- Bryum roseum (plant, Rhodobryum roseum)
rose moss, (Rhodobryum roseum; formerly Bryum roseum), moss of the subclass Bryidae, found throughout most of the world in woods or sheltered grassy places. Rose moss seldom forms sporophytes and capsules (spore cases); it reproduces primarily by stolons (horizontal stems that root at the nodes).
- Bryusov, Valery Yakovlevich (Russian author)
Valery Yakovlevich Bryusov was a poet, essayist, and editor, one of the founders and leading members of Russian Symbolism. Bryusov’s paternal grandfather was a serf who became a merchant, and his maternal grandfather was an amateur poet. Toward the end of 1892, he encountered the theories and
- Brzeg (Poland)
Brzeg, city, Opolskie województwo (province), southwestern Poland, situated on high bluffs on the western side of the Oder River. An important Silesian settlement from the 14th century, when Prince Ludwik I built his castle there, Brzeg was the home of the Piast family, rulers of the duchy of Brzeg
- Brześć (Belarus)
Brest, city and administrative centre of Brest oblast (region), southwestern Belarus, on the right bank of the western Bug River. First mentioned in 1019 as Berestye, it passed to Lithuania in 1319 and later to Poland. In 1795 Russia acquired Brest, although it reverted to Poland from 1919 to 1939.
- Brześć affair (Polish history)
Poland: The Second Republic: The brutal Brześć affair (named for the fortress in which the politicians involved were imprisoned) was seen as a blot on the Piłsudski regime, even though the sentences were light and some of the accused were permitted to emigrate.
- Brześć Kujawski (historical region, Poland)
Kujawy: …reincorporated into two provinces (województwa)—Brześć Kujawski (the southeastern portion) and Inowrocław (the northwestern portion).
- Brzezinski, Zbigniew (United States statesman and scholar)
Zbigniew Brzezinski was a U.S. international relations scholar and national security adviser in the administration of President Jimmy Carter who played key roles in negotiating the SALT II nuclear weapons treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union and in U.S. efforts to sustain the rule
- Brzezinski, Zbigniew Kazimierz (United States statesman and scholar)
Zbigniew Brzezinski was a U.S. international relations scholar and national security adviser in the administration of President Jimmy Carter who played key roles in negotiating the SALT II nuclear weapons treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union and in U.S. efforts to sustain the rule
- Brzozowski, Stanisław (Polish author)
Stanisław Brzozowski was a Polish critic and novelist who is considered a major force in shaping the idiom of 20th-century Polish literature. Brzozowski was educated in Lublin and Warsaw, where he enrolled in university studies. He was arrested by the Russian authorities for political activities
- Brzozowski, Stanisław Leopold (Polish author)
Stanisław Brzozowski was a Polish critic and novelist who is considered a major force in shaping the idiom of 20th-century Polish literature. Brzozowski was educated in Lublin and Warsaw, where he enrolled in university studies. He was arrested by the Russian authorities for political activities
- Brzozowski, Tadeusz (Polish religious leader)
Tadeusz Brzozowski was the first general of the restored Society of Jesus. In 1765 Brzozowski joined the Jesuits in Poland. He was ordained in Vilnius and taught in Minsk. In 1805, after serving 16 years as secretary and assistant to his predecessors, he was elected superior of the order, which had
- BS climate
alluvial fan: …more prominent in arid and semiarid regions, however, and generally are regarded as characteristic desert landforms. This is particularly true in the basin-and-range type of areas of parts of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the western United States, Chile and Peru, Sinai and western Arabia, and Central Asia, where the basic landscape…
- BS&T (American musical group)
Blood, Sweat & Tears (BS&T), American big-band jazz rock group that topped the charts in the late 1960s with its innovative blend of pop, jazz, and rhythm and blues infused with horns. The band’s original members were Al Kooper (b. February 5, 1944, Brooklyn, New York), Steve Katz (b. May 9, 1945,
- BSA Company (British company)
British South Africa Company (BSAC, BSACO, or BSA Company), mercantile company based in London that was incorporated in October 1889 under a royal charter at the instigation of Cecil Rhodes, with the object of acquiring and exercising commercial and administrative rights in south-central Africa.
- BSAC (British company)
British South Africa Company (BSAC, BSACO, or BSA Company), mercantile company based in London that was incorporated in October 1889 under a royal charter at the instigation of Cecil Rhodes, with the object of acquiring and exercising commercial and administrative rights in south-central Africa.
- BSACO (British company)
British South Africa Company (BSAC, BSACO, or BSA Company), mercantile company based in London that was incorporated in October 1889 under a royal charter at the instigation of Cecil Rhodes, with the object of acquiring and exercising commercial and administrative rights in south-central Africa.
- Bsam-yas (monastery, China)
Odantapuri: …in 749 the Sam-Ye (Bsam-Yas) monastery was modeled upon it and that several distinguished Tibetan scholars studied there. It fell into decline during the 11th century, and it was probably sacked and destroyed, along with Nalanda, c. 1200, when Muslims under Ikhtiyār al-Dīn Muḥammad Bakhtiyār Khaljī invaded Bihar.
- BSC (British security organization)
William Stephenson: -based British Security Coordination (BSC). Stephenson coordinated all British overseas espionage activities in the Western Hemisphere, recruited agents, established a secret base in Canada to train agents for missions behind enemy lines, and functioned as liaison between the BSC and the U.S. government until the Office…
- BSCH SA (Spanish company)
Banco Santander, SA, leading financial group in Spain and one of the largest in Europe. It offers services in traditional commercial banking, private banking, investment banking, treasury, and asset management. Headquarters are in Madrid. BSCH was formed as a result of the 1999 merger of Banco
- BSCP (American labor union)
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), first African American labour union to be affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Founded in 1925 by labour organizer and civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) aimed to improve the working
- BSCPM (American labor union)
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), first African American labour union to be affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Founded in 1925 by labour organizer and civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) aimed to improve the working
- BSD (computer operating system)
Bill Joy: …responded in 1977 by creating Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), which distributed Berkeley UNIX’s source code for free, allowing other programmers to learn and improve on the software. It was a pioneering moment in what is now called the open-source movement.
- BSE (pathology)
bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a fatal neurodegenerative disease of cattle. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy is caused by an infectious agent that has a long incubation period, between two and five years. Signs of the disease include behavioral changes, such as agitation and nervousness,
- BSh climate
tropical and subtropical steppe climate, major climate type of the Köppen classification that occurs primarily on the periphery of the true deserts in low-latitude semiarid steppe regions. Such regions are denoted by the abbreviation BSh in the Köppen-Geiger-Pohl system. It is transitional to the
- BSk climate (climatology)
mid-latitude steppe and desert climate: …steppes (regions classified into the BSk subtype) reach nearly 60° N in the Canadian Prairies, well beyond the limits of the subtropical anticyclone. In the higher latitudes, winters are severely cold, with meager precipitation (much of it in the form of snow) associated with polar and arctic air masses. Summer…
- Bskal-bzang Tshe-brtan (Tibetan abbot)
Panchen Lama: …1938 in Qinghai province, China, Bskal-bzang Tshe-brtan, was recognized as his successor by the Chinese government but without having gone through the usual exacting tests that determine rebirth. He was taken to Tibet in 1952 under communist military escort and enthroned as head abbot of Tashilhunpo. The Panchen Lama remained…
- Bskal-bzang-rgya-mtsho (Dalai Lama)
Dalai Lama: The seventh Dalai Lama, Bskal-bzang-rgya-mtsho (1708–57), experienced civil war and the establishment of Chinese Manchu suzerainty over Tibet; the eighth, ’Jam-dpal-rgya-mtsho (1758–1804), saw his country invaded by Gurkha troops from Nepal but defeated them with the aid of Chinese forces. The next four Dalai Lamas all died young, and…
- BSkyB (British company)
Greg Dyke: …worked successively for Rupert Murdoch’s BSkyB cable and satellite television company and for Pearson Television.
- BSND (gene)
Bartter syndrome: Types of Bartter syndrome: …variation of the gene called BSND (Bartter syndrome, infantile, with sensorineural deafness).
- BSO (political organization, Palestine)
Black September, breakaway militant faction of the Palestinian organization Fatah. The group was founded in 1971 to seek retribution on Jordan’s military and to assassinate Jordan’s King Hussein after they forcefully confronted the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) during an attempt to seize
- BSO (American orchestra)
Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO), American symphony orchestra based in Boston, founded in 1881 by Henry Lee Higginson. The orchestra achieved renown for its interpretations of the French repertoire under such conductors as Pierre Monteux and Charles Munch and for its championing of contemporary
- Bsod-nams chos-’phel (Tibetan official)
Tibet: The unification of Tibet: …as ruler of Tibet, appointing Bsod-nams chos-’phel as minister for administrative affairs and himself taking the title of king and the role of military protector. These three forceful personalities methodically and efficiently consolidated the religious and temporal authority of the Dge-lugs-pa, establishing a unique joint control over the region by…
- Bsod-nams-rgya-mtsho (Dalai Lama)
Dalai Lama: His successor, Bsod-nams-rgya-mtsho (1543–88), while on a visit to the Mongol chief Altan Khan, received from that ruler the honorific title ta-le (Anglicized as “dalai”), the Mongolian equivalent of the Tibetan rgya-mtsho, meaning “ocean” and presumably suggesting breadth and depth of wisdom. The title was subsequently applied…
- BSP (Bruneian company)
Seria: Brunei Shell Petroleum, among the sultanate’s largest corporations, is headquartered there. Pop. (2011) 10,610; (2016) 18,936.
- BSP (political party, India)
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), national political party in India. It was formed in 1984. The BSP states that it represents the people at the lowest levels of the Hindu social system—those officially designated as members of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and Other Backward Classes—as well as
- BSP (political party, Bulgaria)
Bulgaria: Communist uprising: The Bulgarian communists, who had declared their neutrality when the coup occurred, were chastised by Moscow and directed to prepare an armed revolt against the Tsankov regime. The communists’ September Uprising was ruthlessly suppressed and provided Tsankov with a pretext for outlawing the Bulgarian Communist Party…
- BSP test (medicine)
liver function test: …substances as hippuric acid and Bromsulphalein. Other diagnostic measures of liver function are based on the following: X-ray, following the opacification of liver structures with a radiopaque substance; biopsy; the administration of a radioactive compound that is absorbed to different degrees by healthy and diseased liver cells; and the mapping…
- BSPP (political party, Myanmar)
Myanmar: Administrative framework: …and the chairman of the Burma Socialist Programme Party (BSPP), which, under military leadership, was the only official political party from 1964 to 1988. Civil servants, members of the armed forces, workers, and peasants belonged to the BSPP, and senior military officials and civil servants were included in the party’s…
- BSRI (psychology)
Bem Sex-Role Inventory (BSRI), test used to measure an individual’s femininity and masculinity. The Bem Sex-Role Inventory (BSRI) is one of the most widely used tools in research on gender roles. In 1974 American psychologist Sandra L. Bem, a proponent of androgyny theory, recognized that an
- BSS (British government)
MI5, intelligence agency charged with internal security and domestic counterintelligence activities of the United Kingdom. It is authorized to investigate any person or movement that might threaten the country’s security. Although MI5 is responsible for domestic counterespionage, it has no powers
- Bstan ′dzin rgya mtsho (Tibetan Buddhist monk)
14th Dalai Lama is the title of the Tibetan Buddhist monk who was the 14th Dalai Lama but the first to become a global figure, largely for his advocacy of Buddhism and of the rights of the people of Tibet. Despite his fame, he dispensed with much of the pomp surrounding his office, describing
- Bstan-’gyur (Buddhist literature)
Bstan-’gyur, the second great collection of Buddhist sacred writings in Tibet, comprising more than 3,600 texts filling some 225 volumes and supplementary to the canonical Bka’-’gyur (“Translation of the Buddha-Word”). This collection is made up of translations of works by individual Indian
- Bstan-ḥgyur (Buddhist literature)
Bstan-’gyur, the second great collection of Buddhist sacred writings in Tibet, comprising more than 3,600 texts filling some 225 volumes and supplementary to the canonical Bka’-’gyur (“Translation of the Buddha-Word”). This collection is made up of translations of works by individual Indian
- Bt (bacterium)
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), soil-dwelling bacterium that naturally produces a toxin that is fatal to certain herbivorous insects. The toxin produced by Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) has been used as an insecticide spray since the 1920s and is commonly used in organic farming. Bt is also the source
- BT (tank)
tank: Interwar developments: …most successful example was the BT, also built in large numbers in the Soviet Union. The fastest tank of its day, the BT was based on designs evolved in the United States by J.W. Christie, who in 1928 built an experimental model capable of 42.5 miles per hour. Christie’s vehicles…
- BT (instrument)
bathythermograph, any of various oceanographic devices containing temperature- and pressure-sensitive elements and producing a continuous record of underwater temperature and pressure. Recoverable bathythermographs, lowered from a ship at rest or in motion, produce this record on a coated glass
- Bt cotton (fibre and plant)
bacillus: …of GM crops such as Bt cotton (see genetically modified organism).
- BT Tower (communications tower, London, United Kingdom)
BT Tower, communications tower and landmark located west of the Bloomsbury district in the borough of Camden, London. One of the taller structures in southeastern England, it was erected in 1961–65 to the architectural designs of Eric Bedford. Including its crowning 40-foot (12-metre) mast, the
- Bt toxin (chemical compound)
agricultural sciences: Emerging agricultural sciences: …produces a natural insecticide called Bt toxin. However, some insect pests have gained resistance to the toxin, and synthetic pesticides are needed to supplement the Bt crops in some places. Herbicide-resistant crops (HRC) have been available since the mid-1980s; these crops enable fairly effective chemical control of weeds, since generally…
- BTA (international trade)
tariff: Tariff reduction and the growth of international trade: …Information Technology Agreement (ITA) and Basic Telecommunications Agreement (BTA) reduced the tariffs on computer and telecommunications products and some intangible goods considered to be drivers of the developing knowledge-based economy. The rapid growth of the Internet and electronic commerce (e-commerce) represented some of the most challenging new issues in the…
- BTC (British government organization)
British Railways: …were taken over by the British Transport Commission (BTC) in 1948 and given the name British Railways. The BTC divided Britain’s rail network into six (later five) regions on a geographic basis. A 1962 law replaced the BTC with the British Railways Board in 1963. The board’s management emphasized mass…
- BTK (American serial killer)
Dennis Rader is an American serial killer who murdered 10 people over a span of three decades before his arrest and confession in 2005. He called himself BTK because he bound, tortured, and killed his victims. Rader was raised in Wichita, Kansas. He later claimed that as a youth he had killed
- BTK Killer (American serial killer)
Dennis Rader is an American serial killer who murdered 10 people over a span of three decades before his arrest and confession in 2005. He called himself BTK because he bound, tortured, and killed his victims. Rader was raised in Wichita, Kansas. He later claimed that as a youth he had killed
- BTO (Canadian rock group)
the Guess Who: Post-Bachman years: …Brave Belt, which evolved into Bachman-Turner Overdrive. Two guitarists, Winter—who became Cummings’s primary songwriting partner—and Leskiw, replaced Bachman. The first album with this new lineup, Share the Land (1970), featured several hits, including Winter’s “Hand Me Down World” and “Bus Rider,” along with Cummings’s title track and the Cummings-Winter collaboration…
- BTR-60 (armored vehicle)
armoured vehicle: Wheeled armoured vehicles: …of wheeled armoured vehicles, the BTR-60, in the early 1960s. In a typical configuration the BTR-60 weighs 10.1 tons, has a two-man crew, can carry 12 infantrymen, and is armed with a 12.7-mm heavy machine gun. The Soviets introduced improved versions in the late 1970s (BTR-70) and late 1980s (BTR-80).…
- BTS (South Korean band)
BTS, South Korean K-pop (Korean pop music) band that shot to international stardom in the late 2010s. Its seven members were Jin (byname of Kim Seok-Jin; b. December 4, 1992, Anyang, South Korea), Suga (original name Min Yoon-Gi; b. March 9, 1993, Buk-gu), J-Hope (byname of Jung Ho-Seok; b.
- BTU (unit of measurement)
British thermal unit (BTU), a measure of the quantity of heat, defined since 1956 as approximately equal to 1,055 joules, or 252 gram calories. It was defined formerly as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of water 1° F. The definition was changed because it was
- bu (measurement)
bushel, unit of capacity in the British Imperial and the United States Customary systems of measurement. In the British system the units of liquid and dry capacity are the same, and since 1824 a bushel has been defined as 8 imperial gallons, or 2,219.36 cubic inches (36,375.31 cubic cm). In the
- Bu Craa (Western Sahara)
Western Sahara: History: …phosphate deposits were discovered at Bu Craa in the northern portion of the Spanish Sahara, which made the province a potentially economically valuable prize for any country that could firmly establish possession of it. Mining of the deposits at Bu Craa began in 1972.
- Bu Saʿīd dynasty (Omani dynasty)
Āl Bū Saʿīd dynasty, Muslim dynasty of Oman, in southeastern Arabia (c. 1749 to the present), and of Zanzibar, in East Africa (c. 1749–1964). Aḥmad ibn Saʿīd, who had been governor of Ṣuḥār, Oman, in the 1740s under the Persian Yaʿrubids, managed to displace the Yaʿrubids by about 1749 and become
- Bu-ston (Tibetan Buddhist scholar)
Bu-ston was a Tibetan Buddhist scholar who was a member of the Saskya-pa sect and for many years served as the head of the Zwa-lu monastery. Bu-ston formulated a notion of the “Three Turnings of the Buddhist Law” (Hīnayāna, Māhayāna, and Vajrayāna) which he employed in the organization of his
- Bua languages
Chad: Languages: …in the south, (9) the Bua group, spoken in southern and central Chad, (10) the Somrai group, spoken in western and central Chad, and (11) Mimi and (12) Fur, both spoken in the extreme east.
- Buache, Philippe (French geographer and cartographer)
Philippe Buache was a French geographer and cartographer who contributed to the theory of physical geography. Buache worked for his father-in-law, the cartographer Guillaume Delisle, and became royal geographer in 1729. He was elected to the Academy of Sciences the next year. His physiographic
- Buade, Louis de (French colonial governor)
Louis de Buade, comte de Frontenac was a French courtier and governor of New France (1672–82 and 1689–98) who, despite a record of misgovernment, managed to encourage profitable explorations westward and to repel British and Iroquois attacks on New France. Frontenac’s father, Henri de Buade, was
- Buākhar (Moroccan military organization)
ʿAbīd al-Bukhārī, army of Saharan blacks organized in Morocco by the ʿAlawī ruler Ismāʿīl (reigned 1672–1727). Earlier rulers had recruited black slaves (Arabic: ʿabīd) into their armies, and these men or their descendants eventually formed the core of Ismāʿīl’s guard. The ʿabīd were sent to a
- Buarque, Chico (Brazilian author)
Sebastião Salgado: …as poems by Brazilian singer-songwriter Chico Buarque. In the 1990s Salgado recorded the displacement of people in more than 35 countries, and his photographs from this period were collected in Migrations: Humanity in Transition (2000). Many of his African photographs were gathered in Africa (2007). Genesis (2013) assembled the results…
- Buat, Pierre-Louis-Georges Du (French engineer)
Pierre-Louis-Georges Du Buat was a French hydraulic engineer who derived formulas for computing the discharge of fluids from pipes and open channels. Educated in Paris, Du Buat served as a military engineer from 1761 to 1791. In his writings, he compiled a wealth of experimental data from which he
- Buayan (Philippines)
General Santos, city, southern Mindanao, Philippines. The city is named for General Paulino Santos, who directed the pioneer settlement (mostly by Christian Filipino migrants) and development of the Koronadal Valley that began in the mid-1930s. General Santos city is located at the head of
- Buba, Rio Grande de (river, Guinea-Bissau)
Quinará: The Rio Grande de Buba flows east-west through the centre of the region and empties into the Atlantic; most of the oil palms in the region are grown along the river. Rice is produced throughout Quinará, as are subsistence crops of millet, corn (maize), sorghum, and…
- Bubalornis albirostris (bird)
buffalo weaver: …more widespread species is the black buffalo weaver, or oxbird (Bubalornis albirostris); it is black, with white in the wings. The white-headed buffalo weaver (Dinemellia dinemelli), confined to eastern Africa, is brown and white, with red rump and vent. Both are stout-bodied, heavy-billed birds 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) long. In…
- Bubalornithinae (bird)
buffalo weaver, either of the two African birds constituting the subfamily Bubalornithinae of the family Ploceidae. The more widespread species is the black buffalo weaver, or oxbird (Bubalornis albirostris); it is black, with white in the wings. The white-headed buffalo weaver (Dinemellia
- Bubalus arnee (mammal)
water buffalo: The wild water buffalo is sometimes referred to as a different species (B. arnee). It can interbreed with domestic water buffalo. This wild form is a huge animal, nearly 3 metres (10 feet) long and 2 metres tall and weighing up to 1,200 kg (2,600 pounds);…
- Bubalus bubalis (mammal)
water buffalo, (Bubalus bubalis), either of two forms, wild and domestic, of Asian mammal similar to the ox. There are 74 breeds of domestic water buffalo numbering some 165 million animals, but only small numbers of wild water buffalo remain. Both forms are gray to black with off-white “socks” and
- Bubalus depressicornis (buffalo)
Southeast Asia: Animal life: …Javan rhinoceros, the orangutan, the anoa (a dwarf buffalo), the babirusa (a wild swine), and the palm civet.
- Bubalus mindorensis (mammal)
tamarau, (species Anoa mindorensis), small species of buffalo
- Bubastis (ancient city, Egypt)
Bubastis, ancient Egyptian city in the Nile River delta north of Cairo. It became important when the pharaohs of the 19th dynasty (1292–1190 bce) moved their capital from Thebes to the delta, and it reached its peak of prosperity when its prince, Sheshonk I (the biblical Shishak, reigned 945–924
- Bubastite dynasty (ancient Egyptian dynasty)
ancient Egypt: Libyan rule: the 22nd and 23rd dynasties: …was an ancestor of the 22nd dynasty, which followed a generation later. From Osorkon’s time to the 26th dynasty, leading Libyans in Egypt kept their Libyan names and ethnic identity, but in a spirit of ethnicity rather than cultural separatism. Although political institutions were different from those of the New…
- Bubb, George (British politician)
George Bubb Dodington, Baron Melcombe of Melcombe-Regis was an English politician, a career office seeker who was the subject of a satirical engraving by William Hogarth, “Chairing the Members” (1758), and kept a diary (published 1784) that remains one of the best sources on British politics of his
- Bubbia (plant genus)
Canellales: Distribution and abundance: …Exospermum (restricted to New Caledonia), Bubbia (from the Moluccas to New Caledonia and Australia, with one species confined to Lord Howe Island, where it is abundant), and Belliolum (in New Caledonia and the Solomon Islands).
- bubble (economics)
economics: Financial economics: …there had been enough “bubbles” in stock prices to remind economists of the excessive volatility of stock markets (and to prompt Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan to point to the market’s “irrational exuberance” when share prices hit new peaks late in the decade). The securities markets seemed anything…
- Bubble (film by Soderbergh)
Steven Soderbergh: Ocean’s series and Magic Mike: …and Solaris (2002), Soderbergh directed Bubble (2005), a drama about three factory workers, one of whom is eventually murdered. The film, which featured amateur actors, was simultaneously released in theatres, on cable television, and on DVD. During this time he also created the television series K Street (2003), a drama…
- bubble and squeak (food)
bubble and squeak, a common British dish consisting of vegetables, especially potatoes and cabbage. The ingredients are panfried and served as a side dish. Bubble and squeak, which dates from the 18th century, originally also included meat, and it was typically made with leftovers from the Sunday
- bubble chamber (radiation detector)
bubble chamber, radiation detector that uses as the detecting medium a superheated liquid that boils into tiny bubbles of vapour around the ions produced along the tracks of subatomic particles. The bubble chamber was developed in 1952 by the American physicist Donald A. Glaser. The device makes
- bubble economy (Japanese economics)
Japan: Economic change: …to be called Japan’s “bubble economy” of the 1980s, which typified an era that combined easy credit with unbridled speculation and eventually drove Japanese equity and real estate markets to astronomical price levels, burst. In 1992–93 this ushered in a deep recession, the severity of which postponed many of…
- bubble fusion (physics)
nuclear fusion: Cold fusion and bubble fusion: Two disputed fusion experiments merit mention. In 1989 two chemists, Martin Fleischmann of the University of Utah and Stanley Pons of the University of Southampton in England, announced that they had produced fusion reactions at essentially room temperature. Their system consisted of electrolytic…
- bubble level (tool)
surveying: Height determination: In spirit leveling the surveyor has for centuries used a surveying level, which consists of a horizontal telescope fitted with cross hairs, rotating around a vertical axis on a tripod, with a very sensitive spirit level fixed to it; the instrument is adjusted until the bubble…
- bubble memory (computer science)
ferrite: …single-crystal ferrites in which tiny magnetic domains called bubbles can be individually manipulated. A number of ferrites absorb microwave energy in only one direction or orientation; for this reason, they are used in microwave wave guides.
- bubble shell (marine snail)
bubble shell, any of various marine snails of the order Cephalaspidea (subclass Opisthobranchia of the class Gastropoda). These snails characteristically have thin, globular shells; in some species the shells are embedded in the animal’s body. Many of these snails are active predators, feeding on
- bubble tea (beverage)
bubble tea, beverage combining tea, milk, and “bubbles”—chewy gelatinous candies made of tapioca or fruit jelly. Bubble tea is a favourite in its homeland of Taiwan and is now popular worldwide. Bubble tea originated in the city of T’ai-nan, Taiwan, in the mid-1980s. Dozens of variations of the
- Bubble, The (film by Apatow [2022])
Judd Apatow: …death of his father, and The Bubble (2022), a pandemic comedy in which a group of actors attempt to make a movie.
- bubblenetting (animal behavior)
humpback whale: …unique method of feeding called bubblenetting, in which bubbles are exhaled as the whale swims in a spiral below a patch of water dense with food. The curtain of bubbles confines the prey to a small area in the middle of which one or more whales surface.
- Bubbles, John (American dancer)
tap dance: Vaudeville: John Bubbles, for instance, went down in history as the “Father of Rhythm Tap.” Though he may not have been the very first tap dancer to use the heel tap to push rhythm from the 1920s jazz beat to the 1930s swing beat, he certainly…
- Bubbly Creek (waterway, United States)
Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, U.S. waterway linking the south branch of the Chicago River with the Des Plaines River at Lockport, Illinois. It has a length of 30 miles (48 km), a minimum width of 160 feet (50 metres), a minimum depth of 9 feet (2.7 metres), and 2 locks. The chief purpose of the
- Bubenberg, Adrian von (Swiss soldier and politician)
Adrian von Bubenberg was a Swiss soldier and politician, leader of the Bernese forces at the Battle of Morat (June 22, 1476), which marked the end of the Swiss Confederation’s war with Burgundy (1474–76). Magistrate for Bern (1468–69, 1473–74, 1477–79) and a partisan of the feudal aristocracy in
- Buber, Martin (German religious philosopher)
Martin Buber was a German-Jewish religious philosopher, biblical translator and interpreter, and master of German prose style. Buber’s philosophy was centred on the encounter, or dialogue, of man with other beings, particularly exemplified in the relation with other men but ultimately resting on
- Buber, Solomon (Jewish philanthropist)
Martin Buber: From Vienna to Jerusalem: Solomon Buber (1827–1906), the Lemberg grandfather, a wealthy philanthropist, dedicated his life to the critical edition of Midrashim, a part of the nonlegal rabbinic lore. His works show him as a Hebrew gentleman-scholar who was also interested in Greek linguistic parallels. His wife, Adele, was…
- bubi (religion)
bubi, in the religion of the Bantu-speaking Luba people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the notion of evil. The term is used to designate that which is contrary to the best and most ethical. Bubi is thus the opposite of buya, or goodness or beauty of character. Luba religion is generally
- Bubi (people)
Equatorial Guinea: Ethnic groups: …inhabitants of Bioko are the Bubi, descendants of Bantu migrants from the mainland. The Bubi, unlike the other ethnic groups of the country, are a matrilineal society, wherein children inherit property from their mother. Early contacts with Europeans decimated the Bubi until only a few thousand remained early in the…
- Būbiyān (island, Kuwait)
Būbiyān, island of Kuwait, located at the head of the Persian Gulf. It is the largest of a group of eight islands situated just southwest of the mouth of the Shaṭṭ Al-ʿArab, which divides Iraq and Iran. Like all of the group except Faylakah Island, about 8 miles (13 km) to the south, Būbiyān is
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Sergey Bubka is a Ukrainian athlete, the first pole-vaulter to clear 6.1 metres (20 feet). Bubka began pole-vaulting at age 9. When his coach, Vitaly Petrov, was transferred to Donetsk, Ukraine, Bubka, at age 15, followed. Bubka won the pole vault at the 1983 world track-and-field championships in