- Codd, Edgar Frank (American computer scientist and mathematician)
Edgar Frank Codd was a British-born American computer scientist and mathematician who devised the “relational” data model, which led to the creation of the relational database, a standard method of retrieving and storing computer data. Codd interrupted his study of mathematics and chemistry at the
- Codde, Petrus (archbishop of Utrecht)
Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands: …in Holland in 1702 when Petrus Codde, archbishop of Utrecht, was accused of heresy for suspected sympathy with Jansenism, a heresy emphasizing God’s grace and predestination, which was condemned by Pope Alexander VII in 1656. Many of the Dutch clergy and laity remained loyal to Codde and left the Roman…
- Coddington lens
microscope: Types of magnifiers: A Coddington lens combines two lens elements into a single thick element, with a groove cut in the centre of the element to select the portion of the imaging light with the lowest aberrations. This was a simple and inexpensive design but suffers from the requirement…
- Coddington, William (colonial governor of Rhode Island)
William Coddington was a colonial governor and religious dissident who founded Newport, Rhode Island, in 1639. Coddington, an assistant in the Massachusetts Bay Company, migrated to the New England colony in 1630. He settled in Boston, where he became the company treasurer from 1634 to 1636 and, in
- CODE (audio recording technology)
T Bone Burnett: …(rendered in English as “CODE”) technology. CODE offered a listening experience that replicated the original studio master recording as faithfully as possible, with no additional cost to the consumer. CODE audio DVDs were included in the standard CD package, and listeners could thus compare the two formats side-by-side. CODE…
- code (communications)
code, in communications, an unvarying rule for replacing a piece of information such as a letter, word, or phrase with an arbitrarily selected equivalent. The term has been frequently misapplied and used as a synonym for cipher, which is a method for transforming a message according to a rule to
- code (computing)
machine language, the numeric codes for the operations that a particular computer can execute directly. The codes are strings of 0s and 1s, or binary digits (“bits”), which are frequently converted both from and to hexadecimal (base 16) for human viewing and modification. Machine language
- code (law)
law code, a more or less systematic and comprehensive written statement of laws. Law codes were compiled by the most ancient peoples. The oldest extant evidence for a code is tablets from the ancient archives of the city of Ebla (now at Tell Mardikh, Syria), which date to about 2400 bc. The best
- Code 46 (film by Winterbottom [2003])
Tim Robbins: …appeared in the sci-fi thrillers Code 46 (2003) and War of the Worlds (2005), the Spanish-Irish coproduction The Secret Life of Words (2005), the political drama Catch a Fire (2006), the war comedy The Lucky Ones (2008), the superhero movie Green Lantern (2011), the romance mystery
- Code annamite, Le (work by Philastre)
Paul-Louis-Félix Philastre: …erudite work was published as Le Code annamite in two volumes in Paris in 1876.
- Code Black (American television series)
Marcia Gay Harden: …in the medical drama series Code Black (2015–18). In 2019 Harden appeared in the true-crime TV movie Love You to Death, and that year saw the debut of The Morning Show, in which she portrayed a reporter. She then was cast in Barkskins (2020), a limited series based on Annie…
- code breaking (biology)
instinct: Instinct as behaviour: …signaling is known as “code breaking.” There also exists “blind” deceit; for example, orchids of the genus Ophrys have flowers mimicking the shape, colour, and sex pheromones of certain species of wasps. The plants trick male wasps into trying to copulate with the flowers, and thus they coerce the…
- Code Civil (France [1804])
Napoleonic Code, French civil code enacted on March 21, 1804, and still extant, with revisions. It was the main influence on the 19th-century civil codes of most countries of continental Europe and Latin America. The demand for codification and, indeed, codification itself preceded the Napoleonic
- Code Civil Suisse (Switzerland [1907])
Swiss Civil Code, body of private law codified by the jurist Eugen Huber at the end of the 19th century; it was adopted in 1907 and went into effect in 1912, and it remains in force, with modifications, in present-day Switzerland. Because Huber’s work was completed after the Napoleonic Code (q.v.)
- Code for the Government of Armies in the Field (work by Lieber)
Francis Lieber: ” His Code for the Government of Armies in the Field (1863) subsequently served as a basis for international conventions on the conduct of warfare.
- Code inconnu (film by Haneke [2000])
Michael Haneke: …Binoche in Code inconnu (2000; Code Unknown), which episodically traces the fates of several lives that intersect on a multicultural Parisian street corner. Next, Isabelle Huppert evinced a middle-aged woman’s psychosexual frustrations in La Pianiste (2001; The Piano Teacher), which Haneke adapted from a novel by Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek.…
- Code Louis (France [1667])
procedural law: Medieval European law: …by Louis XIV of the Ordonnance Civile, also known as Code Louis, a comprehensive code regulating civil procedure in all of France in a uniform manner. The Code Louis continued, with some improvements, many of the basic principles of procedure that had prevailed since the late Middle Ages.
- Code Napoléon (France [1804])
Napoleonic Code, French civil code enacted on March 21, 1804, and still extant, with revisions. It was the main influence on the 19th-century civil codes of most countries of continental Europe and Latin America. The demand for codification and, indeed, codification itself preceded the Napoleonic
- Code of Terpsichore (work by Blasis)
dance: The importance of training: …master Carlo Blasis in his Code of Terpsichore. Blasis advocated at least three hours of dance classes a day, involving exercises that progressively developed different parts of the body.
- Code Pénal (France [1810])
criminal law: Common law and code law: …criminelle of 1808 and the Code pénal of 1810. The latter constituted the leading model for European criminal legislation throughout the first half of the 19th century, after which, although its influence in Europe waned, it continued to play an important role in the legislation of certain Latin American and…
- Code Pink (anti-war organization)
Code Pink, feminist antiwar organization founded in 2002 to protest U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq. The name Code Pink was adopted to satirize the colour-coded terrorism alert system put in place by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2002 and discontinued in 2011. The
- code talker (United States history)
code talker, any of more than 400 Native American soldiers—including Assiniboin, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Choctaw, Comanche, Cree, Crow, Fox, Hopi, Kiowa, Menominee, Navajo, Ojibwa, Oneida, Osage, Pawnee, Sauk, Seminole, and Sioux men—who transmitted sensitive wartime messages by speaking their native
- Code Talkers Recognition Act (United States [2002])
code talker: Congress passed the Code Talkers Recognition Act to honour Sioux, Comanche, and Choctaw code talkers, and a similar act in 2008 further honoured men of other tribes who had used their languages in the wartime service of the United States. More gold medals were awarded in 2013.
- Code Unknown (film by Haneke [2000])
Michael Haneke: …Binoche in Code inconnu (2000; Code Unknown), which episodically traces the fates of several lives that intersect on a multicultural Parisian street corner. Next, Isabelle Huppert evinced a middle-aged woman’s psychosexual frustrations in La Pianiste (2001; The Piano Teacher), which Haneke adapted from a novel by Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek.…
- Code, Lorraine (Canadian philosopher)
philosophical feminism: Feminist epistemology and philosophy of science: …the feminist philosophers Sandra Harding, Lorraine Code, and Helen Longino noted that “communities of knowers”—those recognized as experts in some field of inquiry—were remarkably homogeneous, not only with respect to sex but also with respect to race, ethnicity, and sexual orientation. Most such knowers, in other words, were white, Western,…
- code-breaking (technology)
computer: Colossus: …in Britain the impetus was code breaking. The Ultra project was funded with much secrecy to develop the technology necessary to crack ciphers and codes produced by the German electromechanical devices known as the Enigma and the Geheimschreiber (“Secret Writer”). The first in a series of important code-breaking machines, Colossus,…
- code-division multiple access
mobile telephone: Development of cellular systems: …spectrum multiple access known as code-division multiple access (CDMA)—a technique that, like the original TIA approach, combined digital voice compression with digital modulation. (For more information on the techniques of information compression, signal modulation, and multiple access, see telecommunications.) The CDMA system offered 10 to 20 times the capacity of…
- code-switching (linguistics)
code-switching, process of shifting from one linguistic code (a language or dialect) to another, depending on the social context or conversational setting. Sociolinguists, social psychologists, and identity researchers are interested in the ways in which code-switching, particularly by members of
- codec (technology)
codec, a standard used for compressing and decompressing digital media, especially audio and video, which have traditionally consumed significant bandwidth. Codecs are used to store files on disk, as well as to transmit media (either as discrete files or as a stream) over computer networks. By
- codeine (drug)
codeine, naturally occurring alkaloid of opium, the dried milky exudate of the unripe seed capsule of the poppy Papaver somniferum, that is used in medicine as a cough suppressant and analgesic drug. Codeine exerts its effects by acting on the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord). First
- Codelco (Chilean company)
Codelco, state-owned Chilean mining company that is one of the largest copper producers in the world. Headquarters are in Santiago. Codelco’s core business is the exploration, development, and exploitation of copper mineral resources, the processing and refining of copper, and its subsequent sale.
- codependency (psychology)
codependency, a psychological syndrome noted in partners or relatives of persons with alcohol or drug addiction. Not a formal psychiatric diagnosis, codependency has come to be a useful term for discussing aspects of family dysfunction, particularly among participants in recovery groups like
- coder-decoder (technology)
codec, a standard used for compressing and decompressing digital media, especially audio and video, which have traditionally consumed significant bandwidth. Codecs are used to store files on disk, as well as to transmit media (either as discrete files or as a stream) over computer networks. By
- codetermination (business)
organized labour: Breakup of the postwar settlement: Inflation, neocorporatism, and restructuring: “Codetermination,” as it was called in Germany and Sweden, provided workers with quasi-constitutionalized shop-floor representation on nonwage matters, such as work organization, that industrial unions had been unable or unwilling to address before 1968. Thus, in order to prevent a return of the representation gap…
- codetta (music)
coda: A codetta (“little coda”) is a brief conclusion, a dominant–tonic cadence at the end of the exposition that may be repeated several times for emphasis.
- codex (manuscript)
codex, manuscript book, especially of Scripture, early literature, or ancient mythological or historical annals. The earliest type of manuscript in the form of a modern book (i.e., a collection of written pages stitched together along one side), the codex replaced the earlier rolls of papyrus and
- Codex Alexandrinus (ancient Greek manuscript)
codex: Also important is the Codex Alexandrinus, a Greek text of the Bible that probably was produced in the 5th century and is now preserved in the British Library, London. The term codex aureus describes a volume with gold letters written on sheets that have been stained with a purple…
- Codex Alimentarius Commission (international commission on food standards)
Codex Alimentarius Commission, joint commission of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO) established in 1963 to develop an international code of food quality standards. In its first 20 years of activity, the commission compiled hundreds of
- Codex Ambrosianus (biblical literature)
biblical literature: The Christian canon: …Peshitta (Syriac version) known as Codex Ambrosianus also has III and IV Maccabees, II (sometimes IV) Esdras, and Josephus’s Wars VII.
- Codex Amiatinus (Celtic manuscript)
calligraphy: The Anglo-Celtic and other national styles (5th to 13th century): There is another, Codex Amiatinus (Biblioteca Medicea-Laurenziana, Florence), of 1,030 leaves measuring 20 by 13 12 inches (51 by 34 cm), made in Northumbria in the 8th century. It is continental Roman in style with no concession to the Insular habit of ornamentation—perhaps because it was designed for…
- Codex Argenteus (Gothic manuscript)
Uppsala University: …and contains the illuminated manuscript Codex Argenteus, which is the only extant manuscript of Bishop Ulfilas’s 4th-century translation of the Gospels into the Gothic language. The main university building (1887) has a large art collection.
- Codex Atlanticus (documents by Leonardo da Vinci)
Leonardo da Vinci: Art and science: the notebooks: …Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan, called Codex Atlanticus because of its size, was collected by the sculptor Pompeo Leoni at the end of the 16th century; after a roundabout journey, its companion volume fell into the possession of the English crown in the 17th century and was placed in the Royal…
- codex aureus (manuscript type)
codex: The term codex aureus describes a volume with gold letters written on sheets that have been stained with a purple dye called murex. Existing examples of the codex aureus date from the 8th and 9th centuries.
- Codex Bezae (Greco-Roman manuscript)
Theodore Beza: … from his library the celebrated Codex Bezae (D), an important manuscript from about the 5th century bearing Greek and Latin texts of the Gospels and Acts and supplemented by Beza’s commentary based on the Calvinist viewpoint. Other works among Beza’s own writings include anti-Catholic tracts, a biography of Calvin, and…
- Codex Bezae Cantabrigiensis (Greco-Roman manuscript)
Theodore Beza: … from his library the celebrated Codex Bezae (D), an important manuscript from about the 5th century bearing Greek and Latin texts of the Gospels and Acts and supplemented by Beza’s commentary based on the Calvinist viewpoint. Other works among Beza’s own writings include anti-Catholic tracts, a biography of Calvin, and…
- Codex Calixtinus (Spanish music manuscript)
canonical hours: The Spanish Codex Calixtinus (about the 12th century) also includes two-part polyphony for the Matins responsories.
- Codex canonum (canon law)
canon law: Development of canon law in the West: …form the Corpus (“Body”) or Codex canonum (“Code of Canons”).
- Codex Cenannensis (illuminated manuscript)
Book of Kells, illuminated gospel book (MS. A.I. 6; Trinity College Library, Dublin) that is a masterpiece of the ornate Hiberno-Saxon style. It is probable that the illumination was begun in the late 8th century at the Irish monastery on the Scottish island of Iona and that after a Viking raid the
- Codex Claromontanus (New Testament manuscript)
biblical literature: Uncials: Dp, Codex Claromontanus, of the same Western text type although not remarkably dissimilar from other known texts, contains the Pauline Letters including Hebrews. Dp (p, for Pauline epistles) is sometimes referred to as D2. Beza acquired this 6th-century manuscript at about the same time as Dea,…
- Codex Colombino (pre-Columbian manuscript)
codex: …are the Vienna Codex, the Codex Colombino, and the Codex Fejérváry-Mayer, all believed to have been produced before the Spanish conquest of the region. Certain collections of formulas or standards are also referred to as codices; for example, the Codex Alimentarius and the British Pharmaceutical Codex.
- Codex Constitutionum (Romanian law)
Code of Justinian: …consists of four books: (1) Codex Constitutionum, (2) Digesta, or Pandectae, (3) Institutiones, and (4) Novellae Constitutiones Post Codicem.
- Codex Cumanicus (Turkish textbook)
Kipchak: …important surviving record is the Codex Cumanicus, a late 13th-century dictionary of words in Kipchak, Latin, and Persian. The presence in Egypt of Turkic-speaking Mamlūks also stimulated the compilation of Kipchak-Arabic dictionaries and grammars that are important in the study of several old Turkic languages.
- Codex Dresdensis (Mayan literature)
Dresden Codex, one of the few collections of pre-Columbian Mayan hieroglyphic texts known to have survived the book burnings by the Spanish clergy during the 16th century (others include the Madrid, Paris, and Grolier codices). It contains astronomical calculations—eclipse-prediction tables, the
- Codex Ephraemi Syri (biblical literature)
biblical literature: Uncials: C, Codex Ephraemi Syri rescriptus, is a palimpsest. Originally written as a biblical manuscript in the 5th century, it was erased in the 12th century, and the treatises or sermons of Ephraem Syrus, a 4th-century Syrian Church Father, were written over the scraped text. The manuscript…
- Codex Euricianus (Visigoth law)
Euric: …that bears his name, the Code of Euric.
- Codex Fejérváry-Mayer (pre-Columbian manuscript)
codex: …the Codex Colombino, and the Codex Fejérváry-Mayer, all believed to have been produced before the Spanish conquest of the region. Certain collections of formulas or standards are also referred to as codices; for example, the Codex Alimentarius and the British Pharmaceutical Codex.
- Codex Festi Farnesianus (Roman manuscript)
Sextus Pompeius Festus: …in only one manuscript, the Codex Festi Farnesianus, at Naples. The glosses on it of Josephus Justus Scaliger (1565) were one of the first examples of modern classical scholarship.
- Codex Freerianus (biblical manuscript)
biblical literature: Uncials: W, Codex Washingtonianus (or Freerianus), consists of the four Gospels in the so-called Western order (Matthew, John, Luke, and Mark, as Dea). It was acquired in Egypt by C.L. Freer, an American businessman and philanthropist (hence, the Freer-Gospels), in 1906 and is now in the Freer…
- Codex Gissensis (Gothic manuscript)
biblical literature: German versions: 525) and Codex Gissensis. The translation, essentially based on a Byzantine text, is exceedingly literal and not homogeneous. It is difficult to determine the degree of contamination that the original Gospels translation of Ulfilas had undergone by the time it appeared in these codices.
- Codex Hilleli (Masoretic manuscript)
biblical literature: Masoretic texts: …10th century, and the “Codex Hilleli,” said to have been written circa 600 by Rabbi Hillel ben Moses ben Hillel, have both vanished.
- Codex Juris Canonici (canon law)
Code of Canon Law, official compilation of ecclesiastical law promulgated in 1917 and again, in revised form, in 1983, for Roman Catholics of the Latin rite. The code obliges Roman Catholics of Eastern rites only when it specifically refers to them or clearly applies to all Roman Catholics. For
- Codex Justinianeus (law)
Code of Justinian, collections of laws and legal interpretations developed under the sponsorship of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I from 529 to 565 ce. Strictly speaking, the works did not constitute a new legal code. Rather, Justinian’s committees of jurists provided basically two reference
- Codex Koridethianus (New Testament manuscript)
biblical literature: Uncials: Θ, Codex Koridethianus, is a 9th-century manuscript taking its name from the place of the scribe’s monastery, Koridethi, in the Caucasus Mountains, near the Caspian Sea. Θ contains the Gospels; Matthew, Luke, and John have a text similar to most Byzantine manuscripts, but the text of…
- Codex Laudianus (Greek and Latin manuscript)
biblical literature: Uncials: Ea, Codex Laudianus, is a bilingual Greco-Latin text of Acts presented in 1636 by Archbishop Laud, an Anglican churchman, to the Bodleian Library at Oxford. It is a late-6th- or early-7th-century manuscript often agreeing with Dea and its Western readings but also having a mixture of…
- Codex Lindisfarnensis (medieval manuscript)
Lindisfarne Gospels, manuscript (MS. Cotton Nero D.IV.; British Museum, London) illuminated in the late 7th or 8th century in the Hiberno-Saxon style. The book was probably made for Eadfrith, the bishop of Lindisfarne from 698 to 721. Attributed to the Northumbrian school, the Lindisfarne Gospels
- Codex Marchalianus of the Prophets (biblical papyrus)
biblical literature: Manuscripts and printed editions of the Septuagint: …valuable of these is the Codex Marchalianus of the Prophets, written in the 6th century.
- Codex Mendoza (Latin American manuscript)
Latin American art: Mesoamerica: Included in the Codex Mendoza (begun in 1541) were a tribute list, of great interest to him in the exploitation of the new domain; a summary of cultural ranks and behaviour expected from men and women at different stages of life; and a list of monthly religious observances,…
- Codex Mugah (Masoretic manuscript)
biblical literature: Masoretic texts: A “Codex Mugah,” frequently referred to as an authority in the early 10th century, and the “Codex Hilleli,” said to have been written circa 600 by Rabbi Hillel ben Moses ben Hillel, have both vanished.
- Codex of Ur-Nammu (Sumerian manuscript)
epigraphy: Ancient Mesopotamia: …bce with that of King Ur-Nammu of the Sumerian 3rd dynasty of Ur (c. 2100 bce), continuing with those of the Sumero-Akkadian king Lipit-Ishtar (in Sumerian) and King Bilalama of Eshnunna (in Akkadian) during the interval of the 3rd dynasty of Ur, and the rise of the Amorite dynasty of…
- Codex Peresianus (Mayan literature)
Paris Codex, one of the very few texts of the pre-Conquest Maya known to have survived the book burnings by the Spanish clergy during the 16th century (others include the Madrid, Dresden, and Grolier codices). Its Latin name comes from the name Perez, which was written on the torn wrappings of the
- Codex Petrei (Florentine art history)
Giotto: Early life: In the Codex Petrei version, a statement that Giotto was born in 1276 at Vespignano, the son of a peasant, occurs at the very end of the “Life” and may have been added much later, even, conceivably, from Vasari. In any case, whether Vasari or “Antonio Billi”…
- Codex Regius (Icelandic literature)
Codex Regius, medieval Old Norse (Icelandic) manuscript that contains the 29 poems commonly designated by scholars as the Poetic Edda, or Elder Edda (see Edda). It is the oldest such collection, the best-known of all Icelandic books, and an Icelandic national treasure. The vellum manuscript dates
- Codex Sinaiticus (4th-century biblical manuscript)
Codex Sinaiticus, the earliest known manuscript of the Christian Bible, compiled in the 4th century ce. In 1844, 43 leaves of a 4th-century biblical codex (a collection of single pages bound together along one side) were discovered at St. Catherine’s Monastery at the foot of Mount Sinai (hence the
- Codex Tchacos (Coptic literature)
gnosticism: Diversity of gnostic myths: …a 4th-century papyrus manuscript, the Codex Tchacos, which also contained at least three other writings, two of which were found in the Nag Hammadi collection. The codex was discovered in Egypt in the 1970s but was subsequently acquired by and passed among collectors in Europe and the United States for…
- Codex Teplensis (biblical literature)
biblical literature: German versions: …1350, and another from Bohemia, Codex Teplensis (c. 1400), has also survived.
- Codex Theodosianus (Roman law)
Theodosius II: …in supervising compilation of the Theodosian Code (published 438), which codified the laws issued after 312. Theodosius died from injuries suffered during a hunting accident. His daughter Licinia Eudoxia married the Western Roman emperor Valentinian III (reigned 425–455).
- Codex Tro-Cortesianus (Mayan literature)
Madrid Codex, together with the Paris, Dresden, and Grolier codices, a richly illustrated glyphic text of the pre-Conquest Mayan period and one of few known survivors of the mass book-burnings by the Spanish clergy during the 16th century. The variant name Tro-Cortesianus is a result of the early
- Codex Urbinas Latinus 1270 (work by Leonardo da Vinci)
Leonardo da Vinci: Science of painting: …for Melzi’s manuscript—known as the Codex Urbinas, in the Vatican Library—have been identified and located in the extant notebooks, and it is impossible to assess how closely Melzi’s presentation of the material reflected Leonardo’s specific intentions.
- Codex Vaticanus (biblical literature)
biblical literature: Uncials: B, Codex Vaticanus, a biblical manuscript of the mid-4th century in the Vatican Library since before 1475, appeared in photographic facsimile in 1889–90 and 1904. The New Testament lacks Hebrews from chapter 9, verse 14, on the Pastorals, Philemon, and Revelation. Because B has no ornamentation,…
- Codex Vercellensis (Old English literature)
Vercelli Book, Old English manuscript written in the late 10th century. It contains texts of the poem Andreas, two poems by Cynewulf, The Dream of the Rood, an “Address of the Saved Soul to the Body,” and a fragment of a homiletic poem, as well as 23 prose homilies and a prose life of St. Guthlac,
- Codex Vergilius Romanus (Roman manuscript)
Western painting: Book illustration in antiquity: …in the second great illustrated Codex Virgilius Romanus in the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (No. 3867), written about 500, are still Roman in spirit, if less classical in style.
- Codex Vergilius Vaticanus (Roman manuscript)
Western painting: Book illustration in antiquity: …as do those of the Codex Virgilius Vaticanus in the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (No. 3225), written about 400. Miniatures in the second great illustrated Codex Virgilius Romanus in the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (No. 3867), written about 500, are still Roman in spirit, if less classical in style.
- Codex Washingtonianus (biblical manuscript)
biblical literature: Uncials: W, Codex Washingtonianus (or Freerianus), consists of the four Gospels in the so-called Western order (Matthew, John, Luke, and Mark, as Dea). It was acquired in Egypt by C.L. Freer, an American businessman and philanthropist (hence, the Freer-Gospels), in 1906 and is now in the Freer…
- codfish (fish, Gadus species)
cod, (genus Gadus), any of three or four species of large and economically important marine food fishes of the family Gadidae. Historically, the term cod referred to Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua), a cold-water fish found on both sides of the North Atlantic. In the present day, the term applies to
- Codiaeum variegatum (plant species)
croton, (Codiaeum variegatum), colourful-leaved plant of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae) native to Malaysia and the Pacific and extensively cultivated. Numerous horticultural varieties of shrubs or small trees have been developed, and the plant is commonly grown outdoors in pots or as a
- codification (law)
law code, a more or less systematic and comprehensive written statement of laws. Law codes were compiled by the most ancient peoples. The oldest extant evidence for a code is tablets from the ancient archives of the city of Ebla (now at Tell Mardikh, Syria), which date to about 2400 bc. The best
- coding of information (telecommunications)
combinatorics: Orthogonal arrays and the packing problem: …in the construction of error-correcting codes. A row vector c′ is taken as a code word if and only if c′H = 0. The code words then are of length n and differ in at least t + 1 places. If t = 2u, then u or fewer errors of…
- coding system (information processing)
information processing: Acquisition and recording of information in digital form: …of binary digits are called coding systems, the counterpart of writing systems. A combination of three binary digits can represent up to eight such characters; one comprising four digits, up to 16 characters; and so on. The choice of a particular coding system depends on the size of the character…
- CODIS
police: DNA fingerprinting: The Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), developed by the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI, combines computer technology with forensics, enabling investigators to compare DNA samples against a database of DNA records of convicted offenders and others. CODIS is used worldwide for sharing and comparing…
- Codium (genus of green algae)
Codium, genus of about 50 species of marine green algae (family Codiaceae) usually found in deep pools along rocky coasts. Essentially filamentous, the multinucleate branches are often woven together to form a velvety pseudothallus that can exceed 30 cm (11.8 inches) in length. Some species are
- codling moth
olethreutid moth: …examples include Cydia pomonella, the codling moth (previously Carpocapsa, or Laspeyresia, pomonella) and Cydia molesta, the Oriental fruit moth (previously Laspeyresia, or Grapholitha, molesta). Though originally from Europe, the codling moth exists wherever apples are grown. The larvae burrow in the apples and, when fully grown, emerge and pupate under…
- codling-and-cream (plant)
Epilobium: The hairy willow herb, or codling-and-cream (E. hirsutum), up to 2 m (6 feet) high, is similar to fireweed but has hairy leaves and stalks and notched flower petals; it is found in waste places in eastern North America. Rock fringe (E. obcordatum) is a prostrate…
- Codman, Ernest Amory (American surgeon)
Ernest Amory Codman was an American surgeon known for pioneering the use of process-and-outcome measures, which he referred to as “end results,” to improve the quality and safety of health care. He also made significant contributions in the fields of radiology, anesthesiology, shoulder physiology
- Codomannus (king of Persia)
Darius III was the last king (reigned 336–330 bc) of the Achaemenid dynasty. Darius belonged to a collateral branch of the royal family and was placed on the throne by the eunuch Bagoas, who had poisoned the two previous kings, Artaxerxes III and Arses. When Darius asserted his independence, Bagoas
- codominance (genetics)
codominance, in genetics, phenomenon in which two alleles (different versions of the same gene) are expressed to an equal degree within an organism. As a result, traits associated with each allele are displayed simultaneously. An example of codominance is seen in the MN blood group system of
- codon (genetics)
codon, in genetics, any of 64 different sequences of three adjacent nucleotides in DNA that either encodes information for the production of a specific amino acid or serves as a stop signal to terminate translation (protein synthesis). Codons are made up of any triplet combination of the four
- Codona family (circus performers)
Codona family, a family of circus trapeze performers that became famous in the Ringling Brothers Circus. In the 1890s the Codona family owned and operated a small circus in southern Mexico. Alfredo Codona (1893–1937), who would become the most noted member of the family, began appearing in the
- Codona, Alfredo (circus performer)
Codona family: Alfredo Codona (1893–1937), who would become the most noted member of the family, began appearing in the circus at 7 12 months when his father, Edward, a flyer, balanced him on his hand for the opening act. In 1917, after four years with the Wirth…
- Codona, Edward (circus performer)
Codona family: …12 months when his father, Edward, a flyer, balanced him on his hand for the opening act. In 1917, after four years with the Wirth Brothers Circus in Australia, the Codonas joined the Siegrist-Silbon Troupe of flyers, performing in the Ringling Brothers Circus. After Edward retired, the Three Codonas act…
- Codona, Lalo (circus performer)
Codona family: …as flyers and their brother, Lalo, as the catcher. After Victoria quit, she was replaced by Vera Bruce.