- brightness (astronomy)
meteor and meteoroid: Basic features of meteors: …the sky, it varies in brightness, appears to emit sparks or flares, and sometimes leaves a luminous train that lingers after its flight has ended. Unusually luminous meteors are termed fireballs or bolides (the latter term is often applied to those meteoroids observed to explode in the sky). When meteor…
- brightness control (television)
television: Controls: …of the image); (4) a brightness control, which adjusts the average amount of current taken by the picture tube from the high-voltage power supply, thus varying the overall brightness of the picture; (5) a horizontal-hold control, which adjusts the horizontal deflection generator so that it conforms exactly to the control…
- brightness temperature (astronomy)
star: Stellar temperatures: …extinction) is known, the so-called brightness temperature can be found.
- Brighton (Colorado, United States)
Brighton, city, seat (1902) of Adams county (and lying partially within Weld county), north-central Colorado, U.S., on the South Platte River. Originally a rest stop on a fur-trading trail between Fort Bent and Fort Laramie, Wyoming, the town developed (in the late 1860s) at the junction of the
- Brighton (England, United Kingdom)
Brighton, urban area (from 2011 built-up area), unitary authority of Brighton and Hove, historic county of Sussex, southeastern England. It is a seaside resort on the English Channel, 51 miles (82 km) south of central London. In 2000 the unitary authority of Brighton and Hove was granted city
- Brighton and Hove (unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Brighton and Hove, city and unitary authority, geographic county of East Sussex, historic county of Sussex, southeastern England. It is located on the English Channel 51 miles (82 km) south of London, with which it is closely linked by rail and superhighway. The unitary authority, which is the
- Brighton Beach Memoirs (film by Saks [1986])
Jason Alexander: Career: …E/R (1984–85), the comedy film Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986), and the drama The Mosquito Coast (1986). In 1989 he moved to California to work on Seinfeld, a comedy series that was initially called The Seinfeld Chronicles.
- Brighton Beach Memoirs (play by Simon)
Neil Simon: …of autobiographical plays consisting of Brighton Beach Memoirs (1983; film 1986); Biloxi Blues (1985; film 1988), which was awarded the Tony for best play; and Broadway Bound (1986; television movie 1992). Subsequent plays included Rumors (1988); Lost in Yonkers (1991;
- Brighton bombing (Northern Ireland history)
the Troubles: The Sunningdale Agreement, hunger strikes, Bobby Sands, and the Brighton bombing: A glimmer of hope was offered by the Sunningdale Agreement , named for the English city in which it was negotiated in 1973. That agreement led to the creation of a new Northern Ireland Assembly, with proportional representation for all parties, and to…
- Brighton Rock (novel by Greene)
Brighton Rock, novel of sin and redemption by Graham Greene, published in 1938 and filmed in 1947 and 2010. The two main characters in Greene’s gripping reflection on the nature of evil are the amateur detective Ida and the murderous Pinkie, a teenager and Roman Catholic who chooses hell over
- Brighton Rock (film by Boulting [1947])
Richard Attenborough: …of a sociopathic thug in Brighton Rock (1947); a soldier in the comedy Private’s Progress (1956) and its sequel, I’m All Right Jack (1959); and a squadron leader engineering a breakout from a German POW camp in The Great Escape (1963). Attenborough won Golden Globe Awards for best supporting actor…
- Brigid of Ireland, St. (Irish saint)
St. Brigid of Ireland ; feast day February 1) was an abbess who founded an important monastic community at Kildare in the 5th century and is revered as one of the three patron saints of Ireland, along with St. Patrick and St. Columba (Colmcille). Little is known of Brigid’s life but from legend,
- Brigid of Kildare, Saint (Irish saint)
St. Brigid of Ireland ; feast day February 1) was an abbess who founded an important monastic community at Kildare in the 5th century and is revered as one of the three patron saints of Ireland, along with St. Patrick and St. Columba (Colmcille). Little is known of Brigid’s life but from legend,
- Brigid of Sweden, Saint (Swedish saint)
St. Bridget of Sweden ; canonized October 8, 1391; feast day July 23, formerly October 8) was the patron saint of Sweden, founder of the Bridgittines (Order of the Most Holy Savior), and a mystic whose revelations were influential during the Middle Ages. In 1999 Pope John Paul II named her one of
- Brigit (Celtic deity)
Brigit, in Celtic religion, ancient goddess of the poetic arts, crafts, prophecy, and divination; she was the equivalent of the Roman goddess Minerva (Greek Athena). In Ireland this Brigit was one of three goddesses of the same name, daughters of the Dagda, the great god of that country. Her two
- Brigit of Ireland, Saint (Irish saint)
St. Brigid of Ireland ; feast day February 1) was an abbess who founded an important monastic community at Kildare in the 5th century and is revered as one of the three patron saints of Ireland, along with St. Patrick and St. Columba (Colmcille). Little is known of Brigid’s life but from legend,
- Brigittine Order (Roman Catholicism)
Bridgettine, a religious order of cloistered nuns founded by St. Bridget of Sweden in 1344 and approved by Pope Urban V in 1370. Bridget believed that she was called by Christ to found a strictly disciplined religious order that would contribute to the reform of monastic life. She went to Rome to
- Brihadaranyaka (Indian religious work)
Hinduism: The Upanishads: …are the two oldest, the Brihadaranyaka (“Great Forest Text”; c. 10th–5th century bce) and the Chandogya (pertaining to the Chandogas, priests who intone hymns at sacrifices), both of which are compilations that record the traditions of sages (rishis) of the period—notably Yajnavalkya, who was a pioneer of new religious ideas.
- Brihaddeshi (work by Māaṇa)
South Asian arts: Further development of the grama-ragas: …text on Indian music, the Brihaddeshi, written by the theorist Matanga about the 10th century ce, the grama-ragas are said to derive from the jatis. In some respects at least, the grama-ragas resemble not the jatis but their parent scales. The author of the Brihaddeshi claims to be the first…
- Brihadeshwara Chola (temple, Thanjavur, India)
Brihadishvara temple, temple in Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India, that was constructed under the ruler Rajaraja I and completed in 1010. The Brihadishvara temple is just as much a symbol of power and wealth as it is a shrine to the Hindu god Shiva. Inscriptions—made on the walls detailing the ruler’s
- Brihadishvara temple (temple, Thanjavur, India)
Brihadishvara temple, temple in Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India, that was constructed under the ruler Rajaraja I and completed in 1010. The Brihadishvara temple is just as much a symbol of power and wealth as it is a shrine to the Hindu god Shiva. Inscriptions—made on the walls detailing the ruler’s
- Brihadratha (Mauryan emperor)
India: Ashoka and his successors: … the last of the Mauryas, Brihadratha, was assassinated by his Brahman commander in chief, Pushyamitra, who founded the Shunga dynasty.
- Brihaspati (Hindu deity)
Brihaspati, in Vedic mythology, the preceptor of the gods, the master of sacred wisdom, charms, hymns, and rites, and the sage counselor of Indra in his war against the titans, or asuras. As such, Brihaspati is the heavenly prototype of the class of Brahmans and, most particularly, of the earthly
- Brihati (work by Prabhākara)
Indian philosophy: Principal texts and relation to Shabara: …the author of the commentary Brihati (“The Large Commentary”), on Shabara’s bhashya. On many essential matters, Prabhakara differs radically from the views of Kumarila. Prabhakara’s Brihati has been commented upon by Shalikanatha in his Rijuvimala (“The Straight and Free from Blemishes”), whereas the same author’s Prakaranapanchika (“Commentary of Five Topics”)…
- Brihatphalayana (people)
India: The Andhras and their successors: The Brihatphalayanas came to power at the end of the 3rd century in the Masulipatam area. In these regions the Satavahana pattern of administration continued; many of the rulers had matronymics (names derived from that of the mother or a maternal ancestor); many of the royal…
- Brij Bhasa language
Braj Bhasha language, language descended from Shauraseni Prakrit and commonly viewed as a western dialect of Hindi. It is spoken by some 575,000 people, primarily in India. Its purest forms are spoken in the cities of Mathura, Agra, Etah, and Aligarh. Most speakers of Braj Bhasha worship the Hindu
- Brija el-Jadida, el- (Morocco)
El Jadida, Atlantic port city, north-central Morocco, lying about 55 miles (90 km) southwest of Casablanca. The settlement developed after 1502 around a Portuguese fort and, as Mazagan, became the centre of Portuguese settlement and their last stronghold (1769) against the Filālī (Alaouite)
- Brijnagar (India)
Jhalawar, town, far southeastern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It is situated on an upland plateau just west of the Kali Sindh River, a tributary of the Chambal River, about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Kota. The old town of Jhalrapatan (Patan) was founded as a cantonment (military
- brik (food)
gastronomy: African: Another is brik (related to the Turkish börek), a deep-fried pastry turnover stuffed with fish or meat and a whole egg. A sampler from this continent would include, in East Africa, peanut (groundnut) soup and beef and cassava stew, cooked with coconut, chilies, and coriander; in West…
- Brikama (The Gambia)
Brikama, town, western Gambia, on the road from Banjul (formerly Bathurst) to Mansa Konko. An agricultural trade centre (peanuts [groundnuts], palm oil, and kernels) among the Muslim Malinke (Mandingo) and Dyola (Diola or Jola) peoples, it is also the focus for the country’s incipient forest
- Brikettage (clay mold)
Halle: 1000 bc), Brikettage, clay molds used for making salt bricks, were developed—a distinctive feature of the Halle Culture. About 400 bc the Halle Culture came to an end, to be succeeded by the later Jasdorf Culture, which lasted until the Roman period.
- Brilessos (mountains, Greece)
Mount Pentelicus, mountain range enclosing the Attic plain on its northeast but within the nomós (department) of Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí), in Greece. The chief summit, about 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Athens (Athína), is Kokkinarás (3,632 feet [1,107 m]), which yields white Pentelic marble
- Brilettos (mountains, Greece)
Mount Pentelicus, mountain range enclosing the Attic plain on its northeast but within the nomós (department) of Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí), in Greece. The chief summit, about 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Athens (Athína), is Kokkinarás (3,632 feet [1,107 m]), which yields white Pentelic marble
- brill (fish)
flounder: …blue spots and rings; the brill (Scophthalmus rhombus), a relatively large commercial European species, reaching a length of 75 cm (29 inches); and the dusky flounder (Syacium papillosum), a tropical western Atlantic species. Flounders in those families typically have eyes and colouring on the left side. See also flatfish.
- Brill Building, The (building, New York City, New York, United States)
The Brill Building: Assembly-Line Pop: Located at 1619 Broadway in New York City, the Brill Building was the hub of professionally written rock and roll. As the 1960s equivalent of Tin Pan Alley, it reemphasized a specialized division of labour in which professional songwriters worked closely with producers and artists-and-repertoire…
- Brill, Paul (Flemish artist)
Paul Brill was a Flemish artist who was perhaps the most popular painter of landscapes in Rome in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. His early forest landscapes derive in style partly from Mannerism, but after 1600 he disciplined and simplified his compositions under the influence of the
- Brill, Paulus (Flemish artist)
Paul Brill was a Flemish artist who was perhaps the most popular painter of landscapes in Rome in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. His early forest landscapes derive in style partly from Mannerism, but after 1600 he disciplined and simplified his compositions under the influence of the
- Brill-Zinsser disease
typhus: Epidemic typhus: …complication of epidemic typhus is Brill-Zinsser disease, or recrudescent typhus, in which mild symptoms of epidemic louse-borne typhus reappear after a latent period, sometimes of many years, in persons who at one time had contracted epidemic typhus. The disease was first noted when cases of typhus occurred in communities that…
- Brillat-Savarin, Anthelme (French author)
Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was a French lawyer, politician, and author of a celebrated work on gastronomy, Physiologie du goût (The Physiology of Taste). Brillat-Savarin followed the family profession of law. A deputy of the Third Estate at the Estates-General of 1789, he was forced to flee the
- Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Anthelme (French author)
Anthelme Brillat-Savarin was a French lawyer, politician, and author of a celebrated work on gastronomy, Physiologie du goût (The Physiology of Taste). Brillat-Savarin followed the family profession of law. A deputy of the Third Estate at the Estates-General of 1789, he was forced to flee the
- brilliance (acoustics)
acoustics: Acoustic criteria: “Warmth” and “brilliance” refer to the reverberation time at low frequencies relative to that at higher frequencies. Above about 500 hertz, the reverberation time should be the same for all frequencies. But at low frequencies an increase in the reverberation time creates a warm sound, while, if…
- brilliant cut (gem cut)
brilliant cut, method of faceting a diamond to take best advantage of the optical properties of the stone and produce a finished gem with the maximum fire and brilliancy. It is the most popular style of faceting for diamonds. A brilliant-cut stone is round in plan view and has 58 facets, 33 of
- brilliant green (drug and dye)
brilliant green, a triphenylmethane dye of the malachite-green series (see malachite green) used in dilute solution as a topical antiseptic. Brilliant green is effective against gram-positive microorganisms. It has also been used to dye silk and wool. It occurs as small, shiny, golden crystals
- Brilliant Lies (play by Williamson)
David Williamson: … (1989), Money & Friends (1992), Brilliant Lies (1993; film 1996), Up for Grabs (2001), Influence (2005), Let the Sunshine (2010), and Nearer the Gods (2018). Williamson also wrote several screenplays, including Phar Lap (1982) and, in collaboration with Peter Weir,
- Brillouin function (physics)
magnetism: Paramagnetism: … and is given by the Brillouin function, which depends only on the ratio (B/T). At low magnetic fields, the magnetization is linearly proportional to the field and reaches its maximum saturation value when the magnetic energy is much greater than the thermal energy. Figure 15 shows the dependence of the…
- Brillouin, Léon (French physicist)
Maxwell’s demon: About 1950 the French physicist Léon Brillouin exorcised the demon by demonstrating that the decrease in entropy resulting from the demon’s actions would be exceeded by the increase in entropy in choosing between the fast and slow molecules.
- Brimmer, Andrew (American economist)
Andrew Brimmer was an American economist who became the first African American governor of the Federal Reserve Board (1966–74). He was a renowned expert on monetary policy, international finance, and capital markets. Brimmer was the son of sharecroppers and attended local segregated schools. Upon
- Brimmer, Andrew Fulton, Jr. (American economist)
Andrew Brimmer was an American economist who became the first African American governor of the Federal Reserve Board (1966–74). He was a renowned expert on monetary policy, international finance, and capital markets. Brimmer was the son of sharecroppers and attended local segregated schools. Upon
- brimstone (chemical element)
sulfur (S), nonmetallic chemical element belonging to the oxygen group (Group 16 [VIa] of the periodic table), one of the most reactive of the elements. Pure sulfur is a tasteless, odourless, brittle solid that is pale yellow in colour, a poor conductor of electricity, and insoluble in water. It
- Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park (park, Saint Kitts and Nevis)
Basseterre: Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park (a British fortress built by slave labor in the 17th–18th century), designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1999, is 10 miles (16 km) northwest of the town. Pop. (2001 prelim.) 13,220.
- Brin, Sergey (American entrepreneur)
Sergey Brin is an American computer scientist and entrepreneur who created, along with Larry Page, the online search engine Google, one of the most successful sites on the Internet. Brin’s family moved from Moscow to the United States in 1979. After receiving degrees (1993) in computer science and
- Brîncuşi, Constantin (Romanian-French sculptor)
Constantin Brancusi was a pioneer of modern abstract sculpture whose works in bronze and marble are characterized by a restrained, elegant use of pure form and exquisite finishing. A passionate wood-carver, he produced numerous wood sculptures, often with a folk flavor, and he frequently carved
- Brind’Amour, Rod (Canadian hockey player)
Carolina Hurricanes: …Eric Staal and team captain Rod Brind’Amour, the Hurricanes posted the best record in franchise history during the 2005–06 season and capped off the year with a dramatic seven-game victory over the Edmonton Oilers in the Stanley Cup finals. The Hurricanes advanced to the conference finals in 2008–09 but then…
- Brindaban (India)
Vrindavan, town in western Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is situated on the west bank of the Yamuna River, just north of Mathura. The town is the sacred center of the Hindu deity Krishna and those who worship him. It is especially important to the Gaudiya sect of Vaishnavism and is a
- Brindabella Range (mountain range, Australia)
Australian Capital Territory: Relief: …follows the watershed of the Brindabella Range, a northern extension of the Snowy Mountains. The territory’s southern and western parts are mountainous, reaching a maximum height of 6,279 feet (1,914 metres) at Bimberi Peak. In the northeastern section there are broad valleys between rounded hills. While much of the generally…
- Brindisi (Italy)
Brindisi, city, Puglia (Apulia) regione, southeastern Italy, on the Adriatic coast between the arms of a Y-shaped sea inlet that admits oceangoing ships, southeast of Bari. Legend attributes the foundation of the city to Diomedes, the companion of Odysseus; its original Greek name Brentesion
- brindisi (Italian music)
drinking song: …drinking song is known as brindisi (Italian: “toast”). In Giuseppe Verdi’s operas drinking songs range from the cheerful “Libiamo” (“Let Us Drink”) in La traviata (1853), to Iago’s foreboding toast in Otello (1887).
- Brindisium (Italy)
Brindisi, city, Puglia (Apulia) regione, southeastern Italy, on the Adriatic coast between the arms of a Y-shaped sea inlet that admits oceangoing ships, southeast of Bari. Legend attributes the foundation of the city to Diomedes, the companion of Odysseus; its original Greek name Brentesion
- brindled gnu (mammal)
gnu: The blue wildebeest, or brindled gnu (C. taurinus taurinus), of southern Africa is the largest, weighing 230–275 kg (510–605 pounds) and standing 140–152 cm (55–60 inches) tall. The western white-bearded wildebeest (C. taurinus mearnsi) is the smallest, 50 kg (110 pounds) lighter and 10 cm (4…
- Brindley, James (British engineer)
James Brindley was a pioneer canal builder, who constructed the Bridgewater Canal from Worsley to Manchester, which is recognized as the first English canal of major economic importance. Beginning as a millwright, Brindley designed and built an engine for draining coalpits at Clifton, Lancashire,
- brine (salt water)
brine, salt water, particularly a highly concentrated water solution of common salt (sodium chloride). Natural brines occur underground, in salt lakes, or as seawater and are commercially important sources of common salt and other salts, such as chlorides and sulfates of magnesium and potassium.
- brine curing (food processing)
ham: …the meat by hand, and brine curing, in which the meat is soaked in a mixture of water and the curing agents. Brine curing requires about four days per pound of ham; dry curing is faster (two to three days per pound). Commercial curing is accelerated by injecting the pickle…
- brine flotation (food technology)
vegetable processing: Freezing: …must be removed by either brine flotation or froth washing. In both methods the sound corn stays at the bottom while the impurities float off the tank. Whole-kernel corn can be frozen quickly using the individually quick-frozen method. Frozen corn can be packaged into polyethylene bags or cardboard cartons and…
- brine shrimp (crustacean)
brine shrimp, (genus Artemia), any of several small crustaceans of the order Anostraca (class Branchiopoda) inhabiting brine pools and other highly saline inland waters throughout the world. Measuring up to 15 mm (0.6 inch) in length, the body of the brine shrimp has a discrete head with a nauplius
- brine solution mining (mining)
mining: Brine solution mining: Natural brine wells are the source of a large percentage of the world’s bromine, lithium, and boron and lesser amounts of potash, trona (sodium carbonate), Glauber’s salt (sodium sulfate), and magnesium. In addition, artificial brines are produced by
- Brinell hardness test (measurement)
Johan August Brinell: …Swedish metallurgist who devised the Brinell hardness test, a rapid, nondestructive means of determining the hardness of metals.
- Brinell, Johan August (Swedish engineer)
Johan August Brinell was a Swedish metallurgist who devised the Brinell hardness test, a rapid, nondestructive means of determining the hardness of metals. In 1875 Brinell began his career as an engineer at the Lesjöfers Ironworks and in 1882 became chief engineer of the Fagersta Ironworks. While
- Bring in ’Da Noise, Bring in ’Da Funk (American musical)
tap dance: Rebirth: …he star in the award-winning Bring in ’da Noise, Bring in ’da Funk (1996), but he won a Tony Award for his choreography. As he matured, he continued to improvise and experiment while acknowledging a debt to the past masters of tap. The style and innovation of artists such as…
- Bring Larks and Heroes (novel by Keneally)
Thomas Keneally: …historical novelist was established with Bring Larks and Heroes (1967), about Australia’s early years as an English penal colony. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1972; film 1980) won Keneally international acclaim; it is based on the actual story of a half-caste Aboriginal who rebels against white racism by going on…
- Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (film by Peckinpah [1974])
Sam Peckinpah: Bloody Sam: A similar response greeted Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974), a laconic ultraviolent exercise about the search for the man who impregnated the daughter of a wealthy family. The cast included Oates as a bartender turned remorseless bounty hunter, Kristofferson as a motorcycle-riding rapist, and Gig Young…
- Bring Up the Bodies (novel by Mantel)
Hilary Mantel: A sequel, Bring Up the Bodies (2012), which focuses more narrowly on Cromwell’s role in the downfall of Anne Boleyn, won the Booker Prize as well as the top honour (book of the year) of the Costa Book Awards. The two novels were adapted as a pair…
- Bringas, Joseph (Byzantine premier)
Nicephorus II Phocas: Early life.: …will had left a eunuch, Joseph Bringas, in charge of the affairs of state and the 20-year-old empress, Theophano, as acting regent for the legitimate emperors, Basil and Constantine, aged six and three, respectively. These circumstances do not seem to have tempted Nicephorus.
- Bringing Back the Sunshine (album by Shelton)
Blake Shelton: …with his next three releases—Bringing Back the Sunshine (2014), If I’m Honest (2016), and Texoma Shore (2017)—all topping the country albums chart. In May 2021 he released Body Language, which featured “Happy Anyway,” a duet with pop singer Gwen Stefani, a fellow coach on The Voice whom he began…
- Bringing Down the House (film by Shankman [2003])
Queen Latifah: …was followed by the comedies Bringing Down the House (2003), which Queen Latifah both starred in and produced, Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004), Beauty Shop (2005), and Last Holiday (2006). She again brought her musical background to the screen for her role as Motormouth Maybelle in the film Hairspray…
- Bringing It All Back Home (album by Dylan)
Bob Dylan: On his next album, Bringing It All Back Home (1965), electric instruments were openly brandished—a violation of folk dogma—and only two protest songs were included. The folk rock group the Byrds covered “Mr. Tambourine Man” from that album, adding electric 12-string guitar and three-part harmony vocals, and
- Bringing Out the Dead (film by Scorsese [1999])
Martin Scorsese: Films of the 1990s: GoodFellas, Cape Fear, and Casino: Bringing Out the Dead (1999) starred Nicolas Cage as a New York paramedic who is beginning to crack under the stress of his job and offered some of the same surreal nighttime ambience as Taxi Driver. The film had one of Cage’s more effective performances…
- Bringing Up Baby (film by Hawks [1938])
Bringing Up Baby, American screwball comedy film, released in 1938, that is widely considered a classic of its genre. The zany narrative begins when eccentric heiress Susan Vance (played by Katharine Hepburn) meets and repeatedly embarrasses bookish paleontologist Dr. David Huxley (Cary Grant)
- Bringing Up Father (comic strip)
comic strip: The United States: …gag strip was George McManus’s Bringing Up Father (begun 1913/16), also the first American strip to achieve international fame. Outstanding among the family saga or domestic problem strips that burgeoned during the 1920s was Frank King’s Gasoline Alley, which started in 1918. It strove for realism rather than farcical effects…
- Brinjal bowl
pottery: Coloured glazes: Brinjal bowls, decorated with engraved flowers, have an aubergine ground in conjunction with dappled green and yellow glazes. (Brinjal, in fact, means aubergine, or eggplant, which is a favourite food in parts of the East.) Bowls with engraved dragons and a combination of only two…
- Brink’s Job, The (film by Friedkin [1978])
William Friedkin: …rebounded slightly with the modest The Brink’s Job (1978), a caper starring Peter Falk, Peter Boyle, and Gena Rowlands. However, Friedkin’s next film, Cruising (1980), a sordid thriller starring Al Pacino as a sexually confused cop who goes undercover in New York City’s gay subculture, was widely reviled. When Friedkin…
- Brink, André Philippus (South African author)
André Philippus Brink was a South African writer whose novels, which he wrote in Afrikaans and English versions, often criticized the South African government. Brink was educated in South Africa and France. He later became professor of Afrikaans and Dutch literature at Rhodes University in
- Brink, Bernhard ten (German scholar)
Bernhard ten Brink was a scholar whose research stimulated a revival of British and German study of Geoffrey Chaucer’s works. Brink became professor of modern languages at the University of Marburg (1870) and from 1873 was professor of English at the University of Strassburg. Besides his critical
- Brink, Carol Ryrie (American author)
Idaho: The arts: …movement in his Cantos; and Carol Ryrie Brink, who wrote books for adults and children. Ernest Hemingway wrote many of his books while living in Idaho, which he enjoyed for its wilderness aspects.
- Brink, The (American television series)
Tim Robbins: …period included the HBO series The Brink (2015), a comedy in which he starred as the U.S. secretary of state, and Here and Now (2018), a drama centring on a multiracial family. In 2019 he appeared in the final season of the horror series Castle Rock.
- Brinker, Hans (fictional character)
Hans Brinker, title character of Mary Mapes Dodge’s Hans Brinker
- Brinkley, Christie (American model and actress)
Christie Brinkley is an American model and actress who gained fame for appearing on hundreds of magazine covers, notably a series of Sports Illustrated (SI) swimsuit issues. She represented a new generation of celebrity models who were photographed more often in sportswear than in couture fashions.
- Brinkley, Christie Lee (American model and actress)
Christie Brinkley is an American model and actress who gained fame for appearing on hundreds of magazine covers, notably a series of Sports Illustrated (SI) swimsuit issues. She represented a new generation of celebrity models who were photographed more often in sportswear than in couture fashions.
- Brinkley, David (American journalist)
David Brinkley was an American television reporter known for anchoring several long-running, influential news programs. Together with Walter Cronkite, Brinkley became one of America’s most well-known and beloved news personalities. Brinkley enjoyed writing as a boy, and in high school he obtained
- Brinkley, David McClure (American journalist)
David Brinkley was an American television reporter known for anchoring several long-running, influential news programs. Together with Walter Cronkite, Brinkley became one of America’s most well-known and beloved news personalities. Brinkley enjoyed writing as a boy, and in high school he obtained
- Brinkman, Johannes Andreas (Dutch architect)
Johannes Andreas Brinkman was a Dutch architect particularly noted for his role in the design of the van Nelle tobacco factory, Rotterdam, one of the most architecturally important industrial buildings of the 1920s and one of the finest examples of modern architecture in the Netherlands. Brinkman
- brinkmanship (foreign policy)
brinkmanship, foreign policy practice in which one or both parties force the interaction between them to the threshold of confrontation in order to gain an advantageous negotiation position over the other. The technique is characterized by aggressive risk-taking policy choices that court potential
- Brinnin, John Malcolm (American author)
John Malcolm Brinnin was an American biographer, critic, and poet. He is probably best known for having shepherded the boisterous Welsh poet Dylan Thomas through the United States on his speaking tours. At the age of four Brinnin moved with his American parents from Canada to Detroit, Michigan. He
- Brinon, Fernand de (French journalist and politician)
Fernand de Brinon was a French journalist and politician who became a leading advocate of collaboration with Nazi Germany through the Vichy regime during World War II. Trained in law and political science, Brinon joined the Journal des Débats (1909; “Journal of Debates”) and was its editor in chief
- Brinsley Schwarz (British musical group)
Elvis Costello: …for the pub rock band Brinsley Schwarz, who brought him to the attention of Jake Riviera, one of the heads of the independent label Stiff Records. In 1977 Lowe produced Costello’s first album, My Aim Is True. A critical and commercial success, it aligned the cynicism and energy of punk…
- Brinton, Crane (American historian)
revolution: Later and modern revolutionary thought: …the mid-20th century, American historian Crane Brinton analyzed the tendencies of a society prior to a major revolution. He saw a prerevolutionary society as having a combination of social and political tensions, caused by a gradual breakdown of the society’s values. This leads to a fracture of political authority, as…
- Brinton, Daniel (American anthropologist)
South American Indian languages: Classification of the South American Indian languages: anthropologist Daniel Brinton (1891), based on grammatical criteria and a restricted word list, in which about 73 families are recognized. In 1913 Alexander Chamberlain, an anthropologist, published a new classification in the United States, which remained standard for several years, with no discussion as to its…
- Brinvilliers, Marie-Madeleine-Marguérite d’Aubray, marquise de (French noblewoman)
Marie-Madeleine-Marguérite d’Aubray, marquise de Brinvilliers was a French noblewoman who was executed after poisoning numerous family members. She was the daughter of Antoine Dreux d’Aubray, a civil lieutenant of Paris, and in 1651 she married an army officer, Antoine Gobelin de Brinvilliers. An
- brioche (food)
brioche, soft cakelike French bread that is slightly sweet and has a high butter-to-flour ratio. Brioche had arrived in Paris by the 17th century, and the word brioche has been in use since at least the 15th century. Marie-Antoinette, the doomed wife of King Louis XVI, is supposed to have said with
- brioche à tête (food)
brioche: …the best-known varieties is the brioche à tête, which is cooked in a fluted pan with sloping sides and has a little brioche ball nestled on top. Brioche Nanterre is made up of balls of dough arranged along the bottom of a loaf pan, whereas the similar brioche Parisienne has…
- brioche Nanterre (food)
brioche: Brioche Nanterre is made up of balls of dough arranged along the bottom of a loaf pan, whereas the similar brioche Parisienne has balls of dough arranged in a circle. A specialty brioche comes from the village of Saint-Pierre-d’Albigny: flavoured with saffron or anise, it…