and considerable internal turmoil.
- Adi Granth (Sikh sacred scripture)
Adi Granth, the sacred scripture of Sikhism, a religion of India. It is a collection of nearly 6,000 hymns of the Sikh Gurus (religious leaders) and various early and medieval saints of different religions and castes. The Adi Granth is the central object of worship in all gurdwaras (Sikh temples)
- ʿAdī ibn Musāfir, Sheikh (Yazīdī leader)
Yazīdī: In the early 12th century, Sheikh ʿAdī ibn Musāfir, a Sufi and a descendant of the Umayyads, settled in Lālish, north of Mosul, and began a Sufi order known as the ʿAdwiyyah. Although his own teachings were strictly orthodox, the beliefs of his followers soon blended with local traditions. A…
- Adi Sri Guru Granth Sahibji (Sikh sacred scripture)
Adi Granth, the sacred scripture of Sikhism, a religion of India. It is a collection of nearly 6,000 hymns of the Sikh Gurus (religious leaders) and various early and medieval saints of different religions and castes. The Adi Granth is the central object of worship in all gurdwaras (Sikh temples)
- Adi-Buddha (Buddhism)
Adi-Buddha, among some sects of Mahayana Buddhism, the first, or self-existing, buddha (“enlightened one”), from whom are said to have evolved the five Dhyani-Buddhas. Though the concept of an Adi-Buddha was never generally popular, a few groups, particularly in Nepal, Tibet, and Java, elevated the
- adiabatic change (physics)
adiabatic process, in thermodynamics, change occurring within a system as a result of transfer of energy to or from the system in the form of work only; i.e., no heat is transferred. A rapid expansion or contraction of a gas is very nearly adiabatic. Any process that occurs within a container that
- adiabatic compressibility (physics)
fluid mechanics: Basic properties of fluids: …isothermal compressibility, βT, or the adiabatic compressibility, βS, according to circumstance. When an element of fluid is compressed, the work done on it tends to heat it up. If the heat has time to drain away to the surroundings and the temperature of the fluid remains essentially unchanged throughout, then…
- adiabatic demagnetization (physics)
adiabatic demagnetization, process by which the removal of a magnetic field from certain materials serves to lower their temperature. This procedure, proposed by chemists Peter Debye (1926) and William Francis Giauque (independently, 1927), provides a means for cooling an already cold material (at
- adiabatic expansion (physics)
fog: …cooling of the air by adiabatic expansion; mixing two humid airstreams having different temperatures; and direct cooling of the air by radiation.
- adiabatic flow (physics)
fluid mechanics: Basic properties of fluids: …flow is said to be adiabatic, and βS is needed instead. (The S refers to entropy, which remains constant in an adiabatic process provided that it takes place slowly enough to be treated as “reversible” in the thermodynamic sense.) For gases that obey equation (118), it is evident that p…
- adiabatic lapse rate (physics)
atmosphere: Convection: This rate is called the adiabatic lapse rate (the rate of temperature change occurring within a rising or descending air parcel). In the ocean, the temperature increase with depth that results in free convection is dependent on the temperature, salinity, and depth of the water. For example, if the surface…
- adiabatic nuclear demagnetization (physics)
adiabatic demagnetization: …by an analogous means called adiabatic nuclear demagnetization. This process relies on ordering (aligning) nuclear dipoles (arising from nuclear spins), which are at least 1,000 times smaller than those of atoms. With this process, temperatures of the ordered nuclei as low as 16 microdegrees (0.000016 degree) absolute have been reached.
- adiabatic process (physics)
adiabatic process, in thermodynamics, change occurring within a system as a result of transfer of energy to or from the system in the form of work only; i.e., no heat is transferred. A rapid expansion or contraction of a gas is very nearly adiabatic. Any process that occurs within a container that
- adiabatic temperature increase (geophysics)
seawater: Temperature distribution: This water experiences an adiabatic temperature rise as it sinks. Such a temperature rise does not make the water column unstable, because the increased temperature is caused by compression, which increases the density of the water. For example, surface seawater of 2 °C (35.6 °F) sinking to a depth…
- Adiabene (ancient kingdom, Iraq)
Adiabene, petty kingdom that was a vassal state of the Parthian empire (247 bc–ad 224) in northern Mesopotamia (now Iraq). Its capital was Arba-ilu (Arbela; modern Irbīl). In the 1st century ad its royal family embraced Judaism; the queen mother Helena (d. ad 50), famous for her generosity to the
- Adiantoid (plant clade)
Pteridaceae: Adiantoid clade: The Adiantoid clade contains 6–12 genera and some 300 species. Members of Adiantum (about 250 species), often called maidenhair ferns, are characterized by sporangia positioned on the underside of small flaps of tissue along the leaflet margins. Northern maidenhair (A. pedatum) is found…
- Adiantum (plant genus)
plant: Annotated classification: Polystichum, Adiantum, and Cyathea. Class Equisetopsida (horsetails, scouring rushes) Vascular plants; sporophyte differentiated into stem, leaf, and root; stems ribbed and jointed, monopodial; minute leaves whorled at the nodes; vascular tissue organized into bundles; sole living genus with
- Adiantum pedatum (plant)
fern: Tissues: An example is the common maidenhair fern (Adiantum pedatum), the blade of which, between veins, is mainly made up of only two layers, the upper and the lower epidermis, in which most photosynthesis occurs.
- adiaphorism (Christian theology)
adiaphorism, (from Greek adiaphora, “indifferent”), in Christian theology, the opinion that certain doctrines or practices in morals or religion are matters of indifference because they are neither commanded nor forbidden in the Bible. Two adiaphorist controversies occurred in Germany after the
- Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi (Nigerian author)
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is a Nigerian writer whose second novel, Half of a Yellow Sun (2006), gained international acclaim for its depiction of the devastation caused by the Nigerian Civil War. Her novels, short stories, and nonfiction explore the intersections of identity. Early in life Adichie,
- Adidam (religious movement)
Adidam, a small religious movement grounded in the Hindu tradition. Founded in 1972 in California by Franklin Jones (born 1939), who changed his name to Adi Da (Sanskrit: “One Who Gives from the Divine Source”) in 1994, it has undergone a number of name changes and considerable internal turmoil.
- Adidas (German company)
Adidas (styled as “adidas” since 1949) is a prominent German manufacturer of athletic shoes and apparel, identified by its three-stripe trademark. The company is also known for its high-profile endorsement deals, including NBA star Derrick Rose and Argentine-born football (soccer) star Lionel
- Adiego Lajara, Ignacio (Spanish scholar)
Anatolian languages: Carian: …approach was successfully continued by Ignacio Adiego Lajara and fully confirmed by the discovery of a Carian-Greek bilingual in Kaunos in 1996 and 1997. Much remains uncertain, but the grammatical features thus attested confirm that Carian is related to Hittite and Luwian and is part of the Anatolian group.
- Adieu au langage (film by Godard [2014])
Jean-Luc Godard: Later work and awards of Jean-Luc Godard: …and Adieu au langage (2014; Goodbye to Language), a fragmented narrative about a man, a woman, and a dog, filmed in 3-D. Le Livre d’image (2018; The Image Book) is a cinematic essay, featuring a montage of film clips, photographs, and wartime footage, with Godard providing commentary.
- Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre (work by Beauvoir)
Simone de Beauvoir: …La Cérémonie des adieux (Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre), a painful account of Sartre’s last years.
- Adiga, Aravind (Indian-born author)
The White Tiger: Aravind Adiga, published in 2008.
- Adigal, Ilango, Prince (Tamil author)
Silappathikaram: …the 5th–6th century ad by Prince Ilanko Adikal (Ilango Adigal). Its plot is derived from a well-known story.
- Adige River (river, Italy)
Adige River, longest stream of Italy after the Po River. The Adige rises in the north from two Alpine mountain lakes below Resia Pass and flows rapidly through the Venosta Valley south and east past Merano and Bolzano. Having received the waters of the Isarco River at Bolzano, the Adige turns south
- Adige, Fiume (river, Italy)
Adige River, longest stream of Italy after the Po River. The Adige rises in the north from two Alpine mountain lakes below Resia Pass and flows rapidly through the Venosta Valley south and east past Merano and Bolzano. Having received the waters of the Isarco River at Bolzano, the Adige turns south
- Adikal, Ilanko, Prince (Tamil author)
Silappathikaram: …the 5th–6th century ad by Prince Ilanko Adikal (Ilango Adigal). Its plot is derived from a well-known story.
- ʿĀdil Shāhī dynasty (Indian dynasty)
ʿĀdil Shāhī dynasty, (1489–1686), ruling family of the kingdom of Bijapur, India, one of the two principal successor states to the Muslim sultanate of Bahmanī in the Deccan. The dynasty strongly resisted the Mughal advance southward in the 17th century until it was extinguished by the Indian
- ʿĀdil, al-Malik al- (Ayyūbid sultan)
Ayyubid dynasty: …relaxed under the reigns of al-ʿĀdil and al-Kāmil, Saladin’s brother and nephew, and in 1229 Jerusalem was ceded to the Christians. Although Ayyubid factionalism had been quieted, al-Kāmil’s death in 1238 revived old family disputes, further weakening the dynasty. The Ayyubid decline in Egypt was completed with the Mamluk accession…
- Adilabad (India)
Adilabad, city, northern Telangana state, southern India, lying 160 miles (260 km) north of Hyderabad. The city is situated on a well-forested plateau some 2,000 feet (600 metres) high between the Godavari (south) and Penganga (north) rivers. It is an agricultural trade centre, connected with
- ʿĀdiliyyah Madrasah, Al- (building, Damascus, Syria)
Islamic arts: Architecture in Iraq, Syria, and Anatolia: …Syrian madrasahs in Damascus, like Al-ʿĀdiliyyah, Al-Ẓāhiriyyah, or the works of Nureddin, tended also to follow a comparatively standardized plan: an elaborate facade led into a domed hallway and then into a court with at least one eyvān. Most of those madrasahs were small and were fitted into a preexisting…
- Adinandra (plant genus)
Pentaphylacaceae: …to the western Pacific and Adinandra (75 species) is Indo-Malesian. The genus Freziera (some 57 species) is entirely American. The leaves in this group are often toothed and may remain rolled up as they elongate, so the lower surface of the blade has longitudinal markings. The flowers also occur in…
- Ādinātha (Jaina saint)
Rishabhanatha, the first of the 24 Tirthankaras (“Ford-Makers,” i.e., saviours) of Jainism, a religion of India. His name comes from the series of 14 auspicious dreams that his mother had, in which a bull (rishabha) appeared, before his birth. He is also known as Adinatha (“Lord of the Beginning”)
- adion (chemistry)
electrochemical reaction: Electrocrystallization: …of adsorbed ion, called an adion, which, however, has already undergone partial discharge.
- Adios (American racehorse)
harness racing: The decline and rise of harness racing.: …in the 1930s, the pacers Adios in the 1940s and his son Adios Butler in the 1950s, the pacer Bret Hanover and the trotter Nevele Pride in the 1960s, and the pacer Niatross retired to stud in 1981. The French trotting mare Une de Mai was at one time one…
- Adios Butler (American racehorse)
harness racing: The decline and rise of harness racing.: …the 1940s and his son Adios Butler in the 1950s, the pacer Bret Hanover and the trotter Nevele Pride in the 1960s, and the pacer Niatross retired to stud in 1981. The French trotting mare Une de Mai was at one time one of the leading money winning horses in…
- adipic acid (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Polycarboxylic acids: Because adipic (six carbons) and longer-chain dicarboxylic acids would give rings of seven or more members, heating of these acids does not generally lead to cyclic anhydrides, though this conversion sometimes can be accomplished by using special techniques. Upon heating, phthalic acid readily yields phthalic anhydride…
- adipocyte (biology)
adipose cell, connective-tissue cell specialized to synthesize and contain large globules of fat. There are two types of adipose cells: white adipose cells contain large fat droplets, only a small amount of cytoplasm, and flattened, noncentrally located nuclei; and brown adipose cells contain fat
- adipose cell (biology)
adipose cell, connective-tissue cell specialized to synthesize and contain large globules of fat. There are two types of adipose cells: white adipose cells contain large fat droplets, only a small amount of cytoplasm, and flattened, noncentrally located nuclei; and brown adipose cells contain fat
- adipose fin (animal appendage)
ostariophysan: Fin spines and adipose fin: An adipose fin consists of a small to elongated fleshy or fatty structure without fin ray supports, located dorsally between the rayed dorsal fin and caudal (tail) fin. It is present in most ostariophysan fishes.
- adipose tissue (anatomy)
adipose tissue, connective tissue consisting mainly of fat cells (adipose cells, or adipocytes), specialized to synthesize and contain large globules of fat, within a structural network of fibres. It is found mainly under the skin but also in deposits between the muscles, in the intestines and in
- adiposogenital dystrophy (medical disorder)
Fröhlich’s syndrome, rare childhood metabolic disorder characterized by obesity, growth retardation, and retarded development of the genital organs. It is usually associated with tumours of the hypothalamus, causing increased appetite and depressed secretion of gonadotropin. The disease is named
- adipsia (pathology)
adipsia, rare disorder characterized by the lack of thirst even in the presence of dehydration. In adipsia the brain’s thirst centre, located in the hypothalamus, is damaged. People with adipsia have little or no sensation of thirst when they become dehydrated. These people must be instructed, even
- Adipurana (work by Pampa)
Pampa: Pampa’s great work was the Adipurana (“First [or Original] Scriptures”), in which Jain teaching and tenets are expounded. Another epic of his creation is the Pampa-Bharata (c. 950; Bharata is both the ancient name for India and the name of a famous king), in which Pampa likened his royal master…
- Adirondack Anorthosite (rock formation, Canada)
anorthosite: …(1,040 square miles), and the Adirondack Anorthosite is exposed over an area of about 3,900 square km (1,560 square miles). The Bushveld Complex underlies an area of about 50,000 square km (20,000 square miles); and the Great Dyke of Zimbabwe, another layered complex, has been traced for more than 480…
- Adirondack Forest Preserve (park, New York, United States)
Adirondack Mountains: The state-owned Adirondack Forest Preserve now comprises some 3,900 square miles (10,100 square km) within the park and is a popular tourist area. The majority of the land in Adirondack Park, however, is privately owned and used for lumbering, agriculture, and recreation. The mining of iron ore,…
- Adirondack furniture (art)
rustic style, in decorative arts, any ruralizing influence; more precisely, a type of furniture made of wood or metal, the main components of which are carved and fretted to resemble the branches of trees. Stemming from the idealization of nature and the “simple life” that occurred in the mid-18th
- Adirondack Mountains (mountains, New York, United States)
Adirondack Mountains, mountains in northeastern New York state, U.S. They extend southward from the St. Lawrence River valley and Lake Champlain to the Mohawk River valley. The mountains are only sparsely settled, and much of the area exists in a primitive natural state, protected by state law.
- Adirondack Park (park, New York, United States)
Essex: …Mountains, is entirely occupied by Adirondack Park (1892), which is one of the largest parks in the United States and the nation’s first forest preserve. Mount Marcy, in the central part of the county, is the highest point in the state (5,344 feet [1,629 metres]); surrounding peaks include Haystack, Skylight,…
- Adirondacks (mountains, New York, United States)
Adirondack Mountains, mountains in northeastern New York state, U.S. They extend southward from the St. Lawrence River valley and Lake Champlain to the Mohawk River valley. The mountains are only sparsely settled, and much of the area exists in a primitive natural state, protected by state law.
- Adis Abeba (national capital, Ethiopia)
Addis Ababa, capital and largest city of Ethiopia. It is located on a well-watered plateau surrounded by hills and mountains in the geographic centre of the country. Only since the late 19th century has Addis Ababa been the capital of the Ethiopian state. Its immediate predecessor, Entoto, was
- Adisa, Gamba (American poet and author)
Audre Lorde was an American poet, essayist, and autobiographer known for her passionate writings on lesbian feminism and racial issues. The daughter of Grenadan parents, Lorde attended Hunter College and received a B.A. in 1959 and a master’s degree in library science in 1961. She married in 1962
- adit (mining)
adit, a horizontal or near-horizontal passage driven from the Earth’s surface into the side of a ridge or mountain for the purpose of working, ventilating, or removing water from a mine. Where either a vertical shaft or an adit can be used to reach a mineral deposit, the generally lower cost of
- Aditi (Hindu deity)
Aditi, in the Vedic phase of Hindu mythology, the personification of the infinite and mother of a group of celestial deities, the Adityas. As a primeval goddess, she is referred to as the mother of many gods, including Vishnu in his dwarf incarnation and, in a later reappearance, Krishna. She
- Adityas (Vedic gods)
Aditi: …group of celestial deities, the Adityas. As a primeval goddess, she is referred to as the mother of many gods, including Vishnu in his dwarf incarnation and, in a later reappearance, Krishna. She supports the sky, sustains all existence, and nourishes the earth. It is in the latter sense that…
- Adıvar, Halide Edib (Turkish author)
Halide Edib Adıvar was a novelist and pioneer in the emancipation of women in Turkey. Educated by private tutors and at the American College for Girls in Istanbul, she became actively engaged in Turkish literary, political, and social movements. She divorced her first husband in 1910 because she
- Adivar, Halide Edip (Turkish author)
Halide Edib Adıvar was a novelist and pioneer in the emancipation of women in Turkey. Educated by private tutors and at the American College for Girls in Istanbul, she became actively engaged in Turkish literary, political, and social movements. She divorced her first husband in 1910 because she
- Adivasi (people)
Adivasi, any of various ethnic groups considered to be the original inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent. The term is used primarily in India and Bangladesh. In the constitution of India, promulgated in 1950, most of these groups were listed—or scheduled—as targets for social and economic
- Adıyaman (Turkey)
Adıyaman, city located in a valley of southeastern Turkey. Founded in the 8th century by the Umayyad Arabs near the site of ancient Perre, Ḥiṣn Manṣūr was later fortified by Caliph Hārūn al-Rashīd and became the chief town of the area, replacing Perre. Ruled successively by the Byzantines, the
- Adıyaman (province, Turkey)
Adıyaman: …Turkish republic, it was renamed Adıyaman in 1926. The ruins of Perre are just to the north.
- Adja (people)
Benin: Ethnic groups: …other southern groups are various Adja peoples, including the Aizo, the Holi, and the Mina.
- Adjara (autonomous republic, Georgia)
Ajaria, autonomous republic in Georgia, in the southwestern corner of that country, adjacent to the Black Sea and the Turkish frontier. It is largely mountainous with the exception of a narrow coastal strip. Batumi is the capital and largest city. Area 1,112 square miles (2,880 square km). Pop.
- Adjaye Africa Architecture: A Photographic Survey of Metropolitan Architecture (work by Adjaye)
David Adjaye: …published as a seven-volume set, Adjaye Africa Architecture: A Photographic Survey of Metropolitan Architecture (2011; also published as African Metropolitan Architecture). He also authored or coauthored several other publications, including David Adjaye: Houses: Recycling, Reconfiguring, Rebuilding (2005), David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings: Specificity, Customization, Imbrication (2006), David Adjaye: A House…
- Adjaye, David (architect)
David Adjaye is a British-based architect of Ghanaian descent who won international acclaim for his diverse designs and innovative use of materials and light. Adjaye was born to Ghanaian parents in Tanzania, where his father, a diplomat, was stationed at the time. Because of his father’s career,
- Adjaye, Sir David (architect)
David Adjaye is a British-based architect of Ghanaian descent who won international acclaim for his diverse designs and innovative use of materials and light. Adjaye was born to Ghanaian parents in Tanzania, where his father, a diplomat, was stationed at the time. Because of his father’s career,
- adjective (grammar)
adjective, a word or phrase that modifies, or specifies, the meaning of a noun or pronoun. An adjective provides additional information about a noun or pronoun by answering the question What kind? (for example, a green bicycle), Which one? (the second episode), How much? (more ice cream), How many?
- adjective law
procedural law, the law governing the machinery of the courts and the methods by which both the state and the individual (the latter including groups, whether incorporated or not) enforce their rights in the several courts. Procedural law prescribes the means of enforcing rights or providing
- adjoint (French government)
Marseille: Government: …a local government of 27 adjoints, each with responsibility for a particular facet of government, such as town planning, culture, finance, employment, or transport, and by delegate councillors who assist the adjoints or undertake more detailed responsibilities.
- adjoint functor (mathematics)
foundations of mathematics: Isomorphic structures: …in foundations and elsewhere are adjoint functors (F,G). These are pairs of functors between two categories 𝒜 and ℬ, which go in opposite directions such that a one-to-one correspondence exists between the set of arrows F(A) → B in ℬ and the set of arrows A → G(B) in 𝒜—that…
- adjournment (chess)
chess: Standard controls: …events a game was usually adjourned after the first five-hour session of play and resumed at a later time. Critics said this gave a player an unfair chance to consult colleagues, seconds, or, after 1980, even computers.
- adjudication (law)
bankruptcy: Assets subject to liquidation proceedings: …the bankrupt subsequent to his adjudication or conveyed away by him prior to that date.
- adjunct (grammar)
English language: Origins and basic characteristics: …employ a plural noun as adjunct (modifier), as in wages board and sports editor; or even a conjunctional group, as in prices and incomes policy and parks and gardens committee. Any word class may alter its function in this way: the ins and outs (prepositions becoming nouns), no buts (conjunction…
- adjustable square (tool)
hand tool: Plumb line, level, and square: The adjustable, or bevel, square was used for angles other than 90 degrees beginning in the 17th century. In the earliest examples, the thin blade moved stiffly because it was riveted into a slot in the thick blade. Later models of the 19th century, however, were…
- adjustable wrench (tool)
wrench: The adjustable pipe, or Stillson, wrench is used to hold or turn pipes or circular bars. This wrench has serrated jaws, one of which is pivoted on the handle to create a strong gripping action on the work.
- adjustable-rate mortgage (finance)
United States: The George W. Bush administration: …mortgages, most of which were adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM) at low, so-called teaser, interest rates that ballooned after a few years. The rates for many of those ARMs jumped at the same time that overbuilding undercut the housing market; foreclosures mounted, and investment banks that under recent deregulation had been allowed…
- Adjuster, The (film by Egoyan [1991])
Atom Egoyan: The premise for The Adjuster (1991) took shape as Egoyan studied the insurance agent who came to assess the damage to his family’s business when it was destroyed by fire. Egoyan followed those films with Calendar (1993), in which he starred as a Canadian photographer taking snapshots of…
- adjustment (contract law)
contract: Performance: The task of adjustment is relatively easy in cases in which both parties made a mistake or in which one party laboured under a mistaken assumption that was, or plainly should have been, known to the other. The problem of mistake becomes more intractable when the error is…
- adjustment (psychology)
adjustment, in psychology, the behavioral process by which humans and other animals maintain an equilibrium among their various needs or between their needs and the obstacles of their environments. A sequence of adjustment begins when a need is felt and ends when it is satisfied. Hungry people, for
- Adjustment Bureau, The (film by Nolfi [2011])
Matt Damon: The Departed, Invictus, and True Grit: …he starred in the thriller The Adjustment Bureau, based on a story by Philip K. Dick; Contagion, Soderbergh’s thriller about a deadly virus; and We Bought a Zoo, adapted from a memoir about a family who moves to a wildlife park. Damon then wrote with costar John Krasinski the drama…