- Cherry, Neneh (Swedish singer-songwriter)
Portishead: …recording industry writing songs for Neneh Cherry and doing production work for trip-hop pioneers Massive Attack. Gibbons had been earning a living as a nightclub singer when she and Barrow met in 1991 while participating in a job-training program at the Bristol unemployment office. They collaborated on a number of…
- cherry-bark oak (tree)
red oak: Cherry-bark oak, or swamp red oak, a valuable timber tree also used as an ornamental, is a variety of the southern red oak. It is a larger tree, up to 36 m, with more uniform, 5- to 11-lobed leaves, often 23 cm long. The gray-brown…
- cherrystone clam (mollusk)
clam: The northern quahog (Mercenaria mercenaria), also known as the cherrystone clam, littleneck clam, or hard-shell clam, and the southern quahog (M. campechiensis) belong to the family of venus clams (Veneridae). M. mercenaria is about 7.5 to 12.5 cm (3 to 5 inches) long. The dingy white…
- Cherskogo Mountains (mountains, Russia)
Chersky Range, range running northwest to southeast through the Sakha republic and Magadan oblast (province), Russia. The range, extending more than 900 miles (1,500 km), forms a part of the extensive Verkhoyansk mountain system and comprises a series of highly dissected parallel ranges with
- Chersky Mountains (mountains, Russia)
Chersky Range, range running northwest to southeast through the Sakha republic and Magadan oblast (province), Russia. The range, extending more than 900 miles (1,500 km), forms a part of the extensive Verkhoyansk mountain system and comprises a series of highly dissected parallel ranges with
- Chersky Range (mountains, Russia)
Chersky Range, range running northwest to southeast through the Sakha republic and Magadan oblast (province), Russia. The range, extending more than 900 miles (1,500 km), forms a part of the extensive Verkhoyansk mountain system and comprises a series of highly dissected parallel ranges with
- Cherso (island, Croatia)
Cres, island in the Kvarner group, northwest Croatia, in the Adriatic Sea, off the east coast of Istria. With an area of 156 square miles (404 square km), it reaches a maximum elevation of 2,150 feet (650 metres) at Gorice. In the south, a canal—first made in Roman times, revived in the 16th
- Cherson (Ukraine)
Kherson, city, southern Ukraine. It lies on the right (west) bank of the lower Dnieper River about 15 miles (25 km) from the river’s mouth. Kherson, named after the ancient settlement of Chersonesus (west of what is now Sevastopol), was founded in 1778 as a fortress to protect the newly acquired
- Chersonese, Tauric (ancient region, Ukraine)
Tauric Chersonese, ancient region comprising the Crimea and, often, the city of Chersonesus, located three miles west of modern Sevastopol, Ukraine. The city, founded on the Heracleotic Chersonese (or Chersonesos Micra [Small Chersonese]) by Ionian Greeks in the 6th century bc, probably as a
- Chersonese, Thracian (ancient region, Turkey)
Thracian Chersonese, ancient region comprising the modern Gallipoli Peninsula, located on the European side of the Hellespont (the Dardanelles, in modern Turkey). A major wheat-exporting region, it was on the main trade route between Europe and Asia; one of its cities, Sestos, was at the main
- Chersonesus (ancient city, Ukraine)
Sevastopol: …the ancient Greek colony of Chersonesus, founded in 421 bce. Originally a republic, Chersonesus (Heracleotic Chersonese) became, in turn, part of the kingdom of Pontus, of the Cimmerian Bosporus, of the Roman Empire, and of the Byzantine Empire. In 988 or 989 Prince Volodymyr of Kyiv captured the town and…
- Chersonesus Aurea (peninsula, Southeast Asia)
Malay Peninsula, in Southeast Asia, a long, narrow appendix of the mainland extending south for a distance of about 700 miles (1,127 km) through the Isthmus of Kra to Cape Piai, the southernmost point of the Asian continent; its maximum width is 200 miles (322 km), and it covers roughly 70,000
- chert and flint (mineral)
chert and flint, very fine-grained quartz (q.v.), a silica mineral with minor impurities. Several varieties are included under the general term chert: jasper, chalcedony, agate (qq.v.), flint, porcelanite, and novaculite. Flint is gray to black and nearly opaque (translucent brown in thin
- Cherta Osedlosti (Russian history)
pale: …came to be called the Pale of Settlement (Cherta Osedlosti) came into being as a result of the introduction of large numbers of Jews into the Russian sphere after the three partitions of Poland (1772, 1793, 1795). Adjusting to a population often banned from Russia altogether was a problem that…
- Chertoff, Michael (American official)
Michael Chertoff is an American lawyer who was secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (2005–09). Chertoff was educated at Harvard University (B.A., 1975; J.D., 1978) and graduated with top honours. He was admitted to the bar in the District of Columbia (1980), New York (1987), and New
- cherub (religion)
cherub, in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic literature, a celestial winged being with human, animal, or birdlike characteristics who functions as a throne bearer of the Deity. Derived from ancient Middle Eastern mythology and iconography, these celestial beings serve important liturgical and
- cherubim (religion)
cherub, in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic literature, a celestial winged being with human, animal, or birdlike characteristics who functions as a throne bearer of the Deity. Derived from ancient Middle Eastern mythology and iconography, these celestial beings serve important liturgical and
- Cherubim and Seraphim society (Nigerian religious society)
Aiyetoro: …a small group of the Cherubim and Seraphim Society, itself a part of the Aladura religious movement (a Charismatic Christian movement having affinities with Pentecostalism). The founders of Aiyetoro built the model settlement on piles on a mudbank in the coastal lagoons 100 miles (160 km) east of Lagos. Though…
- Cherubini, Luigi (Italian composer)
Luigi Cherubini was an Italian-born French composer during the period of transition from Classicism to Romanticism; he contributed to the development of French opera and was also a master of sacred music. His mature operas are characterized by the way they use some of the new techniques and subject
- Cherubini, Maria Luigi Carlo Zenobio Salvatore (Italian composer)
Luigi Cherubini was an Italian-born French composer during the period of transition from Classicism to Romanticism; he contributed to the development of French opera and was also a master of sacred music. His mature operas are characterized by the way they use some of the new techniques and subject
- cherubinischer Wandersmann, Der (work by Angelus Silesius)
Angelus Silesius: …primarily as the author of Der cherubinischer Wandersmann (1674; “The Cherubic Wanderer”), a major work of Roman Catholic mysticism.
- Chéruel, Adolphe (French historian)
Adolphe Chéruel was a French historian known for his pioneer work from original sources on the reign (1643–1715) of Louis XIV of France. Chéruel pursued an academic career and rose to the highest posts. His early work was concerned with Norman history and with the general history of France; but his
- Chéruel, Pierre-Adolphe (French historian)
Adolphe Chéruel was a French historian known for his pioneer work from original sources on the reign (1643–1715) of Louis XIV of France. Chéruel pursued an academic career and rose to the highest posts. His early work was concerned with Norman history and with the general history of France; but his
- Cheruiyot, Robert Kipkoech (Kenyan runner)
Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot is a Kenyan runner who became the first man to win the Chicago Marathon and the Boston Marathon in the same year (2006). Cheruiyot, a Nandi tribesman, enjoyed success as a high-school runner but struggled for two years after graduation when his parents separated. He lived
- Cherusci (ancient people)
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest: Context: …9 ce, Arminius of the Cherusci began to plot an insurrection. He had been an ally of the Romans in previous years, growing up in Rome as a noble hostage, receiving Roman citizenship, and even being given the honourable rank of eques (Roman knight). Arminius frequently acted as a messenger…
- Cherven (Bulgaria)
Ruse, city of northern Bulgaria, on the Danube River near the mouth of the Rusenski Lom. Bulgaria’s principal river port and a transportation hub for road and rail, Ruse has regular shipping services on the Danube and an airport. Upstream is the Friendship Bridge, built in 1954, carrying road and
- Chervenkov, Vŭlko Velyov (Bulgarian statesman)
Vŭlko Velyov Chervenkov was a Bulgarian communist leader and premier of Bulgaria (1950–56). Chervenkov joined the Bulgarian Workers’ Party in 1919 and was a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League (1920–25). In 1923 Chervenkov took part in an unsuccessful communist uprising,
- chervil (herb)
chervil, (Anthriscus cerefolium), annual herb of the family Apiaceae (Umbelliferae). It is native to regions of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea and to western Asia. Chervil is cultivated in Europe for its lacy, decompound, aromatic leaves, which are used to flavour fish, salads, soups, eggs, meat
- chervonets (Soviet currency)
Soviet Union: The communist regime in crisis: 1920–21: A new currency, called chervonets, based on gold, replaced the worthless ruble. Thus was inaugurated the New Economic Policy (NEP), which Lenin expected to last for an indeterminate period; during this time the country would recover from the calamities of War Communism and the population would acquire a higher…
- Cherwell (district, England, United Kingdom)
Cherwell, district, administrative and historic county of Oxfordshire, south-central England. Banbury, in the north, is the administrative centre. The River Cherwell and the Oxford Canal extend north from Oxford city and bisect the district. Predominantly rural, Cherwell is a lowland area bordering
- Cherwell, Frederick Alexander Lindemann, Viscount (British physicist)
Winston Churchill: Exclusion from office, 1929–39: Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell), who enabled him to build up at Chartwell a private intelligence centre the information of which was often superior to that of the government. When Baldwin became prime minister in 1935, he persisted in excluding Churchill from office but gave him the exceptional…
- Chesapeake (United States ship)
James Lawrence: …to captain of the frigate Chesapeake. On June 1, 1813, the Chesapeake accepted HMS Shannon’s challenge to a sea fight off Boston (see photograph). The Chesapeake was decisively defeated in less than an hour and Lawrence was mortally wounded.
- Chesapeake (Virginia, United States)
Chesapeake, independent city, southeastern Virginia, U.S. It lies along the Elizabeth River on the Tidewater coastal plain, adjacent to Suffolk, Portsmouth, Norfolk, and Virginia Beach, and extends southward from Hampton Roads (natural roadstead) to the North Carolina border. Formed as an
- Chesapeake and Delaware Canal (waterway, United States)
Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, American waterway 22 km (14 miles) long connecting the head of the Chesapeake Bay with the Delaware River estuary. The canal cuts across the narrow northern neck of the 290-km- (180-mile-) long Delmarva Peninsula, thereby providing shortened northern and European
- Chesapeake and Ohio Canal (waterway, United States)
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, former waterway, extending 297 km (184.5 miles) along the east bank of the Potomac River between Washington, D.C., and Cumberland in western Maryland. Begun in 1828, the canal was intended to provide cheap transportation between the Atlantic seaports and the Midwest via
- Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park (park, United States)
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park, park, eastern United States. It consists of the former Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, a waterway running along the Potomac River between Washington, D.C., and Cumberland, Md. Construction of the canal, which extends 184.5 miles (297 km), began in the
- Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company (American railway)
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company (C&O), American railroad company established in 1868 with the consolidation of two smaller lines, the Virginia Central and the Covington and Ohio. It subsequently acquired a number of other lines, culminating in its merger with the Pere Marquette Railroad Company
- Chesapeake Bay (bay, United States)
Chesapeake Bay, largest inlet in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the eastern United States. Created by the submergence of the lower courses of the Susquehanna River and its tributaries, it is 193 miles (311 km) long and 3 to 25 miles (5 to 40 km) wide. The southern part of the bay is bordered by
- Chesapeake Bay Bridge (bridge, Maryland, United States)
Chesapeake Bay: The William Preston Lane, Jr., Memorial Bridge spans the upper bay near Annapolis, Maryland. It was opened to traffic in 1952 and is 4 miles (6.4 km) long. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel was completed across the lower bay in 1964. The bay forms part of the…
- Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel (bridge, Virginia, United States)
Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, complex of trestles, artificial islands, tunnels, and bridges that runs across the entrance to Chesapeake Bay in Virginia, providing a vehicular roadway between the Norfolk–Hampton Roads area (southwest) and Cape Charles at the tip of the Delmarva Peninsula
- Chesapeake Bay retriever (breed of dog)
Chesapeake Bay retriever, breed of sporting dog, developed in the United States in the 19th century to retrieve downed fowl from icy coastal waters. Its water-repellent, short, thick coat tends to be wavy on the back, shoulders, and loins, and it occurs in colours described as brown, sedge, or dead
- Chesapeake, Battle of the (American Revolution [1781])
Battle of the Chesapeake, (September 5, 1781), in the American Revolution, French naval victory over a British fleet that took place outside Chesapeake Bay. The outcome of the battle was indispensable to the successful Franco-American Siege of Yorktown from August to October. Lord Charles
- Cheselden, William (British surgeon and teacher)
William Cheselden was a British surgeon and teacher of anatomy and surgery who wrote Anatomy of the Human Body (1713) and Osteographia, or the Anatomy of the Bones (1733). The former was used as a text by anatomy students for nearly a century. Cheselden was apprenticed to a Mr. Wilkes, surgeon of
- Cheshire (county, England, United Kingdom)
Cheshire, geographic and historic county and former administrative county of northwestern England, bordering Wales to the west, fronting the Dee and Mersey estuaries to the northwest, and flanked by the Pennine uplands, partly within the Peak District National Park, to the east. In 2009 the
- Cheshire (county, New Hampshire, United States)
Cheshire, county, extreme southwestern New Hampshire, U.S. It consists largely of a hill-and-valley region bounded to the south by Massachusetts and to the west by Vermont, the Connecticut River constituting the western border. Other waterways include the Ashuelot and Cold rivers, Spofford and
- Cheshire Cat (fictional character)
Cheshire Cat, fictional character, a cat notable for its broad grin and its ability to disappear and reappear at will, in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) by Lewis Carroll. The phrase “grin like a Cheshire cat” predates Carroll’s story, and, although experts have guessed at its meaning, its
- Cheshire East (unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Cheshire East, unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Cheshire, northwestern England. Cheshire East is bounded to the north by Greater Manchester, to the northeast by Derbyshire, to the east by Staffordshire, to the south by Shropshire, to the west by the unitary authority of Cheshire
- Cheshire West and Chester (unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Cheshire West and Chester, unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Cheshire, northwestern England. It is bounded to the north by the unitary authorities of Halton and Warrington, to the east by the unitary authority of Cheshire East, to the southeast by Shropshire, to the west by
- Cheshme, Battle of (Turkish history)
Battle of Çeşme, (July 6–7, 1770), naval clash in which a Russian fleet defeated and destroyed the Ottoman fleet at the harbour of Çeşme on the Aegean Sea. During the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–74, a Russian fleet under Aleksey Orlov entered the Mediterranean in 1770 to destroy the Ottoman fleet and
- Chesil Bank (beach, England, United Kingdom)
Chesil Beach, beach, county of Dorset, England, that stretches 18 miles (29 km) from Bridport to the Isle of Portland. One of the best-known natural features in Britain, it consists of shingle (pebbles), 98.5 percent of which is hard flint or chert rock. From Abbotsbury to Portland (12 miles [19
- Chesil Beach (beach, England, United Kingdom)
Chesil Beach, beach, county of Dorset, England, that stretches 18 miles (29 km) from Bridport to the Isle of Portland. One of the best-known natural features in Britain, it consists of shingle (pebbles), 98.5 percent of which is hard flint or chert rock. From Abbotsbury to Portland (12 miles [19
- Chesmenski, Count (Russian count)
Aleksey Grigoryevich, Count Orlov was a military officer who played a prominent role in the coup d’état that placed Catherine II the Great on the Russian throne. Having entered the cadet corps in 1749, Orlov became an officer in the Russian guards as well as a close adviser to his brother Grigory
- Chesneus, Andreas (French historian)
André Duchesne was a historian and geographer, sometimes called the father of French history, who was the first to make critical collections of sources for national histories. Duchesne was educated at Loudun and Paris and devoted his early years to studies in history and geography. His first work,
- Chesney, Francis Rawdon (British explorer)
Francis Rawdon Chesney was a British soldier, explorer, and Middle East traveler whose fame rests on his projects for the Suez Canal and for an overland route to India by the Euphrates River valley. After a cadetship at the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, near London, Chesney was gazetted to
- Chesney, George (British author)
science fiction: Mass markets and juvenile science fiction: …as seen, for example, in George Chesney’s short story The Battle of Dorking (1871). First published in Blackwood’s Magazine, The Battle of Dorking darkly postulated a Prussian defeat of a poorly armed, weak, and unwary Britain and established the military techno-thriller. Chesney used his urgent narrative of the near future…
- Chesney, Kenneth Arnold (American musician)
Kenny Chesney is an American country-music singer, songwriter, and guitarist whose contemplative ballads and hard-core party songs, onstage energy, approachable character, and sophisticated concert productions made him one of the most popular performers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
- Chesney, Kenny (American musician)
Kenny Chesney is an American country-music singer, songwriter, and guitarist whose contemplative ballads and hard-core party songs, onstage energy, approachable character, and sophisticated concert productions made him one of the most popular performers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
- Chesnokov, Pavel (Russian composer)
Russian chant: …works of Aleksandr Kastalsky and Pavel Chesnokov, who, although writing for multi-voiced choirs, utilized supposedly traditional melodies and the style Mily Balakirev had developed for harmonizing Russian folk music.
- Chesnoy, Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte Guyon, Madame du (French mystic)
Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte Guyon was a French Roman Catholic mystic and writer, a central figure in the theological debates of 17th-century France through her advocacy of Quietism, an extreme passivity and indifference of the soul, even to eternal salvation, wherein she believed that one
- Chesnut, Mary Boykin (American writer)
Mary Boykin Chesnut was the author of A Diary from Dixie, an insightful view of Southern life and leadership during the American Civil War (1861–65), told from an upper-class perspective. The work has led some to call Chesnut “the preeminent writer of the Confederacy.” Mary Boykin Miller was born
- Chesnutt, Charles W. (American writer)
Charles W. Chesnutt was a pioneering Black American short-story writer and novelist during the decades after the Civil War. Chesnutt was the son of free Black parents of multiracial heritage who had left their native city of Fayetteville, North Carolina, prior to the Civil War. Following the war,
- Chesnutt, Charles Waddell (American writer)
Charles W. Chesnutt was a pioneering Black American short-story writer and novelist during the decades after the Civil War. Chesnutt was the son of free Black parents of multiracial heritage who had left their native city of Fayetteville, North Carolina, prior to the Civil War. Following the war,
- Chespirito (Mexican actor and writer)
Chespirito was a Mexican comic actor and writer who became a cultural icon in Latin America for the characters he created and portrayed on the family-friendly TV sketch-comedy show Chespirito and its various spin-offs. Gómez Bolaños, whose father was a painter and an illustrator for periodicals,
- Chespirito (Mexican television show)
Chespirito: …the family-friendly TV sketch-comedy show Chespirito and its various spin-offs.
- Chess (musical by Rice and Andersson and Björn)
ABBA: Breakup and solo projects: …lyricist Tim Rice to create Chess (1984), a concept album and stage musical that produced the surprise radio hit “One Night in Bangkok.” In 1995 the songwriting duo produced the critically acclaimed Kristina från Duvemåla (“Kristina from Duvemåla”), a stage musical based on the four-volume Emigrant series by Swedish author…
- chess (game)
chess, one of the oldest and most popular board games, played by two opponents on a checkered board with specially designed pieces of contrasting colours, commonly white and black. White moves first, after which the players alternate turns in accordance with fixed rules, each player attempting to
- chess (plant)
bromegrass: The common weed chess (B. secalinus), sometimes known as cheat, is found along roadsides and in grain fields. Cheatgrass, ripgut grass (B. diandrus), and foxtail brome (B. rubens) are dangerous to grazing animals; spines on their spikelets or bracts can puncture the animals’ eyes, mouths, and intestines, leading…
- Chess Analyzed (work by Philidor)
chess: Philidor and the birth of chess theory: …published L’Analyze des échecs (Chess Analyzed), an enormously influential book that appeared in more than 100 editions.
- chess clock (device)
chess: Technological improvements: …by a pair of mechanical clocks after a simple pendulum device was introduced at London 1883. The pendulum acted like a seesaw so that, when a player depressed his clock, it stopped and the opponent’s clock began ticking. See Figure 4.
- Chess Code (game rules)
chess: Conduct of the game: …rules that supplement the basic laws governing how the pieces move. Among the more important rules are those governing completion of a move, recording of games, time controls (see The time element and competition), and penalties for illegal moves and other infractions.
- chess composition (chess)
chess: Chess composition: Chess compositions are created positions in which one side, usually White, moves first and is required to perform a task. The reader is called upon to find the task’s solution. There are three basic forms of composition depending on the type of task.
- chess pie (food)
chess pie, a very sweet egg-rich pie, popular in Tennessee and other parts of the southern United States, made with a simple recipe of sugar, eggs, cornmeal, and butter with vanilla. Some recipe variations add brown sugar, chocolate, lemon juice, or nuts as well. Chess pie is similar to cheesecake
- chess piece (chess)
chess piece, game piece used for playing chess. Chess pieces are distinguished by appearance and made of rigid material such as wood, ivory, or plastic. Pieces are of contrasting colours, commonly white and black. The six different types of pieces are: king, rook, bishop, queen, knight, and pawn.
- Chess Players, The (film by Ray [1977])
Birju Maharaj: …movie Shatranj ke Khilari (1977; The Chess Players), directed by Satyajit Ray, among other film work.
- chess problem (chess)
chess: Standard problems: The number of pieces in a problem is small but, with the exception of miniatures, there are generally more pieces than in studies. In studies the solver usually tries to overcome the limits of material, but in problems what must be overcome is…
- Chess Records (American company)
Chess Records: From Muddy to “Maybellene”: In 1947 brothers Leonard and Phil Chess became partners with Charles and Evelyn Aron in the Aristocrat Record Company. The Chesses had operated several taverns on Chicago’s South Side—the last and largest of which was the Mocamba Lounge—and their desire to record one of the…
- Chess Records: From Muddy to “Maybellene”
In 1947 brothers Leonard and Phil Chess became partners with Charles and Evelyn Aron in the Aristocrat Record Company. The Chesses had operated several taverns on Chicago’s South Side—the last and largest of which was the Mocamba Lounge—and their desire to record one of the singers who performed in
- chess study (chess)
chess: Chess composition: …Master and International Grandmaster of Chess Composition based on having studies and problems published in the FIDE albums.
- chess theory
chess: Development of theory: Chess theory consists of opening knowledge, tactics (or combinations), positional analysis (particularly pawn structures), strategy (the making of long-range plans and goals), and endgame technique (including basic mates against the lone king).
- Chess, Laws of (game rules)
chess: Conduct of the game: …rules that supplement the basic laws governing how the pieces move. Among the more important rules are those governing completion of a move, recording of games, time controls (see The time element and competition), and penalties for illegal moves and other infractions.
- Chess, Leonard (American record producer)
Leonard Chess was a Polish-born U.S. record producer. He immigrated to the U.S in 1928 with his mother, sister, and brother—and future partner—Fiszel (later Philip); they joined his father, who had preceded them, in Chicago. After working at several trades, Leonard Chess opened a lounge, and Phil
- chess960 (game)
Alexandra Konstantinovna Kosteniuk: …the first woman champion of chess960 (also known as Fischer chess because it was invented by the American Bobby Fischer, former world chess champion), a game in which the chess pieces are shuffled along each player’s back rank (with certain restrictions) before play begins. Kosteniuk won the 2008 FIDE Women’s…
- chessboard
chess: Set design: Playing boards, which had monochromatic squares in the Muslim world, began to have alternating black and white, or red and white, squares by 1000 ce and were often made of fine wood or marble. Peter I (the Great) of Russia had special campaign boards made of…
- chessboard carpet
Damascus rug, usually small floor covering, often attributed to Damascus, Syria, in the 16th or 17th century in continuation of the rug art of the Mamlūk rulers of that land. The usual Damascus field pattern is a grid of small squares or rectangles (hence the European term chessboard carpets), each
- chessboard problem
number game: The chessboard problem: ” How many were there? How many grains of wheat are required in order to place one grain on the first square, 2 on the second, 4 on the third, and so on for the 64 squares?
- Chessie System (American railway)
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company (C&O), American railroad company established in 1868 with the consolidation of two smaller lines, the Virginia Central and the Covington and Ohio. It subsequently acquired a number of other lines, culminating in its merger with the Pere Marquette Railroad Company
- chessman (chess)
chess piece, game piece used for playing chess. Chess pieces are distinguished by appearance and made of rigid material such as wood, ivory, or plastic. Pieces are of contrasting colours, commonly white and black. The six different types of pieces are: king, rook, bishop, queen, knight, and pawn.
- Chessman, Caryl (American criminal)
Caryl Chessman was an American criminal whose writings during 12 years on death row made him the symbol of an enduring controversy over capital punishment. Chessman had been sent to reform school and the county jail four times before he was sentenced in March 1941 to San Quentin prison for a term
- Chessman, Caryl Whittier (American criminal)
Caryl Chessman was an American criminal whose writings during 12 years on death row made him the symbol of an enduring controversy over capital punishment. Chessman had been sent to reform school and the county jail four times before he was sentenced in March 1941 to San Quentin prison for a term
- Chessmaster (series of electronic games)
Chessmaster, popular series of electronic games for playing chess against a computer; it was originally released in 1986 by the Software Toolworks, which was acquired by the Learning Company. Chessmaster featured extremely competitive artificial intelligence engines—with later versions named “the
- chessmen (chess)
chess piece, game piece used for playing chess. Chess pieces are distinguished by appearance and made of rigid material such as wood, ivory, or plastic. Pieces are of contrasting colours, commonly white and black. The six different types of pieces are: king, rook, bishop, queen, knight, and pawn.
- chessylite (mineral)
azurite, basic copper carbonate [Cu3(OH)2(CO3)2]. It is ordinarily found with malachite in the oxidized zone of copper lodes. Notable deposits are at Tsumeb, Namib.; Chessy, France; and Bisbee, Ariz., U.S. Azurite was used as a blue pigment in ancient Eastern wall painting and, from the 15th to the
- chest (anatomy)
thorax, the part of an animal’s body between its head and its midsection. In vertebrates (fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals), the thorax is the chest, with the chest being that part of the body between the neck and the abdomen. The vertebrate thorax contains the chief organs of
- chest (furniture)
chest, the earliest form of container for storing clothes, documents, valuables, or other possessions, and the most important piece of furniture in the home until the 18th century. Chests with flat tops were also sometimes used as seats or beds. Chests are known from the 18th dynasty (c. 1539–1292
- chest cavity (anatomy)
thoracic cavity, the second largest hollow space of the body. It is enclosed by the ribs, the vertebral column, and the sternum, or breastbone, and is separated from the abdominal cavity (the body’s largest hollow space) by a muscular and membranous partition, the diaphragm. It contains the lungs,
- chest of drawers (furniture)
chest of drawers, type of furniture developed in the mid-17th century from a chest with drawers in the base. By the 1680s the “chest” was entirely made up of drawers: three long ones of varying depth, topped by two short ones side by side. Sometimes a flat slide with two small pull handles was
- chest voice
speech: The basic registers: …the basic registers being called chest voice, midvoice, and head voice. These terms are derived from observations, for example, that in the low-chest register the resonances are felt chiefly over the chest. When sitting on a wooden bench with a large male, one can feel the vibrations of his low…
- chest-on-chest (furniture)
highboy, a high or double chest of drawers (known technically as a chest-on-stand and a chest-on-chest, respectively). The name highboy is derived from a corruption of the French bois (“wood”) and became common in English in the late 1600s. The prototype of the highboy was the chest of drawers on a
- chest-on-stand (furniture)
highboy, a high or double chest of drawers (known technically as a chest-on-stand and a chest-on-chest, respectively). The name highboy is derived from a corruption of the French bois (“wood”) and became common in English in the late 1600s. The prototype of the highboy was the chest of drawers on a
- Chester (Illinois, United States)
Chester, city, seat (1844) of Randolph county, southwestern Illinois, U.S. It lies on the Mississippi River (there bridged to Missouri) near the mouth of the Marys River, about 60 miles (100 km) southeast of St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1819 by an Ohio land company and named for Chester,