- Chincha Islands (islands, Peru)
Chincha Islands, island group that is part of Los Libertadores-Wari región, Peru. Located in the Pacific Ocean 13 miles (21 km) off Peru’s southwestern coast, the three small islands are situated to the northwest of Paracas Bay and west-northwest of the city of Pisco. They have extensive guano
- Chinchilla (rodent)
chinchilla, (genus Chinchilla), either of two South American species of medium-sized rodents long valued for their extremely soft and thick fur. Once very common, chinchillas were hunted almost to extinction. They remain scarce in the wild but are raised commercially and also sold as housepets. All
- chinchilla (rodent)
chinchilla, (genus Chinchilla), either of two South American species of medium-sized rodents long valued for their extremely soft and thick fur. Once very common, chinchillas were hunted almost to extinction. They remain scarce in the wild but are raised commercially and also sold as housepets. All
- Chinchilla bennetti (rodent)
chinchilla rat: Bennett’s chinchilla rat (A. bennetti) occupies scrub habitats in central Chile from near the coast up to 1,200 metres above sea level, occurring along with the degu (Octodon degus). The two animals are approximately the same size, and mothers and young of both species have…
- Chinchilla brevicaudata (rodent)
chinchilla: laniger) and the short-tailed chinchilla (C. brevicaudata), are protected by law, but poaching and habitat loss continue. Chinchillas and their closest living relatives, the mountain viscachas, along with the more distantly related plains viscacha, constitute the family Chinchillidae of the suborder Hystricognatha within the order Rodentia.
- Chinchilla laniger (rodent)
chinchilla: Both species of Chinchilla, the long-tailed chinchilla (C. laniger) and the short-tailed chinchilla (C. brevicaudata), are protected by law, but poaching and habitat loss continue. Chinchillas and their closest living relatives, the mountain viscachas, along with the more distantly related plains viscacha, constitute the family Chinchillidae of the suborder Hystricognatha…
- Chinchilla Miranda, Laura (president of Costa Rica)
Laura Chinchilla is a Costa Rican politician who served as vice president (2006–08) and president (2010–14) of Costa Rica. She was the first woman to be elected to the Costa Rican presidency. Chinchilla, the eldest of four children, was born in a suburb of the Costa Rican capital, San José. Her
- chinchilla rat (rodent)
chinchilla rat, any of six South American species of rodents that superficially resemble a chinchilla but are more ratlike in body form. Chinchilla rats have short limbs, large eyes, and large, rounded ears. The forefeet have four digits, the hind feet five, and the hairless soles are padded and
- Chinchilla, Laura (president of Costa Rica)
Laura Chinchilla is a Costa Rican politician who served as vice president (2006–08) and president (2010–14) of Costa Rica. She was the first woman to be elected to the Costa Rican presidency. Chinchilla, the eldest of four children, was born in a suburb of the Costa Rican capital, San José. Her
- Chinchow (western Liaoning, China)
Jinzhou, city, western Liaoning sheng (province), China. It is strategically situated at the northern end of the narrow coastal plain between the Song Mountains and the Bo Hai (Gulf of Chihli). A Chinese administration was first established there under the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) in the 2nd
- Chinchow (southern Liaoning, China)
Jinzhou, former town, southern Liaoning sheng (province), China. Now administratively a district under the city of Dalian, it is situated on Jinzhou Bay, a part of the Bo Hai (Gulf of Chihli), and on the neck of the Liaodong Peninsula immediately northeast of Dalian. Jinzhou is an important
- Chincoteague Bay (bay, Maryland-Virginia, United States)
Assateague Island National Seashore: …mainland by Sinepuxent (north) and Chincoteague (south) bays, which are spanned by two bridges—one from Barrier Island Visitor Center in Maryland, near the northern end, and the other from Chincoteague, Va., near the southern tip.
- Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge (wildlife sanctuary, Virginia, United States)
Assateague Island National Seashore: …the national seashore boundaries are Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge (established 1943) at the southern (Virginia) end and Assateague State Park (1956) near the northern (Maryland) end. The island lies immediately south of Ocean City, Md., and is separated from the mainland by Sinepuxent (north) and Chincoteague (south) bays, which are…
- Chinde (Mozambique)
Chinde, town, central Mozambique. Located on the Chinde River, a distributary channel of the Zambezi delta, it exports sugar and copra and is an important fishing centre. Important originally as a British free-trade area (1891) for Northern Rhodesian exports and coastal traffic, Chinde declined
- Chinde River (river, Mozambique)
Zambezi River: Physiography: …of the main delta the Chinde River separates from the Zambezi’s main stream to form a navigable channel leading to a shallow harbour.
- Chindits (British guerrilla force)
Orde Charles Wingate: His “Chindits,” or “Wingate’s Raiders,” a brigade of British, Gurkha, and Burmese guerrillas, harassed much stronger Japanese forces in the jungles of northern Burma (now Myanmar) during World War II.
- Chindwin River (river, Myanmar)
Chindwin River, main tributary of the Irrawaddy River, northern Myanmar (Burma). The Chindwin is formed in the Pātkai and Kumon ranges of the Indo-Myanmar border by a network of headstreams including the Tanai, Tawan, and Taron. Called Ningthi by the Manipuris of India, it drains northwest through
- Chine intérieure, La (work by Bauchau)
Henry Bauchau: In the poems of La Chine intérieure (1974; “Inner China”), Bauchau’s use of language is instrumental in aiding the processes of memory and introspection. His first novel, La Déchirure (1966; “The Tear”), is a multileveled narrative on the loss of his mother viewed against a backdrop of Belgian social…
- Chinese (people)
Australia: The Chinese: The long history of Chinese migration to Australia dates from the early 19th century. In the 1850s tens of thousands of Chinese people arrived to provide a source of cheap labour as workers in the goldfields. After the gold rushes, many Chinese miners…
- Chinese Academy of Sciences (academy, Shanghai, China)
Shanghai: Education: The Shanghai Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China’s leading scientific research and development body, is located in Shanghai. During the Cultural Revolution (1966–76), practical applications of scientific work in agriculture and industry were encouraged. Since the late 1970s, extensive research investments have been made in such high-technology areas…
- Chinese alligator (reptile)
Chinese alligator, (Alligator sinensis), species of alligator inhabiting the stream, pond, and wetland ecosystems in the lower Yangtze River basin of east-central China. Once widespread throughout the basin, the Chinese alligator’s geographic range has contracted to a handful of small habitats in
- Chinese ambercane (agriculture)
origins of agriculture: Sorghum: Chinese ambercane was brought from France to the United States in 1854 and was distributed to farmers. While the cane provided good forage for livestock, promoters of the new crop were most interested in refining sugar from the sorghum molasses, a goal that persisted for many…
- Chinese American (people)
California: Population composition: Only a few hundred Chinese lived in the state in 1850, but two years later one resident out of 10 was Chinese; most performed menial labour. Irish labourers arrived during the railroad construction boom in the 1860s. The Irish, French, and Italians tended to settle in San Francisco. As…
- Chinese arborvitae (plant)
arborvitae: The oriental, or Chinese, arborvitae (T. orientalis), a popular ornamental native to Asia, is a gracefully symmetrical shrub about 10 metres (33 feet) tall. Some authorities have assigned it to a separate genus (Biota) because of distinctions such as its erect branches, vertically arranged, fanlike branchlet systems, and…
- Chinese architecture
Chinese architecture, the built structures of China, specifically those found in the 18 historical provinces of China that are bounded by the Tibetan Highlands on the west, the Gobi to the north, and Myanmar (Burma), Laos, and Vietnam to the southwest. The first communities that can be identified
- Chinese art
Chinese art, the painting, calligraphy, architecture, pottery, sculpture, bronzes, jade carving, and other fine or decorative art forms produced in China over the centuries. The following article treats the general characteristics of Chinese art as a whole. For a detailed discussion of each of the
- Chinese ash (tree)
ash: Major species: The Chinese ash (F. chinensis) yields Chinese white wax.
- Chinese bamboo rat (rodent)
bamboo rat: …Rhizomys bamboo rats are the Chinese bamboo rat (R. sinensis), the hoary bamboo rat (R. pruinosus), and the large bamboo rat (R. sumatrensis). All bamboo rats belong to the subfamily Rhyzomyinae, which includes their closest living relatives, the African mole rats (genus Tachyoryctes). Subfamily Rhyzomyinae is classified within the family…
- Chinese beech (plant)
beech: Major species: An Asian species, the Chinese beech (F. engleriana), about 20 metres (65 feet) tall, and the Japanese blue beech (F. japonica), up to 24 metres (79 feet) tall, divide at the base into several stems. The Japanese, or Siebold’s, beech (F. crenata) is grown as an ornamental in the…
- Chinese bellflower (plant)
balloon flower, (Platycodon grandiflorus), perennial flowering plant of the bellflower family (Campanulaceae), native to East Asia. The plants are commonly cultivated as a garden ornamental and are sometimes grown as a ground cover. The balloon flower gets its name from its balloonlike flower buds.
- Chinese bergenia (plant)
Saxifragaceae: The rhizomes of Chinese bergenia (Bergenia purpurascens) are used in Chinese medicine to stop bleeding and to serve as a tonic. Heartleaf foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia) of North America is used in folk medicine as a diuretic and tonic. Creeping saxifrage (Saxifraga stolonifera), native to China and Japan, is…
- Chinese bezique (card game)
bezique: …four (rubicon bezique), six (Chinese bezique), and even eight decks. Bezique all but died out in the 20th century under the pressure of rummy games, which are quicker and simpler.
- Chinese blind tree mouse (rodent)
Asian tree mouse: …tree mice (genus Typhlomys): the Chinese blind tree mouse (T. cinereus) and the Chapa blind tree mouse (T. chapensis). They are probably nocturnal and arboreal, inhabiting mountain forests of southern China and northern Vietnam, respectively. Aside from their physical traits, little is known of these rodents. They resemble the Malabar…
- Chinese blue (pigment)
Prussian blue: …in paints, enamels, and lacquers; Chinese blue is very dark, with a greenish tint, and is favoured for use in printing inks; Milori blue has a reddish tint; toning blue is dull, with a strong red tone. All these pigments are chemically similar, differences in shade arising from variations in…
- Chinese boxing (martial art and exercise)
tai chi chuan, ancient and distinctive Chinese form of exercise or attack and defense that is popular throughout the world. As exercise, tai chi chuan is designed to provide relaxation in the process of body-conditioning exercise and is drawn from the principles of taiji, notably including the
- Chinese bronzes (metalwork)
Chinese bronzes, any of a number of bronze objects that were cast in China beginning before 1500 bce. Bronzes have been cast in China for about 3,700 years. Most bronzes of about 1500–300 bce, roughly the Bronze Age in China, may be described as ritual vessels intended for the worship of ancestors,
- Chinese cabbage (plant)
bok choy, (Brassica rapa), member of the mustard family (Brassicaceae) that is a variety (chinensis) of Brassica rapa. Bok choy belongs to a family of plants that includes other vegetables popular in Asian cookery such as mustard greens and Chinese leaves (also known as Chinese cabbage and Napa
- Chinese cabbage (plant group)
Chinese cabbage, either of two widely cultivated members of the mustard family (Brassicaceae) that are varieties of Brassica rapa. Napa cabbage, also called celery cabbage (B. rapa, variety pekinensis), forms a tight head of crinkled light green leaves. The slender cylindrical heads are about 30 cm
- Chinese cabbage (plant)
napa cabbage, (Brassica rapa, variety pekinensis), form of Chinese cabbage, belonging to the mustard family (Brassicaceae), cultivated for its edible leaves. Napa cabbage is widely grown in eastern Asia and is commonly used to make kimchi, a traditional Korean dish made of spicy fermented
- Chinese calendar (chronology)
Chinese calendar, dating system used concurrently with the Gregorian (Western) calendar in China and Taiwan and in neighbouring countries (e.g., Japan). The Chinese calendar is basically lunar, its year consisting of 12 months of alternately 29 and 30 days, equal to 354 days, or approximately 12
- Chinese calligraphy
Chinese calligraphy, the stylized artistic writing of Chinese characters, the written form of Chinese that unites the languages (many mutually unintelligible) spoken in China. Because calligraphy is considered supreme among the visual arts in China, it sets the standard by which Chinese painting is
- Chinese carpet (carpet)
rug and carpet: Materials and technique: Some Chinese carpets have fewer than 20 knots per square inch (3 per square centimetre); certain Indian ones, more than 2,400. The highest density can be achieved with the Persian knot.
- Chinese cassia (spice)
cassia, (Cinnamomun cassia), tree of the family Lauraceae and the spice made from its aromatic bark. The bark of cassia Cinnamomum cassia is similar to that of true cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum), to which cassia is closely related. Cassia bark has a more pungent, less delicate flavour and is thicker
- Chinese ceramics
Chinese pottery, objects made of clay and hardened by heat: earthenware, stoneware, and porcelain, particularly those made in China. Nowhere in the world has pottery assumed such importance as in China, and the influence of Chinese porcelain on later European pottery has been profound. The earliest
- Chinese Ch’ang-ch’un Railway (Chinese railroad)
Trans-Siberian Railroad: …II; it was renamed the Chinese Changchun Railway. During the Soviet era, a number of spur lines were built that radiated from the main trans-Siberian line. From 1974 to 1989 construction was completed on a large alternative route, the Baikal-Amur line; its route across the challenging environment of taiga, permafrost,…
- Chinese characters
Chinese writing, basically logographic writing system, one of the world’s great writing systems. Like Semitic writing in the West, Chinese script was fundamental to the writing systems in the East. Until relatively recently, Chinese writing was more widely in use than alphabetic writing systems,
- Chinese checkers (board game)
Halma: Chinese checkers, a game for from two to six players, derived from Halma, was introduced in the United States in the 1930s. It is played in the same way as Halma, except that the pieces are usually marbles (each player has 10 or 15) and…
- Chinese chess (board game)
Chinese chess, strategy board game played in China from about ad 700. Like orthodox chess, Chinese chess is believed to have been derived from an Indian board game known as chaturanga. As in Western chess, the object of Chinese chess is to capture the opponent’s king (also called general in Chinese
- Chinese chestnut (plant)
chestnut: Species and uses: The Chinese chestnut (C. mollissima), usually less than 18 metres (about 60 feet) tall, grows at altitudes up to 2,440 metres (8,000 feet). The Japanese chestnut (C. crenata), a similar shrub or tree that may grow to 9 metres (30 feet) or more, is found at…
- Chinese cinnamon (spice)
cassia, (Cinnamomun cassia), tree of the family Lauraceae and the spice made from its aromatic bark. The bark of cassia Cinnamomum cassia is similar to that of true cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum), to which cassia is closely related. Cassia bark has a more pungent, less delicate flavour and is thicker
- Chinese City (district, Beijing, China)
Beijing: City layout: …city, also known as the Chinese City, was added during the reign of the Ming emperor Jiajing (1521–66/67); it was in the form of an oblong adjoining the inner city, with walls that were 14 miles (23 km) in length, including 4 miles (6 km) of the southern wall of…
- Chinese civil service
Chinese civil service, the administrative system of the traditional Chinese government, the members of which were selected by a competitive examination. The Chinese civil service system gave the Chinese empire stability for more than 2,000 years and provided one of the major outlets for social
- Chinese Civil War (1945–1949)
Chinese Civil War, (1945–49) was a military struggle for control of China waged between the Nationalists (Kuomintang) under Chiang Kai-shek and the Communists under Mao Zedong. During the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–45), China was effectively divided into three regions—Nationalist China under
- Chinese Coffee (film by Pacino [2000])
Al Pacino: TV and stage work: …success, in the Broadway drama Chinese Coffee; he later directed and starred in a 2000 film adaptation. He also directed the documentary films Looking for Richard (1996) and Wilde Salomé (2011), which offered behind-the-scenes looks at two of his stage productions.
- Chinese Communist Party (political party, China)
Chinese Communist Party (CCP), political party of China. Since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, the CCP has been in sole control of that country’s government. The CCP was founded as both a political party and a revolutionary movement in 1921 by revolutionaries such as Li
- Chinese cooking
China: Daily life, sports, and recreation: Chinese cuisine, like Chinese philosophy, is organized along Daoist principles of opposition and change: hot is balanced by cold, spicy by mild, fresh by cured. The cooking of Sichuan province in central China is distinguished by the use of hot peppers; the lush southern interior…
- Chinese cork oak (tree)
oak: Major species and uses: …provides useful timber, and the Chinese cork oak (Q. variabilis) is the source of a black dye as well as a popular ornamental. Other cultivated ornamentals are the Armenian, or pontic, oak (Q. pontica), chestnut-leaved oak (Q. castaneaefolia), golden oak (Q. alnifolia), Holm, or holly, oak (Q. ilex),
- Chinese crab (crustacean)
migration: Lower invertebrates: …freshwater crabs, such as the Chinese crab (Eriocheir sinensis), after remaining for three to five years in fresh water, migrate to brackish water, where mating occurs. Females with eggs externally attached then travel to the sea and remain a few miles offshore for several months during winter. The following spring…
- Chinese crested (breed of dog)
Chinese crested, breed of toy dog of ancient ancestry; it is one of the hairless breeds, its coat being confined to its head (crest), tail (plume), and lower legs (socks), although most litters also contain “powderpuff” pups with a full coat. The origin of the breed is uncertain; it may have
- Chinese crested powderpuff (dog)
Chinese crested: …genes for normal coats are powderpuffs.
- Chinese cuisine
China: Daily life, sports, and recreation: Chinese cuisine, like Chinese philosophy, is organized along Daoist principles of opposition and change: hot is balanced by cold, spicy by mild, fresh by cured. The cooking of Sichuan province in central China is distinguished by the use of hot peppers; the lush southern interior…
- Chinese Democracy (album by Guns N’ Roses)
Guns N’ Roses: …from the album, tentatively titled Chinese Democracy, were leaked to the Internet. After some 14 years, an estimated $13 million in production costs, and an exclusive distribution deal with electronics retailer Best Buy, Chinese Democracy hit store shelves in November 2008. It was greeted with generally positive reviews, but it…
- Chinese Dietary Guidelines (diet)
human nutrition: Adapting guidelines to culture: The Food Guide Pagoda, a graphic display intended to help Chinese consumers put the dietary recommendations into practice, rested on the traditional cereal-based Chinese diet. Those who could not tolerate fresh milk were encouraged to consume yogurt or other dairy products as a source of calcium.…
- Chinese dog (breed of dog)
Mexican hairless, breed of dog that is probably descended from hairless Chinese or African dogs that were taken by Spanish traders to Mexico in the late 16th century. A rather long-legged dog, the Mexican hairless comes in three sizes: toy, which stands 11 to 12 inches (28 to 30.5 cm) and weighs 9
- Chinese Douglas fir (plant)
Douglas fir: Major species: The Chinese Douglas fir (P. sinensis) is found in China, Taiwan, and parts of Vietnam and is an important timber tree. The Japanese Douglas fir (P. japonica), endemic to the islands of Honshu and Shikoku, is listed as an endangered species
- Chinese dragon (Chinese mythology)
long, in Chinese mythology, a type of majestic beast that dwells in rivers, lakes, and oceans and roams the skies. Originally a rain divinity, the Chinese dragon, unlike its malevolent European counterpart (see dragon), is associated with heavenly beneficence and fecundity. Rain rituals as early as
- Chinese Eastern Railway (railway, China)
Chinese Eastern Railway, railroad constructed in Manchuria (northeastern China) by Russia in the late 19th century. The privileges for the line were obtained from China in the wake of the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) as part of a secret alliance (1896) between Russia and China. Two years later
- Chinese elm (plant)
elm: Major species: …species planted as ornamentals include Chinese elm (U. parvifolia), a small-leaved species with interesting mottled bark; English elm (U. procera), with a compact crown and deeply fissured bark; Wych elm (U. glabra), with smoother bark; and Camperdown elm (U. glabra camperdownii), a variety of Wych elm also known as umbrella…
- Chinese Engagement (Malaya [1874])
Chinese Engagement, (1874), in Malaysian history, agreement ending warfare between Chinese secret societies in Malaya over possession of the Perak tin mines. In the 1850s Chinese entrepreneurs from Penang began rapid expansion of tin-mining operations in Perak. Gradually, the Larut district became
- Chinese evergreen (plant)
houseplant: Foliage plants: The Chinese evergreens, of the genus Aglaonema, are fleshy tropical Asian herbs of slow growth, with leathery leaves often bearing silvery or colourful patterns; they are durable and are tolerant of indoor conditions. Members of Scindapsus, popularly known as pothos, or ivy-arums, are tropical climbers from…
- Chinese examination system (Chinese history)
Chinese examination system, In China, system of competitive examinations for recruiting officials that linked state and society and dominated education from the Song dynasty (960–1279) onward, though its roots date to the imperial university established in the Han dynasty (206 bc–ad 220).
- Chinese Exclusion Act (United States [1882])
Chinese Exclusion Act, U.S. federal law that was the first and only major federal legislation to explicitly suspend immigration for a specific nationality. The basic exclusion law prohibited Chinese labourers—defined as “both skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining”—from
- Chinese ferret badger (mammal)
badger: …pahmi, consist of four species: Chinese (M. moschata), Burmese (M. personata), Everett’s (M. everetti), and Javan (M. orientalis). They live in grasslands and forests from northeast India to central China and Southeast Asia where they consume mostly insects, worms, small birds, rodents, and wild fruits. They are brownish to blackish…
- Chinese fiddle (musical instrument)
stringed instrument: Lutes: Chinese fiddles (bowed lutes) tend to have a skin belly and, like the banjo, an open back. The two different varieties of lute are distinct in sound and structure, and methods of construction, timbre, history, and symbolic associations differ markedly. A second subdivision concerns the…
- Chinese five-spice powder (food)
Chinese five-spice powder, combination of five dried spices—fennel seeds, cassia (Chinese cinnamon), cloves, star anise, and Szechuan pepper, though many variations exist—that is of Chinese origin. Five spice powder has come to unify China’s many distinct cuisines, and it is ubiquitous in kitchens
- Chinese flowering crabapple (tree)
crabapple: Major species: Outstanding Asian crabapples include the Chinese flowering crab (M. spectabilis), Siberian crabapple (M. baccata), Toringo crabapple (M. sieboldii), and Japanese flowering crabapple (M. floribunda). Among notable American species are the garland, or sweet crab (M. coronaria), Oregon crabapple (M. fusca),
- Chinese flowering quince (plant)
flowering quince: Major species: The Chinese flowering quince (Chaenomeles cathayensis) reaches 3 metres (9.8 feet) in height. It produces white to pink flowers and bears the largest fruit of the genus, 15 cm (5.9 inches) long. The Japanese quince (C. japonica) is popularly grown in bonsai and has provided several…
- Chinese flute (musical instrument)
di, in music, transverse (or side-blown) bamboo flute of the Han Chinese. Traditional di have a membrane of bamboo or reed tissue covering the hole that is located between the mouth hole and the six finger holes. This membrane creates a distinctive sound characteristic of much Chinese flute music.
- Chinese forget-me-not (plant)
hound’s-tongue: …family Boraginaceae, including the bright-blue-flowered Chinese forget-me-not (C. amabile), native in mostly temperate areas of the New World and Old World. They are named for their usually rough, tongue-shaped leaves.
- Chinese fringe tree (plant)
fringe tree: The Chinese fringe tree (C. retusus) seldom reaches more than 6 metres (20 feet).
- Chinese gall (plant)
gallic acid: …Caesalpinia) and in Aleppo and Chinese galls (swellings of plant tissue), from which it is obtained commercially by the action of acids or alkalies. An Aleppo gall has a spherical shape, is hard and brittle, and is about the size of a hickory nut; it is produced on oak twigs…
- Chinese geomancy (Chinese philosophy)
feng shui, an ancient Chinese practice of orienting significant sites, buildings, and the spaces and objects within them in harmony with the flow of qi (also spelled ch’i). Qi (“breath” or “dragon’s breath”) is the vital life force, comparable to prana in Indian culture. Feng shui is rooted in the
- Chinese giant salamander (amphibian)
salamander: …of the order are the Chinese giant salamanders—Andrias sligoi can grow to 2 metres (6.6 feet), and A. davidianus can grow to 1.8 metres (5.9 feet) in length—and the Japanese giant salamander (A. japonicus), which can grow up to 1.7 metres (5.6 feet) in length.
- Chinese Girl (painting by Tretchikoff)
Vladimir Tretchikoff: As well, his painting Chinese Girl (1952)—which depicts an exotically dressed woman of Asian descent with a pensive expression and bluish green skin—became one of the most-reproduced artworks of the mid-20th century, particularly in South Africa and other Commonwealth countries. Indeed, the widespread availability of reproductions of his work…
- Chinese gong (musical instrument)
gong: …gong of indefinite pitch (called tam-tam in the West); beginning in the late 20th century, some composers called for such gongs to be played by passing a violin bow along the edge. Occasionally, orchestral music calls for the use of deep-rimmed gong chimes. Acoustically, steel drums of the type originated…
- Chinese gooseberry (fruit)
kiwi, (Actinidia deliciosa), woody vine and edible fruit of the family Actinidiaceae. The plant is native to mainland China and Taiwan and is also grown commercially in New Zealand and California. The fruit has a slightly acid taste and can be eaten raw or cooked. The juice is sometimes used as a
- Chinese Gordon (British general)
Charles George Gordon was a British general who became a national hero for his exploits in China and his ill-fated defense of Khartoum against the Mahdists. Gordon, the son of an artillery officer, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Royal Engineers in 1852. During the Crimean War (1853–56)
- Chinese greenfinch (bird)
greenfinch: The Chinese, or Oriental, greenfinch (C. sinica) of eastern Asia is a dooryard bird in Japan.
- Chinese hat plant (plant)
Verbenaceae: …tropical plants such as the Chinese hat plant (Holmskioldia sanguinea) and species of pigeon berry, or golden dewdrop (Duranta), and glory-bower (Clerodendrum) are cultivated as ornamentals. The shrub lemon verbena (Aloysia triphylla) is notable for its fragrant oil. The family also includes teak (Tectona grandis), an important timber tree of
- Chinese hibiscus (plant)
Chinese hibiscus, (Hibiscus rosa-sinensis), perennial species of hibiscus of the mallow family (Malvaceae), cultivated for its large brightly coloured flowers. Chinese hibiscus is the most common species of hibiscus and is grown as an ornamental hedge in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide.
- Chinese holly (plant)
holly: Major species: Chinese holly (I. cornuta), from East Asia, a shrub reaching 3 metres (10 feet), produces scarlet berries among shining evergreen leaves. Japanese holly (I. crenata), an East Asian shrub growing to 6 metres (20 feet), has small evergreen leaves and black berries.
- Chinese hypothesis (mathematics)
Fermat’s theorem: …Fermat’s theorem, known as the Chinese hypothesis, may be some 2,000 years old. The Chinese hypothesis, which replaces a with 2, states that a number n is prime if and only if it divides exactly into 2n − 2. As proved later in the West, the Chinese hypothesis is only…
- Chinese Immigration Act (Australia [1861])
Lambing Flat Riots: …Wales government to pass the Chinese Immigration Act in November 1861, severely limiting the flow of Chinese into the colony.
- Chinese ink
India ink, black pigment in the form of sticks that are moistened before use in drawing and lettering, or the fluid ink consisting of this pigment finely suspended in a liquid medium, such as water, and a glutinous binder. The sticks or cakes consist of specially prepared lampblack, or carbon
- Chinese insect wax (insect secretion)
Chinese wax, white or yellowish-white crystalline wax resembling spermaceti but harder, more friable, and with a higher melting point. It is deposited on the branches of certain trees by the scale insect Ceroplastes ceriferus, common in China and India, or a related scale insect, Ericerus pe-la, of
- Chinese jade (decorative art)
Chinese jade, any of the carved-jade objects produced in China from the Neolithic Period (c. 3000–2000 bce) onward. The Chinese have historically regarded carved-jade objects as intrinsically valuable, and they metaphorically equated jade with purity and indestructibility. Jade occupies a special
- Chinese jujube (tree)
jujube: Most are varieties of the common jujube (Z. jujuba), native to China, where they have been cultivated for more than 4,000 years. This species, 7.6 to 9 metres (25 to 30 feet) high, has alternate, three-veined, elliptical to ovate leaves 2.5 to 7.6 cm (1 to 3 inches) long. The…
- Chinese jump rope (game)
jump rope: In Chinese and Vietnamese jump rope, a stationary rope or string, commonly elastic, is held in a rectangular configuration around two players’ legs; the jumper performs designated hops in and out of the rectangle, with the rope being raised on each successive jump.
- Chinese juniper (plant)
juniper: Major species: sabina) of central Europe, Chinese juniper (J. chinensis) of eastern Asia, and creeping juniper (J. horizontalis) of eastern North America are other popular ornamental species with many horticultural varieties.
- Chinese junk (ship)
junk, classic Chinese sailing vessel of ancient unknown origin, still in wide use. High-sterned, with projecting bow, the junk carries up to five masts on which are set square sails consisting of panels of linen or matting flattened by bamboo strips. Each sail can be spread or closed at a pull,