- Coccomyxa (lichen)
fungus: Form and function of lichens: A few phycobionts, such as Coccomyxa and Stichococcus, which are not penetrated by haustoria, have thin-walled cells that are pressed close to fungal hyphae.
- Cocconi, Giuseppe (Italian physicist)
extraterrestrial life: Searching for technical civilizations: …in 1959 by Italian physicist Giuseppe Cocconi and American physicist Philip Morrison. Using the radio telescope at Green Bank, West Virginia, in 1960, Drake mounted the first (very brief) search, Project Ozma, which was oriented to two nearby stars, Epsilon Eridani and Tau Ceti. On the basis of the Drake…
- Coccosteus (paleontology)
arthrodire: …as the Middle Devonian genus Coccosteus, tended toward marine habitats. Coccosteans were less heavily armoured than Arctolepis, and the bony head and body shields were connected by a joint on each side allowing free head movement. They were predators and had bony jaws. Two toothplates were present on each side…
- Coccothraustes vespertina (bird)
evening grosbeak, North American grosbeak species. See
- coccus (bacterial shape)
coccus, in microbiology, a spherical-shaped bacterium. Many species of bacteria have characteristic arrangements that are useful in identification. Pairs of cocci are called diplococci; rows or chains of such cells are called streptococci; grapelike clusters of cells, staphylococci; packets of
- coccygeal nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: The spinal cord: …5 sacral (S), and 1 coccygeal (Coc). Spinal nerve roots emerge via intervertebral foramina; lumbar and sacral spinal roots, descending for some distance within the subarachnoid space before reaching the appropriate foramina, produce a group of nerve roots at the conus medullaris known as the cauda equina. Two enlargements of…
- coccygeal plexus (anatomy)
human nervous system: Coccygeal plexus: The ventral rami of S4, S5, and Coc1 form the coccygeal plexus, from which small anococcygeal nerves arise to innervate the skin over the coccyx (tailbone) and around the anus.
- coccygeus muscle (anatomy)
coccygeus muscle, muscle of the lower back that arises from the ischium (lower, rear portion of the hipbone) and from the ligaments that join the spinal column and the sacrum (triangular bone at the base of the spine). It is attached to the lower sacrum and the coccyx (tailbone). In humans its
- coccyx (anatomy)
coccyx, curved, semiflexible lower end of the backbone (vertebral column) in apes and humans, representing a vestigial tail. It is composed of three to five successively smaller caudal (coccygeal) vertebrae. The first is a relatively well-defined vertebra and connects with the sacrum; the last is
- Coccyzus americanus (bird)
cuckoo: …yellow-billed and black-billed cuckoos (Coccyzus americanus and C. erythropthalmus) and the mangrove cuckoo (C. minor), which is restricted in the United States to coastal southern Florida (also found in the West Indies and Mexico to northern South America); they are represented in Central and South America by about 12…
- Coccyzus erythropthalmus (bird)
cuckoo: …by the widespread yellow-billed and black-billed cuckoos (Coccyzus americanus and C. erythropthalmus) and the mangrove cuckoo (C. minor), which is restricted in the United States to coastal southern Florida (also found in the West Indies and Mexico to northern South America); they are represented in Central and South America by…
- Coccyzus minor (bird)
cuckoo: erythropthalmus) and the mangrove cuckoo (C. minor), which is restricted in the United States to coastal southern Florida (also found in the West Indies and Mexico to northern South America); they are represented in Central and South America by about 12 other species, some placed in the genera…
- Coch, Johannes (German theologian)
Johannes Cocceius was a Dutch theologian of the Reformed Church, biblical scholar, prolific writer, and a leading exponent of covenant theology, a school of religious thought emphasizing the compacts between God and man. Educated in biblical languages, Cocceius was appointed in 1630 to the
- Cochabamba (Bolivia)
Cochabamba, city, central Bolivia. It lies in the densely populated, fertile Cochabamba Basin, at 8,432 feet (2,570 metres) above sea level. Founded as Villa de Oropeza in 1574 by the conquistador Sebastián Barba de Padilla, it was elevated to city status in 1786 and renamed Cochabamba, the Quechua
- Cochamama (Inca god)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Inca gods: …until after 1450, was called Cochamama (Mama Qoca), the Sea Mother.
- Cochato (Massachusetts, United States)
Randolph, town (township), Norfolk county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S., 15 miles (24 km) south of Boston. Settled in 1710 as Cochato (named for the Cochato Indians), it was part of Braintree until separately incorporated in 1793. The town was renamed for Peyton Randolph, first president of the
- Coche (island, Venezuela)
Nueva Esparta: …two small neighbors, Cubagua and Coche. There are numerous small islands in the area; most of them remain uninhabited. Those islands are directly dependent on the federal government.
- Cochet, Henri (French tennis player)
Henri Cochet was a French tennis player who, as one of the Four Musketeers (with Jean Borotra, René Lacoste, and Jacques Brugnon), helped establish the French domination of world tennis in the mid-1920s. Cochet’s father was the secretary of a local tennis court, and as a youth Cochet spent much
- Cochin (India)
Kochi, city and major port on the Malabar Coast of the Arabian Sea, west-central Kerala state, southwestern India. Also the name of a former princely state, “Kochi” is sometimes used to refer to a cluster of islands and towns, including Ernakulam, Mattancheri, Fort Cochin, Willingdon Island, Vypin
- Cochin Jews (Indian religious community)
Cochin Jews, Malayalam-speaking Jews from the Kochi (formerly Cochin) region of Kerala, located along the Malabar Coast of southwestern India. The Cochin Jews were known for their division into three castelike groups—the Paradesis (White Jews), the Malabaris (Black Jews), and the Meshuchrarim
- Cochin, Charles-Nicolas, The Younger (French artist)
Charles-Nicolas Cochin, the Younger was an outstanding French engraver of the 18th century. The son of Charles-Nicolas the Elder (1688–1754), from whom he learned engraving, Cochin rose to national prominence early in his career. As a member of the academy (admitted in 1751) and the keeper of the
- Cochinchina (region, Vietnam)
Cochinchina, the southern region of Vietnam during the French colonial period, known in precolonial times as Nam Ky (“Southern Administrative Division”), the name that the Vietnamese continued to use. Cochinchina was bounded on the northeast by the part of central Vietnam that the French called
- Cochinchine (region, Vietnam)
Cochinchina, the southern region of Vietnam during the French colonial period, known in precolonial times as Nam Ky (“Southern Administrative Division”), the name that the Vietnamese continued to use. Cochinchina was bounded on the northeast by the part of central Vietnam that the French called
- Cochinchinese language
Viet-Muong languages: …Vietnamese, centred in Hue, and Southern Vietnamese, centred in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), differ from the Northern norm in having fewer tones and in modifying certain consonants. All three use the same writing system, which is called Quoc-ngu. The dialects spoken in the city of Vinh and in much…
- cochineal (dye)
cochineal, red dyestuff consisting of the dried, pulverized bodies of certain female scale insects, Dactylopius coccus, of the Coccidae family, cactus-eating insects native to tropical and subtropical America. Cochineal is used to produce scarlet, crimson, orange, and other tints and to prepare
- Cochini Jews (Indian religious community)
Cochin Jews, Malayalam-speaking Jews from the Kochi (formerly Cochin) region of Kerala, located along the Malabar Coast of southwestern India. The Cochin Jews were known for their division into three castelike groups—the Paradesis (White Jews), the Malabaris (Black Jews), and the Meshuchrarim
- Cochise (Apache chief)
Cochise was a Chiricahua Apache chief who led the Indians’ resistance to the white man’s incursions into the U.S. Southwest in the 1860s; the southeasternmost county of Arizona bears his name. Nothing is known of Cochise’s birth or early life. His people remained at peace with white settlers
- Cochise culture
Cochise culture, an ancient North American Indian culture that existed perhaps 9,000 to 2,000 years ago, known from sites in Arizona and western New Mexico and named for the ancient Lake Cochise, now a dry desert basin called Willcox Playa, near which important finds were made. The Cochise was a
- cochito (mammal)
porpoise: The vaquita, or cochito (P. sinus), is listed as a critically endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Vaquitas are found only near the northern end of the Gulf of California. By 2020, ecologists had estimated that no more than 18 adults…
- Cochlaeus, Johannes (German humanist)
Johannes Cochlaeus was a German Humanist and a leading Roman Catholic opponent of Martin Luther. Educated at the University of Cologne (1504–10), Cochlaeus became rector of the Latin School of St. Lawrence, Nürnberg (1510–15), where he published several textbooks that notably improved instructional
- cochlea (anatomy)
human ear: Cochlea: The cochlea contains the sensory organ of hearing. It bears a striking resemblance to the shell of a snail and in fact takes its name from the Greek word for this object. The cochlea is a spiral tube that is…
- cochlear duct (anatomy)
inner ear: …in the vestibule; and the cochlear duct, which is the only part of the inner ear involved in hearing. The cochlear duct forms a shelf across the cochlea dividing it into two sections, the scala vestibuli and the scala tympani. The entire inner ear is bathed in a cushioning fluid,…
- cochlear fluid (anatomy)
sound reception: The auditory mechanism in frogs: …which makes contact with the fluids of the inner-ear (otic) capsule through an opening, the oval window. A second opening in the otic capsule, the round window, is covered by a thin, flexible membrane; it is bounded externally by a fluid-filled space that can expand into the air-filled cavity of…
- cochlear implant (hearing device)
cochlear implant, electrical device inserted surgically into the human ear that enables the detection of sound in persons with severe hearing impairment. The cochlea is a coiled sensory structure in the inner ear that plays a fundamental role in hearing. It is innervated by the cochlear nerve,
- cochlear nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII or 8): Auditory receptors of the cochlear division are located in the organ of Corti and follow the spiral shape (about 2.5 turns) of the cochlea. Air movement against the eardrum initiates action of the ossicles of the ear, which, in turn, causes movement of fluid in the spiral cochlea. This…
- cochlear nucleus (anatomy)
human ear: Ascending pathways: …of nerve cells called the cochlear nucleus. The cochlear nucleus consists of several distinct cell types and is divided into the dorsal and ventral cochlear nucleus. Each cochlear nerve fibre branches at the cochlear nucleus, sending one branch to the dorsal and the other branch to the ventral cochlear nucleus.
- Cochlearius cochlearius (bird)
heron: Another night heron is the boat-billed heron, or boatbill (Cochlearius cochlearius), of Central and South America, placed by some authorities in its own family (Cochleariidae).
- Cochliomyia (insect)
insect: Medical significance: …is the screwworm fly (Cochliomyia) of the southern United States and Central America. In many parts of the world, various blowflies infest the fleece and skin of sheep. This infestation, called sheep-strike, causes severe economic damage.
- Cochliomyia hominivorax (insect)
blow fly: The true screwworm (Cochliomyia hominivorax; formerly, Callitroga americana) and the secondary screwworm (Callitroga macellaria) develop in decaying flesh in surface wounds of domestic animals and occasionally of humans, and the larvae may attack living tissue as well. Each female deposits about 200 to 400 eggs near an open…
- Cochlospermum (plant genus)
Cochlospermum, genus of tropical trees belonging to the family Cochlospermaceae. About 15 species are known, 3 occurring as far north as northern Mexico and southwestern United States. The buttercup tree (C. vitifolium), found in Central America and the West Indies, has bright-yellow, cup-shaped
- Cochlospermum vitifolium (plant)
Cochlospermum: The buttercup tree (C. vitifolium), found in Central America and the West Indies, has bright-yellow, cup-shaped flowers about 10 cm (4 inches) across. In some areas rope is made of its bark. Several species yield dye. The seeds of C. angolense, an African species, yield a…
- Cochran, Eddie (American singer and musician)
Eddie Cochran was a first-generation rock-and-roll singer, guitarist, and songwriter who died at age 21 in a car crash while on tour in England. Cochran’s family lived in Oklahoma and Minnesota before settling in California in 1950, and the young Cochran sang and played country music—touring and
- Cochran, Elizabeth (American journalist)
Nellie Bly was an American journalist whose around-the-world race against a fictional record brought her world renown. Elizabeth Cochran (she later added a final “e” to Cochran) received scant formal schooling. She began her career in 1885 in her native Pennsylvania as a reporter for the Pittsburgh
- Cochran, J. G. (American settler)
Centralia: …was founded in 1852 by J.G. Cochran and George Washington; Washington, the son of an African slave and an Englishwoman, had been denied the right to settle, and Cochran, his adoptive father, had filed the claim for him. Washington purchased the claim from his father when the newly created Washington…
- Cochran, Jackie (American pilot)
Jacqueline Cochran was an American pilot who held more speed, distance, and altitude records than any other flyer during her career. In 1964 she flew an aircraft faster than any woman had before. Pittman grew up in poverty and had little formal education. (She later claimed to have been an orphan
- Cochran, Jacqueline (American pilot)
Jacqueline Cochran was an American pilot who held more speed, distance, and altitude records than any other flyer during her career. In 1964 she flew an aircraft faster than any woman had before. Pittman grew up in poverty and had little formal education. (She later claimed to have been an orphan
- Cochran, Johnnie (American lawyer)
Johnnie Cochran was an American trial lawyer who gained international prominence with his skillful and controversial defense of O.J. Simpson, a football player and celebrity who was charged with a double murder in 1994. Simpson’s trial ended with his acquittal. In 1949 Cochran’s family moved from
- Cochran, Margaret (American heroine)
Margaret Corbin was an American Revolutionary War heroine whose valour and sacrifice were recognized by the new United States government. Margaret Cochran, having lost both her parents in an Indian raid when she was five, grew up with relatives and, in 1772, married John Corbin. When he enlisted in
- Cochran, Ray Edward (American singer and musician)
Eddie Cochran was a first-generation rock-and-roll singer, guitarist, and songwriter who died at age 21 in a car crash while on tour in England. Cochran’s family lived in Oklahoma and Minnesota before settling in California in 1950, and the young Cochran sang and played country music—touring and
- Cochran, Sir Charles Blake (British theatrical producer)
Sir Charles Blake Cochran was a leading British impresario and theatrical producer between World Wars I and II, best known for his musical revues. A colourful showman, he also owned a flea circus and produced boxing matches, circuses, rodeos, and a travelling medicine show during his long and
- Cochran, Thad (United States senator)
Thad Cochran was an American politician who represented Mississippi in the U.S. Senate from 1978 to 2018. He was the first Republican to win statewide office in Mississippi in more than 100 years. Cochran previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1973–78). While growing up, Cochran
- Cochran, Welker (American billiards player)
Welker Cochran was a prominent American billiards player who, with his rivals Willie Hoppe and Jake Schaefer, Jr., dominated the game for the first three decades of the 20th century. Cochran began playing billiards at the age of 13 in his father’s billiards room in Manson, Iowa. He studied the game
- Cochran, William Thad (United States senator)
Thad Cochran was an American politician who represented Mississippi in the U.S. Senate from 1978 to 2018. He was the first Republican to win statewide office in Mississippi in more than 100 years. Cochran previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1973–78). While growing up, Cochran
- Cochrane, Archibald Leman (British physician)
Archibald Leman Cochrane was a British physician who contributed greatly to the development of epidemiology, emphasized the necessity for randomized control trials (RCTs) in medical studies, and was a pioneer in evidence-based medicine. His ideas eventually led to the creation of the international
- Cochrane, Archie (British physician)
Archibald Leman Cochrane was a British physician who contributed greatly to the development of epidemiology, emphasized the necessity for randomized control trials (RCTs) in medical studies, and was a pioneer in evidence-based medicine. His ideas eventually led to the creation of the international
- Cochrane, Elizabeth (American journalist)
Nellie Bly was an American journalist whose around-the-world race against a fictional record brought her world renown. Elizabeth Cochran (she later added a final “e” to Cochran) received scant formal schooling. She began her career in 1885 in her native Pennsylvania as a reporter for the Pittsburgh
- Cochrane, Lucy Douglas (American fashion designer and socialite)
The True Story Behind Feud: Capote vs. the Swans: C.Z. Guest: She was given the nickname “C.Z.” at a young…
- Cochrane, Mickey (American baseball player)
Oakland Athletics: pitcher Lefty Grove, and catcher Mickey Cochrane—make their debuts with the team, joining a solid core that already featured all-time great outfielder Al Simmons. After finishing in second place behind the powerhouse New York Yankees in 1927 and 1928, the A’s won both the AL pennant and the World Series…
- Cochrane, Thomas (British politician and admiral)
Thomas Cochrane, 10th earl of Dundonald was an iconoclastic British politician and admiral, who ranks among the greatest of British seamen. He was the eldest son of the 9th earl, whose scientific experiments on his Scottish estates impoverished his family. In 1793 Thomas joined the ship commanded
- Cocibolca (ancient city, Nicaragua)
Cocibolca, extinct city, Rivas department, Nicaragua, on the western shore of Lake Nicaragua. The last capital of the indigenous tribes that lived around the lake, it apparently declined following the Spanish conquest in the 16th century. The Nicaraguan artist Rodrigo Peñalba immortalized Cocibolca
- Cocibolca (lake, Nicaragua)
Lake Nicaragua, the largest of several freshwater lakes in southwestern Nicaragua and the dominant physical feature of the country. It is also the largest lake in Central America. Its indigenous name is Cocibolca, and the Spanish called it Mar Dulce—both terms meaning “sweet sea.” Its present name
- cocida (food)
gastronomy: Spanish and Portuguese: The cocido, a heavy stew of boiled chicken, meats, and vegetables, is Spain’s national dish. In Portugal it is called the cozido.
- cock (flintlock part)
military technology: The flintlock: …a small vise, called a cock, which described an arc around its pivot to strike the steel (generally called the frizzen) a glancing blow. A spring inside the lock was connected through a tumbler to the cock. The sear, a small piece of metal attached to the trigger, either engaged…
- cock (bird)
chicken: Natural history: Males (called cocks or roosters) and females (hens) are known for their fleshy combs, lobed wattles hanging below the bill, and high-arched tails. In some roosters, the tail can extend more than 30 cm (12 inches) in length.
- cock (device)
valve: A plug valve, or cock, is a conical plug with a hole perpendicular to its axis fitting in a conical seat in the valve body at right angles to the pipe. By turning the plug the hole is either lined up with the pipe to permit…
- cock of the wood (bird)
capercaillie, European game bird of the grouse family. See
- cock of the woods (bird)
capercaillie, European game bird of the grouse family. See
- Cock, Hieronymus (Flemish artist)
Pieter Bruegel, the Elder: Life: …designs for engravings commissioned by Hiëronymus Cock, an engraver and Antwerp’s foremost publisher of prints.
- cock-of-the-rock (bird)
cock-of-the-rock, either of two species of brilliantly coloured birds of tropical South America, usually included in the family Cotingidae (q.v.; order Passeriformes) but sometimes placed in a family of their own, Rupicolidae. They are noted for the males’ flattened circular crest extending over
- cockade (hat decoration)
cockade, a bow or knot of ribbons worn in the hat. Though originally ornamental, cockades soon came to be used to broadcast identification with such various organizations as a political party, a military unit, or a household (in the form of livery). During the French Revolution the partisans of the
- Cockaigne (imaginary country)
Cockaigne, imaginary land of extreme luxury and ease where physical comforts and pleasures are always immediately at hand. References to Cockaigne are especially prominent in medieval European lore. These accounts describe rivers of wine, houses built of cake and barley sugar, streets paved with
- cockatiel (bird)
cockatiel, Crested, small, gray Australian parrot (Nymphicus hollandicus). It has a yellow head, red ear patches, and a heavy beak used to crack nuts. The cockatiel is in the same family (Cacatuidae) as the larger cockatoo. About 13 in. (32 cm) long, the cockatiel lives in open areas and eats grass
- cockatoo (bird)
cockatoo, (family Cacatuidae), any of the 21 species of crested parrots (order Psittaciformes) found in Australia as well as in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. Most are white with touches of red or yellow; some are black. All have a massive scimitar-like beak for cracking nuts, digging up
- Cockatoo Island (island, Western Australia, Australia)
Buccaneer Archipelago: …but the most important are Cockatoo and Koolan, where rich iron-ore deposits were discovered about 1880 and were mined during the second half of the 20th century. Named for the numerous white cockatoos found there, Cockatoo Island, 12 square miles (31 square km) in area, rises from coastal cliffs to…
- cockatrice (mythological creature)
cockatrice, in the legends of Hellenistic and Roman times, a small serpent, possibly the Egyptian cobra, known as a basilikos (“kinglet”) and credited with powers of destroying all animal and vegetable life by its mere look or breath. Only the weasel, which secreted a venom deadly to the
- Cockayne (imaginary country)
Cockaigne, imaginary land of extreme luxury and ease where physical comforts and pleasures are always immediately at hand. References to Cockaigne are especially prominent in medieval European lore. These accounts describe rivers of wine, houses built of cake and barley sugar, streets paved with
- Cockburn Harbour (Turks and Caicos Islands)
Cockburn Harbour, port on South Caicos Island, part of the British overseas territory of the Turks and Caicos Islands, in the West Indies north of Hispaniola. Historic buildings, including the old Wesleyan Church, are located in the southeastern part of the town. The settlement dates from 1850,
- Cockburn Sound (inlet, Western Australia, Australia)
Cockburn Sound, inlet of the Indian Ocean, southwestern Western Australia. The inlet extends 14 miles (23 km) south from the mouth of the Swan River to Point Peron. An important part of Fremantle’s outer harbour, it is 3–6 miles (5–9 km) wide and is bounded on the east by the mainland and on the
- Cockburn Town (Turks and Caicos Islands)
Cockburn Town, town and seat of government of the Turks and Caicos Islands, West Indies. Cockburn Town is on the west coast of Grand Turk Island, about 20 miles (32 km) directly across a channel (Turks Island Passage) from the port of Cockburn Harbour on South Caicos Island. Cockburn Town has
- Cockburn, Alicia (Scottish author)
Alicia Cockburn was a Scottish author who wrote the original version of the popular ballad “Flowers of the Forest.” Her lyrics beginning “I’ve seen the smiling of Fortune beguiling,” set to the old air of “Flowers of the Forest,” were probably written before 1731, although they were not published
- Cockburn, Alison (Scottish author)
Alicia Cockburn was a Scottish author who wrote the original version of the popular ballad “Flowers of the Forest.” Her lyrics beginning “I’ve seen the smiling of Fortune beguiling,” set to the old air of “Flowers of the Forest,” were probably written before 1731, although they were not published
- Cockburn, Bruce (Canadian musician)
Bruce Cockburn is a Canadian singer, songwriter, guitarist, and activist best known for music blending folk, rock, pop, and jazz and for lyrics that typically addressed spiritual themes and global issues from a politically charged perspective. Often considered a “songwriter’s songwriter,”
- Cockburn, James (Canadian politician and lawyer)
James Cockburn was a politician and lawyer who was Canada’s first Speaker of the House of Commons. His participation in the Québec Conference of 1864 made him one of the Fathers of Confederation. Cockburn was the son of a merchant. When his family immigrated to Lower Canada in 1832, his father
- Cockburn, Olivia Jane (American actress, director, and screenwriter)
Olivia Wilde is an American actress, director, and screenwriter who first gained fame in front of the camera, known for her performances on both television and film. She later found success as a director of movies that typically focus on women and explore feminist themes. (Read Martin Scorsese’s
- Cockburn, Sir Alexander James Edmund, 10th Baronet (British chief justice)
Sir Alexander James Edmund Cockburn, 10th Baronet was the lord chief justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench from June 24, 1859, and lord chief justice of England from 1874 until his death. He was the first to be legally styled lord chief justice of England, a title used informally by lord chief
- cockchafer (insect)
cockchafer, (Melolontha melolontha), a large European beetle that is destructive to foliage, flowers, and fruit as an adult and to plant roots as a larva. In the British Isles, the name “cockchafer” refers more broadly to any of the beetles in the subfamily Melolonthinae (family Scarabaeidae),
- cockchafer (insect)
chafer, (subfamily Melolonthinae), any of a group of beetles in the family Scarabaeidae (insect order Coleoptera). Adult leaf chafers (Macrodactylus) eat foliage, whereas grubs feed underground on plant roots. The adult female deposits her eggs in the soil, and the larvae live underground for two
- Cockcroft, Sir John Douglas (British physicist)
Sir John Douglas Cockcroft was a British physicist, joint winner, with Ernest T.S. Walton of Ireland, of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Physics for pioneering the use of particle accelerators in studying the atomic nucleus. Educated at the University of Manchester and St. John’s College, Cambridge,
- Cockcroft-Walton generator (voltage multiplier)
Sir John Douglas Cockcroft: …he and Walton designed the Cockcroft-Walton generator and used it to disintegrate lithium atoms by bombarding them with protons. This type of accelerator proved to be one of the most useful in the world’s laboratories. They conducted further research on the splitting of other atoms and established the importance of…
- Cocke, John (American mathematician and computer scientist)
John Cocke was an American mathematician and computer scientist and winner of the 1984 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for “significant contributions in the design and theory of compilers, the architecture of large systems and the development of reduced instruction set
- cocked hat (bowling)
cocked hat, bowling game played on a standard tenpin lane with three tenpins and a duckpin ball (4–5 inches [10–12.5 cm] in diameter). The pins are set 36 inches apart at the three corners of a normal tenpin formation. Two balls are allowed per frame, and scoring is as in tenpin bowling, except
- cocker spaniel (type of dog)
cocker spaniel, either of two breeds of sporting dogs used by hunters to flush game birds from cover; it is also trained to retrieve. “Cocker” likely refers to its use in flushing woodcocks. Spaniel ancestors have been known since the 14th century, gradually differentiated into land, water, and toy
- cocker spaniel, American (dog)
cocker spaniel: The American cocker spaniel is a small dog standing 14 to 15 inches (36 to 38 cm) and weighing 22 to 29 pounds (10 to 13 kg). Compact and sturdily built, it has a rounded head, floppy ears, and a soft, flat or wavy coat. The…
- cocker spaniel, English (breed of dog)
cocker spaniel: The English cocker spaniel is similar to the American cocker spaniel but is larger and has longer legs and a longer muzzle. It stands 15 to 17 inches (38 to 43 cm) and weighs 26 to 34 pounds (12 to 15 kg). It has a medium-length,…
- Cocker’s Arithmetic (book by Cocker)
Edward Cocker: …the reputed English author of Cocker’s Arithmetic, a famous textbook, the popularity of which gave rise to the phrase “according to Cocker,” meaning “quite correct.”
- Cocker, Edward (English mathematician)
Edward Cocker was the reputed English author of Cocker’s Arithmetic, a famous textbook, the popularity of which gave rise to the phrase “according to Cocker,” meaning “quite correct.” Cocker worked very skillfully as an engraver and is mentioned favourably in Samuel Pepys’ Diary. His other works
- Cocker, Joe (British singer)
Joe Cocker was a British blues-rock singer known for his raspy voice who became one of the most distinctive vocalists of his generation. Over his more than five-decade-long career, he recorded nearly 40 albums and lent his voice to several films. Cocker began performing in pubs with various bands
- Cocker, John Robert (British singer)
Joe Cocker was a British blues-rock singer known for his raspy voice who became one of the most distinctive vocalists of his generation. Over his more than five-decade-long career, he recorded nearly 40 albums and lent his voice to several films. Cocker began performing in pubs with various bands
- Cockeram, Henry (English lexicographer)
dictionary: From 1604 to 1828: …next work, in 1623, by Henry Cockeram, the first to have the word dictionary in its title: The English Dictionary; or, An Interpreter of Hard English Words. It added many words that have never appeared anywhere else—adpugne, adstupiate, bulbitate, catillate, fraxate, nixious, prodigity, vitulate, and so on. Much fuller than…
- cockerel (bird)
chicken: Natural history: Males (called cocks or roosters) and females (hens) are known for their fleshy combs, lobed wattles hanging below the bill, and high-arched tails. In some roosters, the tail can extend more than 30 cm (12 inches) in length.