- Burnett, Mark (British author and television producer and director)
Mark Burnett is an English author and television producer and director, best known for introducing Survivor (2000– ) and several other successful reality television shows to the United States. Burnett, whose parents were both factory workers, grew up in Essex. He enlisted in the British army when
- Burnett, T Bone (American producer and musician)
T Bone Burnett is an American producer and musician, one of popular music’s most prolific and successful producers, known for his work in a wide range of genres including rock, country, and folk. Burnett spent his childhood in Fort Worth, Texas, and it was there that he acquired the nickname “T
- Burnett, W. R. (American author)
hard-boiled fiction: …and Eye Witness (1950), and W.R. Burnett (1899–1982), who wrote Little Caesar (1929) and The Asphalt Jungle (1949). Hard-boiled fiction ultimately degenerated into the extreme sensationalism and undisguised sadism of what Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine called the “guts-gore-and-gals-school,” as found in the works of Mickey Spillane, writer of such phenomenal…
- Burney mission (Thailand history)
Rama III: …British demands presented by the Burney mission (1826) and conclude a treaty that established regular trade with the West but yielded none of Siam’s independence.
- Burney, Charles (British musician and historian)
Charles Burney was an organist, composer, and the foremost music historian of his time in England. After attending Chester Free School (1739–42), Burney returned to Shrewsbury, assisted his half-brother, a church organist, and learned violin and French. In 1744 he began a musical apprenticeship
- Burney, Frances (British author)
Frances Burney was an English novelist and letter writer, who was the author of Evelina, a landmark in the development of the novel of manners. Burney was the daughter of musician and historian Charles Burney. She educated herself by omnivorous reading at home. Her literary apprenticeship was much
- Burney, Frances (British author)
Frances Burney was an English novelist and letter writer, who was the author of Evelina, a landmark in the development of the novel of manners. Burney was the daughter of musician and historian Charles Burney. She educated herself by omnivorous reading at home. Her literary apprenticeship was much
- Burnham & Root (American architect)
Daniel Burnham was an American architect and urban planner whose impact on the American city was substantial. He was instrumental in the development of the skyscraper and was noted for his highly successful management of the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 and his ideas about urban planning.
- Burnham & Root (American architect)
John Wellborn Root was an architect, one of the greatest practitioners in the Chicago school of commercial American architecture. His works are among the most distinguished early attempts at a mature aesthetic expression of the height and the function of the skyscraper. Sent to England for safety
- Burnham of Hall Barn, Beaconsfield, Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron (British newspaper editor and proprietor)
Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron Burnham was an English newspaper proprietor who virtually created the London Daily Telegraph. He was educated at University College school. His father, Joseph Moses Levy, acquired the Daily Telegraph and Courier in 1855, a few months after it was founded by Colonel
- Burnham Plan (work by Burnham and Bennett)
City Beautiful movement: …for Chicago, published as the Plan of Chicago and also known as the Burnham Plan. The plan involved a 60-mile (95-kilometre) radius in which avenues would extend out from a civic centre. It included an extensive rail system, a bi-level boulevard for commercial and regular traffic (what is now Wacker…
- Burnham’s Celestial Handbook (work by Burnham)
astronomical map: Atlases for stargazing: Burnham’s Celestial Handbook (1978) contains comprehensive descriptions of thousands of astronomical objects. The Observer’s Handbook, published annually by the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, lists valuable information for locating and observing a wide range of astronomical phenomena.
- Burnham, Daniel (American architect)
Daniel Burnham was an American architect and urban planner whose impact on the American city was substantial. He was instrumental in the development of the skyscraper and was noted for his highly successful management of the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 and his ideas about urban planning.
- Burnham, Daniel Hudson (American architect)
Daniel Burnham was an American architect and urban planner whose impact on the American city was substantial. He was instrumental in the development of the skyscraper and was noted for his highly successful management of the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 and his ideas about urban planning.
- Burnham, Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron (British newspaper editor and proprietor)
Edward Levy-Lawson, 1st Baron Burnham was an English newspaper proprietor who virtually created the London Daily Telegraph. He was educated at University College school. His father, Joseph Moses Levy, acquired the Daily Telegraph and Courier in 1855, a few months after it was founded by Colonel
- Burnham, Forbes (president of Guyana)
Forbes Burnham was the prime minister of Guyana (until 1966, British Guiana) from 1964 to 1980 and president from 1980 to 1985. Burnham received a law degree from the University of London in 1947, returned home in 1949, and formed the People’s Progressive Party the following year together with
- Burnham, Hugo (British musician)
Gang of Four: February 1, 2020), Hugo Burnham (b. March 25, 1956, London), and Dave Allen (b. December 23, 1955, Kendal, Cumbria).
- Burnham, James (American political philosopher)
elite theory: The conservative American philosopher James Burnham, a founding editor of the National Review, depicted Mosca, Pareto, and Michels as Machiavellians whose realistic analysis of elite actors and rejection of utopian egalitarianism represented the best hope of democracy—as defined in terms of the law-governed liberty that emerges from interelite checks…
- Burnham, Linden Forbes Sampson (president of Guyana)
Forbes Burnham was the prime minister of Guyana (until 1966, British Guiana) from 1964 to 1980 and president from 1980 to 1985. Burnham received a law degree from the University of London in 1947, returned home in 1949, and formed the People’s Progressive Party the following year together with
- Burnham-on-Crouch (England, United Kingdom)
Burnham-on-Crouch, town (parish), Maldon district, administrative and historic county of Essex, eastern England. The town lies on the left bank of the River Crouch, 5 miles (8 km) inland from the North Sea. There are many oyster beds in the river’s estuary, which opens out just below
- Burnie (Tasmania, Australia)
Burnie, city and port, northern Tasmania, Australia. Burnie is situated on Emu Bay, an inlet of Bass Strait, at the mouth of the Emu River. Established in the late 1820s by the Van Diemen’s Land Company as Emu Bay Settlement, the settlement was renamed to honour a company director, William Burnie,
- Burning (novel by Johnson)
Diane Johnson: Burning (1971) satirizes the southern California way of life. The Shadow Knows (1974) concerns a divorced mother whose secure life is shattered when she becomes convinced that she is marked for violence. In Lying Low (1978), Johnson chronicled four days in the lives of three…
- burning at the stake (capital punishment)
burning at the stake, a method of execution practiced in Babylonia and ancient Israel and later adopted in Europe and North America. Spanish heretics suffered this penalty during the Inquisition, as did French disbelievers and heretics such as St. Joan of Arc, who was condemned and burned in 1431
- Burning Boy, The (novel by Gee)
Maurice Gee: He scrutinized social ostracization in The Burning Boy (1990), which iterates the traumas endured by a burn victim; in The Champion (1994), which explores the travails of a black American soldier stationed in New Zealand; and in Live Bodies (1998), which tells the story of an antifascist Austrian Jew who…
- Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane (biography by Auster)
Paul Auster: Auster later published the biography Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane (2021).
- Burning Brand: Diaries 1935-1950, The (work by Pavese)
Cesare Pavese: …Business of Living, New York, The Burning Brand: Diaries 1935–1950, both 1961).
- burning bush (plant)
burning bush: The winged spindle tree, or winged euonymus (E. alatus), is often called burning bush. A shrub growing to a height of 2.5 metres (8 feet), it has several cultivated varieties, including a dwarf, compact branching form, which is much used in landscaping. See also Euonymus.
- burning bush (plant)
burning bush, any of several plants so called for their striking fall foliage, brilliant flower display, or emission of a volatile flammable vapour. Many are cultivated as garden ornamentals. One of the most popular burning bushes planted for fall colour is Euonymus atropurpureus, also called
- burning bush (plant species)
gas plant, (Dictamnus albus), gland-covered herb of the rue family (Rutaceae). Gas plant is native to Eurasia and is grown as an ornamental in many places. The flowers (white or pink) and the leaves give off a strong aromatic vapour that can be ignited—hence the names gas plant and burning bush.
- Burning Bush (work by Froment)
Nicolas Froment: The Burning Bush (1475–76), which illustrates his application of the Flemish style to the legends and landscape of Provence, is perhaps Froment’s most illustrious work. The painting was done for King René of Anjou and depicts the king and his wife with several saints.
- burning bush (plant variety, Kochia scoparia)
Bassia: One variety, known as firebush or burning bush, is a globe-shaped subshrub with narrow hairy leaves that turn purplish red in autumn; it is often grown as an ornamental summer hedge.
- burning bush (biblical literature)
Moses: Moses in Midian: …attention was attracted by a flaming bush, but, oddly, it was not consumed. He had seen bushes brilliant with flamelike blossoms, but this phenomenon was different, and so he turned aside to investigate it. Before he could do so, he was warned to come no closer. Then he was ordered…
- Burning Chrome (story by Gibson)
William Gibson: …Mnemonic (1981; film 1995) and Burning Chrome (1982), were published in Omni magazine. With the publication of his first novel, Neuromancer (1984), Gibson emerged as a leading exponent of cyberpunk, a new school of science-fiction writing. Cyberpunk combines a cynical, tough “punk” sensibility with futuristic cybernetic (i.e., having to do…
- Burning Daylight (novel by London)
Jack London: … (1903), White Fang (1906), and Burning Daylight (1910), in which he dramatized in turn atavism, adaptability, and the appeal of the wilderness, are outstanding. His short story “To Build a Fire” (1908), set in the Klondike, is a masterly depiction of humankind’s inability to overcome nature; it was reprinted in…
- Burning Love (recording by Presley)
Elvis Presley: Marriage, reclusion at Graceland, and death: …last number one and “Burning Love” (1972) his final Top Ten entry. But, thanks to concerts, spectaculars best described by critic Jon Landau as an apotheosis of American musical comedy, he remained a big money earner. He now lacked the ambition and power of his early work, but that…
- Burning Man (festival, Nevada, United States)
Burning Man, late-summer arts festival and adventure in the establishment of expressive communities, held annually in the Black Rock Desert, northwestern Nevada, U.S. Burning Man was inaugurated in 1986, when Larry Harvey and Jerry James—two members of the San Francisco arts community—burned an
- Burning Mountain (mountain, New South Wales, Australia)
Scone: A local curiosity is Mount Wingen, or Burning Mountain, 1,800 feet (550 metres) high; a cleft in its side emits smoke from an underground coal seam that has been smoldering for thousands of years, thought to have been originally ignited by a brushfire. Pop. (2006) urban centre, 4,624; (2011)…
- burning of the books (Chinese history)
Mao Chang: …dynasty (221–206 bc), a massive burning of books took place in which most copies of the Confucian classics were destroyed. After the founding of the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220), an intensive campaign was undertaken to replace the classics; older scholars who had memorized these works in their entirety provided…
- burning one (angel)
seraph, in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic literature, celestial being variously described as having two or three pairs of wings and serving as a throne guardian of God. Often called the burning ones, seraphim in the Old Testament appear in the Temple vision of the prophet Isaiah as six-winged
- Burning Patience (novel by Skármeta)
Antonio Skármeta: He followed these with Ardiente paciencia, a novel that tells the story of an extraordinary friendship that develops between the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, living in exile, and his postman. Ardiente paciencia subsequently became Skármeta’s most popular work. It was translated into 20 languages and was adapted for the…
- Burning Plain, The (short stories by Rulfo)
The Burning Plain, a collection of short stories (one of the same name) by Juan Rulfo, published in 1953. In his collection of short stories Rulfo was recognized as a master. Post-revolutionary scenes in Llano Grande in the state of Jalisco overcome the rural limitations of these tales about the
- Burning Questions: Essays and Occasional Pieces, 2004 to 2021 (work by Atwood)
Margaret Atwood: …relationship to science fiction; and Burning Questions: Essays and Occasional Pieces, 2004 to 2021 (2022), a collection of diverse writings as well as several speeches. Atwood also penned the libretto for the opera Pauline, about Pauline Johnson, a Canadian poet-performer of Mohawk and English heritage; it premiered at the York…
- Burning Season, The (film by Frankenheimer [1994])
Raul Julia: …and in the made-for-TV film The Burning Season (1994) he starred as the martyred Brazilian labour leader and environmentalist Chico Mendes. Julia’s commanding presence, athleticism, and vitality were showcased in such stage productions as Betrayal (1980) and Arms and the Man (1985) and in such films as Eyes of Laura…
- Burning Water (work by Bowering)
Canadian literature: Fiction: George Bowering’s Burning Water (1980), which focuses on the 18th-century explorer George Vancouver, and Michael Ondaatje’s Coming Through Slaughter (1976), the story of the jazz musician Buddy Bolden, mingle history with autobiography in self-reflexive narratives that enact the process of writing. Ranging from 1920s Toronto (In the
- Burning Wheat (work by Gropper)
William Gropper: …dominated works such as “Burning Wheat” (on the Depression agricultural program) and “The Shoemaker” (on the poverty of the working class). He later painted a mural at the Department of the Interior building in Washington, D.C.
- burnishing
pottery: Burnishing and polishing: When the clay used in early pottery was exceptionally fine, it was sometimes polished or burnished after firing. Such pottery—dating back to 6500 and 2000 bce—has been excavated in Turkey and the Banshan cemetery in Gansu province, China. Most Inca pottery is…
- Burnley (district, England, United Kingdom)
Burnley: Burnley, town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Lancashire, England, north of Greater Manchester. It is situated at the junction of the Rivers Burn and Calder.
- Burnley (England, United Kingdom)
Burnley, town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Lancashire, England, north of Greater Manchester. It is situated at the junction of the Rivers Burn and Calder. In common with other towns of Lancashire, Burnley grew rapidly from the end of the 18th century with the
- Burnouf, Emile Louis (French archaeologist)
Heinrich Schliemann: Discovery of Troy: …1879 he was assisted by Émile Burnouf, a classical archaeologist, and by Rudolf Virchow, the famous German pathologist, who was also the founder of the German Society for Anthropology, Ethnology, and Prehistory. In his last two seasons Schliemann had the expert assistance of Wilhelm Dörpfeld, who was a practical architect…
- Burnouf, Eugène (French Orientalist)
Eugène Burnouf was a French Orientalist who acquainted Europe with the religious tenets and Old Iranian language of the Avesta, the ancient sacred scripture of Zoroastrianism. Burnouf’s father, Jean-Louis Burnouf (1775–1844), was a noted classical scholar who translated the works of Tacitus and
- burnous (clothing)
dress: The Middle East from the 6th century: A similar mantle was the burnous, a hooded garment also used for warmth day or night.
- Burns (Oregon, United States)
Burns, city, seat (1889) of Harney county, east-central Oregon, U.S., situated on the Silvies River. Bannock, Northern Paiute, and Shoshoni peoples once roamed the region. The settlement was built on a former cattle ranch and named for the Scottish poet Robert Burns. As the capital of a vast cattle
- Burns metre (literature)
Burns metre, in poetry, a stanza often used by Robert Burns and other Scottish poets. The stanza consists of six lines rhyming aaabab of which the fourth and sixth are regularly iambic dimeters and the others iambic tetrameters, as in Burns’s Holy Willie’s
- Burns’s Night (Scottish celebration)
haggis: …ceremony, even bagpipes, particularly on Burns Night (held annually on January 25, Burns’s birthday) and Hogmanay, as the Scots call their New Year’s celebrations.
- Burns, Arthur F. (American economist)
Alan Greenspan: …future Federal Reserve Board chairman Arthur F. Burns. He met the polemical novelist Ayn Rand in 1952 and became a member of her inner circle, adopting her philosophy of radical self-interest and laissez-faire capitalism (see objectivism).
- Burns, Arthur Robert (American economist and educator)
Milton Friedman: Education and career: While at Rutgers he encountered Arthur Burns, then a new assistant professor of economics, whom Friedman ultimately regarded as his mentor and most important influence. Burns introduced him to Alfred Marshall’s Principles of Economics, and Friedman later would approvingly quote Marshall’s description of economics as “an engine for the discovery…
- Burns, Bob (American musician)
Lynyrd Skynyrd: …2001, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida), Bob Burns (b. November 24, 1950, Jacksonville—d. April 3, 2015, Cartersville, Georgia), and Artimus Pyle (b. July 15, 1948, Louisville, Kentucky).
- Burns, Christy Turlington (American fashion model)
Christy Turlington is an American fashion model best known as a face of the cosmetics company Maybelline and the Calvin Klein fashion house. Turlington appeared on more than 500 magazine covers and walked the runways for the world’s top fashion houses, including Chanel and Valentino. Turlington was
- Burns, Eveline M. (American economist and educator)
Eveline M. Burns was a British-born American economist and educator, best remembered for her role in creating U.S. social security policy and for her work to further public understanding of it. Eveline Richardson worked as an administrative assistant in Great Britain’s Ministry of Labour while
- Burns, Eveline Mabel (American economist and educator)
Eveline M. Burns was a British-born American economist and educator, best remembered for her role in creating U.S. social security policy and for her work to further public understanding of it. Eveline Richardson worked as an administrative assistant in Great Britain’s Ministry of Labour while
- Burns, George (American comedian)
George Burns was an American comedian who—with his dry humour, gravelly voice, and ever-present cigar—was popular for more than 70 years in vaudeville, radio, film, and television. He was especially known as part of a popular comedy team with his wife, Gracie Allen. Burns began his career at age
- Burns, Jesse Louis (American minister and activist)
Jesse Jackson is an American civil rights leader, Baptist minister, and politician whose bids for the U.S. presidency (in the Democratic Party’s nomination races in 1983–84 and 1987–88) were the most successful by an African American until 2008, when Barack Obama captured the Democratic
- Burns, Jethro (American entertainer)
Homer and Jethro: …Homer strumming the guitar and Jethro playing the mandolin, they performed on radio in Knoxville before becoming cast regulars in 1939 on the “Renfro Valley Barn Dance” radio program. The team broke up during World War II, but they reunited in 1945 and performed for a decade as regulars on…
- Burns, John (British entrepreneur)
Sir George Burns, Baronet: His eldest son and heir, John Burns (1829–1901), became head of the Cunard company in 1880 and was created Baron Inverclyde in 1897.
- Burns, John Elliot (British labor leader)
John Elliot Burns was a British labour leader and Socialist, the first person of working-class origin to enter a British cabinet (1905). Having begun work at the age of 10, Burns attended night school and read extensively. In 1883 he joined the Social Democratic Federation (SDF), which was at that
- Burns, Ken (American director)
Ken Burns is an American documentary director who is known for the epic historical scope of his films and miniseries. Burns spent his youth in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his father was a professor at the University of Michigan. He received a bachelor’s degree (1975) in film studies and design from
- Burns, Kenneth C. (American entertainer)
Homer and Jethro: …Homer strumming the guitar and Jethro playing the mandolin, they performed on radio in Knoxville before becoming cast regulars in 1939 on the “Renfro Valley Barn Dance” radio program. The team broke up during World War II, but they reunited in 1945 and performed for a decade as regulars on…
- Burns, Kenneth Lauren (American director)
Ken Burns is an American documentary director who is known for the epic historical scope of his films and miniseries. Burns spent his youth in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his father was a professor at the University of Michigan. He received a bachelor’s degree (1975) in film studies and design from
- Burns, Lucy (American suffragist)
Lucy Burns was an American suffragist whose zealous political organizing and militant tactics helped forge support for a federal constitutional amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote. Burns was the fourth of eight children. Fortunate to have a father who believed in educating children of
- Burns, Lugenia D. (American social reformer)
Lugenia Burns Hope was an American social reformer whose Neighborhood Union and other community service organizations improved the quality of life for blacks in Atlanta, Ga., and served as a model for the future Civil Rights Movement. Hope gained experience as an adolescent by working, often full
- Burns, Robert (Scottish poet)
Robert Burns was the national poet of Scotland, who wrote lyrics and songs in Scots and in English. He was also famous for his amours and his rebellion against orthodox religion and morality. Burns’s father had come to Ayrshire from Kincardineshire in an endeavour to improve his fortunes, but,
- Burns, Sarah (American filmmaker)
Ken Burns: …was codirected by his daughter Sarah Burns and her husband, David McMahon. The 18-hour series The Vietnam War (2017) was epic in its scope, including discussions on the origins of the conflict and its polarizing effect on Americans as well as interviews with both U.S. and Viet Cong soldiers. In…
- Burns, Sir George, Baronet (British entrepreneur)
Sir George Burns, Baronet was a Scottish shipping magnate and one of the founders of the Cunard Line. Burns was the son of a Glasgow clergyman. In partnership with a brother, James, he began as a Glasgow general merchant, and in 1824, in conjunction with a Liverpool partner, Hugh Matthie, he
- Burns, Tex (American writer)
Louis L’Amour was an American writer, best-selling author of more than 100 books, most of which were formula westerns that were highly popular because of their well-researched portrayals of frontier life. L’Amour, who left school at the age of 15, was a world traveler who mined in the West, sailed
- Burns, Thomas (Scottish association football player and manager)
- Burns, Tommy (Scottish association football player and manager)
- Burns, Tommy (Canadian boxer)
Tommy Burns was a Canadian world heavyweight boxing champion from February 23, 1906, when he won a 20-round decision over Marvin Hart in Los Angeles, until December 26, 1908, when he lost to Jack Johnson in 14 rounds in Sydney, Australia. This victory made Johnson the first black fighter to hold
- Burns, Ursula (American executive)
Ursula Burns is an American business executive who served as CEO (2009–16) and chairman (2010–17) of the international document-management and business-services company Xerox Corporation. She was the first African American woman to serve as CEO of a Fortune 500 company and the first female to
- Burns, William J. (American government agent)
Gaston Means: …in New York City by William J. Burns, a former Secret Service agent. Means’s enthusiasm for unscrupulous but productive practices—such as breaking and entering, wiretapping, and extortion—soon earned him a prime place among Burns’s staff of investigators. Just prior to accepting that job, Means had inveigled his way into the…
- Burnside Bridge (American Civil War landmark)
Battle of Antietam: The battle for Burnside Bridge: Burnside, on the southern end of the Union lines, had received his orders late and acted on them later still. The battle was over on the Confederate right before Burnside fired a shot, and Lee was able to shift nearly all of his…
- Burnside problem (mathematics)
Burnside problem, in group theory (a branch of modern algebra), problem of determining if a finitely generated periodic group with each element of finite order must necessarily be a finite group. The problem was formulated by the English mathematician William Burnside in 1902. A finitely generated
- Burnside problem (mathematics)
Burnside problem, in group theory (a branch of modern algebra), problem of determining if a finitely generated periodic group with each element of finite order must necessarily be a finite group. The problem was formulated by the English mathematician William Burnside in 1902. A finitely generated
- Burnside, Ambrose Everett (United States general)
Ambrose Everett Burnside was a Union general in the American Civil War and originator in the United States of the fashion of side whiskers (later known as sideburns). Burnside, a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. (1847), resigned his commission in 1853 and for the next five
- Burnside, William (English mathematician)
Burnside problem: …formulated by the English mathematician William Burnside in 1902.
- burnsides (whisker style)
dress: The 19th century: …clean-shaven, were called burnsides or sideburns, after the U.S. Civil War general Ambrose Burnside. Other popular beard styles included the imperial, a small goatee named for Napoleon III, and the side-whiskers and drooping mustache known as the Franz Joseph in honour of the head of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After 1880…
- Burnt (film by Wells [2015])
Omar Sy: …vengeful chef in the comedy Burnt (2015), starring Bradley Cooper.
- Burnt by the Sun (film by Mikhalkov [1994])
- Burnt Njáll (Icelandic literature)
Njáls saga, one of the longest and generally considered the finest of the 13th-century Icelanders’ sagas. It presents the most comprehensive picture of Icelandic life in the heroic age and has a wide range of complex characters. The work has two heroes—Gunnar (Gunther) and Njáll. Gunnar is a brave,
- Burnt Norton (poem by Eliot)
Burnt Norton, poem by T.S. Eliot, the first of the four poems that make up The Four Quartets. “Burnt Norton” was published in Collected Poems 1909–1935 (1936); it then appeared in pamphlet form in 1941 and was published with the remaining three poems of the The Four Quartets in 1943. It is a
- Burnt Orange Heresy, The (film by Capotondi [2020])
Donald Sutherland: His later films included The Burnt Orange Heresy (2019), about an art heist, and the horror thriller Alone (2020).
- burnt topaz (mineral)
topaz: …topaz” is often known as Brazilian ruby, as is the very rare, natural red topaz. Cut topazes of large size are known, and it is said that the great “Braganza diamond” of Portugal is probably a topaz.
- Burnt-Out Case, A (novel by Greene)
A Burnt-Out Case, novel by Graham Greene, published in 1961, that examines the possibility of redemption. The story opens as Querry, a European who has lost the ability to connect with emotion or spirituality, arrives at a church-run leprosarium in the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of
- Bürolandschaft (interior design)
interior design: Space planning: …office design is known as office landscape (from the German word Bürolandschaft). Above, in Modes of composition, it was noted that the appearance of a “landscaped” space might seem chaotic. Actually, however, the system was developed in the 1960s by a German team of planning and management consultants who made…
- burp gun (weapon)
small arm: The submachine gun: …way with the MP38 and MP40. Known to the Allies as “burp guns,” these weapons operated at 450 to 550 rounds per minute, the optimal rate for controlled fire. Also, they were fed by a box magazine, which did not jam as often as a drum, and had a wire…
- burp gun (weapon)
small arm: The submachine gun: …led the way with the MP38 and MP40. Known to the Allies as “burp guns,” these weapons operated at 450 to 550 rounds per minute, the optimal rate for controlled fire. Also, they were fed by a box magazine, which did not jam as often as a drum, and had…
- Burpee Museum of Natural History (museum, Rockford, Illinois, United States)
Rockford: Rockford museums include the Burpee Museum of Natural History, the Erlander Home (1871; a Swedish American museum), the Rockford Art Museum (the state’s largest art museum outside Chicago), the Tinker Swiss Cottage Museum, and the Midway Village and Museum Center (local history). Rockford Speedway hosts NASCAR automobile racing events.…
- Burpee, W. Atlee (American seedsman)
W. Atlee Burpee was an American seedsman who founded the world’s largest mail-order seed company. After completing two years at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Burpee borrowed $1,000 from his mother and set up a mail-order poultry business with a partner in 1876. Two years later he
- Burpee, Washington Atlee (American seedsman)
W. Atlee Burpee was an American seedsman who founded the world’s largest mail-order seed company. After completing two years at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Burpee borrowed $1,000 from his mother and set up a mail-order poultry business with a partner in 1876. Two years later he
- burqa (garment)
burka, a loose outer garment worn primarily in public spaces by some Muslim women. It covers the body and face, usually incorporating a mesh panel through which the wearer can see. The burka comes in a variety of colours, but blue is the most common choice, and it often features embroidery on the
- Burqān, Al- (oil field, Kuwait)
petroleum: Iraq, Kuwait, and Iran: …basin, including Kuwait’s field at Al-Burqān, which was discovered in 1938. Al-Burqān is the world’s second largest oil field, having originally contained 75 billion barrels of recoverable oil. Iraq possesses a significant potential for additional oil discoveries, primarily in its southwestern geographic region, where an estimated 45–100 billion barrels of…