- counting-out rhyme
counting-out rhyme, gibberish formula used by children, usually as a preliminary to games in which one child must be chosen to take the undesirable role designated as “It” in the United States, “It” or “He” in Britain, and “wolf,” “devil,” or “leper” in some other countries. Among the most popular
- counting-rate meter (instrument)
radiation measurement: Counting systems: …be indicated electronically using a rate meter. This unit provides an output signal that is proportional to the rate at which accepted pulses are occurring averaged over a response time that is normally adjustable by the user. Long response times minimize the fluctuations in the output signal due to the…
- Country (film by Pearce [1984])
Jessica Lange: …and received Oscar nominations for Country (1984), the Patsy Cline biopic Sweet Dreams (1985), and Music Box (1989). In 1995 she won an Academy Award for best actress for Blue Sky (1994). Later notable films included Cousin Bette (1998), based on the Honoré de Balzac novel; Titus
- country (politics)
nation-state, a territorially bounded sovereign polity—i.e., a state—that is ruled in the name of a community of citizens who identify themselves as a nation. The legitimacy of a nation-state’s rule over a territory and over the population inhabiting it stems from the right of a core national group
- country and western
country music, style of American popular music that originated in rural areas of the South and West in the early 20th century. The term country and western music (later shortened to country music) was adopted by the recording industry in 1949 to replace the derogatory label hillbilly music.
- Country Between Us, The (poetry by Forche)
Carolyn Forché: …writing, especially in the collection The Country Between Us (1981), which examines events she witnessed in El Salvador.
- country dance (British dance)
country dance, genre of social dance for several couples, the characteristic form of folk and courtly dances of the British Isles. In England after about 1550, the term country dancing referred to a dance of the upper classes; similar dances, usually called traditional, existed contemporaneously
- Country Deputies (American band)
Faron Young: …1954 discharge, Young formed the Country Deputies band, which backed him for the next forty years. Band members who went on to fame included Johnny Paycheck, the Wilburn Brothers, Roger Miller, Lloyd Green, and Darrell McCall.
- Country Doctor, The (novel by Balzac)
The Country Doctor, novel by Honoré de Balzac, published in 1833 as Le Médecin de campagne. The novel was part of Balzac’s monumental fictional undertaking, La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy). Dr. Benassis is a compassionate and conscientious physician who ministers to the psychological and
- Country Doctor, The (film by King [1936])
Henry King: Films of the 1930s: …of successful films, beginning with The Country Doctor, a novelty biopic about the Dionne quintuplets; Jean Hersholt starred as the doctor who gained a moment of fame when he delivered the babies. Ramona, an adaptation of the Helen Hunt Jackson novel, was a light but popular Technicolor romance starring Loretta…
- country furniture
country furniture, furniture made by country craftsmen, varying from purely functional pieces made by amateurs to expertly constructed and carved work based on luxurious furniture made for the rich. Much country furniture is naive, with the best of such examples falling into the category of folk
- Country Girl (memoir by O’Brien)
Edna O’Brien: Country Girl, O’Brien’s 2012 memoir, traces her passage from the repressive confinement of the rural Irish town where she was raised to the rarefied existence afforded by her success as a novelist.
- Country Girl, The (play by Odets)
George Seaton: Miracle on 34th Street and The Country Girl: …an adaptation of Clifford Odets’s play. Crosby, in perhaps his best performance, was cast against type as an alcoholic actor, and Grace Kelly, who won an Oscar, forwent her usually glamorous roles to play his dowdy wife. A critical and commercial success, the drama received an Academy Award nomination for…
- Country Girl, The (film by Seaton [1954])
George Seaton: Miracle on 34th Street and The Country Girl: …he enjoyed great success with The Country Girl, an adaptation of Clifford Odets’s play. Crosby, in perhaps his best performance, was cast against type as an alcoholic actor, and Grace Kelly, who won an Oscar, forwent her usually glamorous roles to play his dowdy wife. A critical and commercial success,…
- Country Girls Trilogy, The (work by O’Brien)
The Country Girls Trilogy, three novels by Edna O’Brien that follow the lives of friends Kate and Baba from their school days and strict Roman Catholic upbringing in the Irish countryside to their disillusioned adulthood and failed marriages in London. The trilogy consists of The Country Girls
- Country Girls, The (novel by O’Brien)
Edna O’Brien: O’Brien’s popular first novel, The Country Girls (1960), was the first volume of The Country Girls Trilogy. It had as its main characters two Irish girls who leave their strict homes and convent school for the excitement and romantic opportunities of Dublin. The girls’ subsequent lives are traced in…
- country gospel (music)
gospel music: White gospel music: …popular country music, sometimes called country gospel, that was both practically and stylistically a fully secular tradition (not intended for use in church), with such exponents as the Oak Ridge Boys and the Statler Brothers. Such secularized gospel music continued to enjoy a wide audience in the 21st century, through…
- country ham (food)
ham: …flavour, and require continuous refrigeration; country hams, not requiring refrigeration after processing, are produced on farms and in some plants having a specialty trade.
- country house (manorial residence)
château: …as typical examples of the châteaux de plaisance (country houses) of the transition period, all retaining some of the characteristics of the medieval castle.
- Country Joe and the Fish (American musical group)
Woodstock: Ravi Shankar, and Country Joe and the Fish.
- Country Life (album by Roxy Music)
Roxy Music: …success with Stranded (1973) and Country Life (1974), the band broke through in the United States with Siren and its hit single “Love Is the Drug” in 1975. Splitting, re-forming, and splitting again, Roxy Music had commercial success with its albums in the late 1970s and early 1980s, most notably…
- Country Music (documentary by Burns)
Ken Burns: …following year the eight-part series Country Music debuted. Burns then codirected the multipart series Hemingway (2021), about the life and work of the literary giant; Muhammad Ali (2021), an in-depth look at the legendary boxer; and The U.S. and the Holocaust (2022), which explores how racism and
- Country Music (collection of poems by Wright)
Charles Wright: …and 1977, were published as Country Music (1982), for which he won an American Book Award. In his poems Wright reflected on some of the most eternal of human concerns—time, truth, nature, and death—and balanced his unending search for transcendence with elements of the ordinary amid the ineffable. The compelling…
- country music
country music, style of American popular music that originated in rural areas of the South and West in the early 20th century. The term country and western music (later shortened to country music) was adopted by the recording industry in 1949 to replace the derogatory label hillbilly music.
- Country Music Association (American association)
Nashville 1960s overview: The newly formed Country Music Association (CMA) recommended the criteria for the kind of music that could be played on country radio, inviting producers to make a choice between making country or pop records. With the notable exceptions of Roger Miller (on Mercury’s Smash subsidiary) and Glen Campbell…
- Country of the Pointed Firs, The (work by Jewett)
The Country of the Pointed Firs, collection of sketches about life in a fictional coastal village in Maine by Sarah Orne Jewett; published in 1896, it is an acclaimed example of local colour. The work is highly regarded for its sympathetic yet unsentimental portrayal of the town of Dunnet Landing
- Country Party (political party, Australia)
the Nationals, Australian political party that for most of its history has held office as a result of its customary alliance with the Liberal Party of Australia. It often acted as a margin in the balance of power, but its own power declined over the years. In 1934 it could command 16 percent of the
- Country Road, A (painting by Savrasov)
Aleksey Kondratyevich Savrasov: …another of his well-known paintings, A Country Road (1873). Savrasov copied his paintings many times for different patrons.
- country rock (music)
country rock, the incorporation of musical elements and songwriting idioms from traditional country music into late 1960s and ’70s rock, usually pursued in Los Angeles. The style achieved its commercial zenith with the hits of the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and many other less consistent performers.
- country rock (geology)
igneous rock: …have cross-cutting contacts with the country rocks that they have invaded, and in many cases the country rocks show evidence of having been baked and thermally metamorphosed at these contacts. The exposed intrusive rocks are found in a variety of sizes, from small veinlike injections to massive dome-shaped batholiths, which…
- Country Strong (film by Feste [2010])
Tim McGraw: … (2004), The Blind Side (2009), Country Strong (2010), Tomorrowland (2015), and The Shack (2017). He also costarred with his wife and Sam Elliott in the TV series 1883 (2021– ), a western drama that was a prequel to the hit show Yellowstone.
- country team (diplomacy)
diplomacy: The United Nations and the changing world order: missions had instituted “country teams,” including the ambassador and the heads of all attached missions, which met at least once each week to unify policy and reporting efforts and to prevent different elements under the ambassador from working at cross-purposes.
- Country Wake, The (play by Doggett)
Thomas Doggett: He wrote a comedy, The Country Wake (1696), that was successfully staged at Lincoln’s Inn Fields Theatre and later revived by Cibber in 1711.
- country-fried steak (food)
chicken-fried steak, battered and fried steak dish popular in the southern United States. The meat—usually tenderized cube steak—is dipped in a milk or egg wash, dredged with seasoned flour, and fried in a skillet or deep-fried. It is served smothered in a creamy gravy traditionally made with pan
- Country-Wife, The (play by Wycherley)
The Country-Wife, comedy of manners in five acts by Restoration dramatist William Wycherley, performed and published in 1675. It satirizes the sexual duplicity of the aristocracy during the reign of Charles II. Popular for its lively characters and its double entendres, the bawdy comedy was
- Countrywide Financial Corp. (American corporation)
Bank of America: …institutions began to struggle, notably Countrywide Financial, the largest American mortgage lender, and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. That year Bank of America bought both companies, and the acquisitions proved costly. In January 2009 Bank of America announced that it would receive $20 billion in U.S. government aid and an…
- Counts, George S. (American educator and activist)
George S. Counts was an American educator and activist who, as a leading proponent of social reconstructionism, believed that schools should bring about social change. After graduating (1911) from Baker University, Counts earned a doctorate (1916) in education with a minor in sociology at the
- Counts, George Sylvester (American educator and activist)
George S. Counts was an American educator and activist who, as a leading proponent of social reconstructionism, believed that schools should bring about social change. After graduating (1911) from Baker University, Counts earned a doctorate (1916) in education with a minor in sociology at the
- Counts, Ministry of (Austrian history)
Richard, Count Belcredi: His “Ministry of Counts” (July 27, 1865–Feb. 3, 1867) advocated conservative federalism under which the Slavs’ historic rights would be recognized instead of subsumed by those of the Germans and Magyars.
- Countship Palatine of the Rhine (historical region, Germany)
Palatinate, in German history, the lands of the count palatine, a title held by a leading secular prince of the Holy Roman Empire. Geographically, the Palatinate was divided between two small territorial clusters: the Rhenish, or Lower, Palatinate and the Upper Palatinate. The Rhenish Palatinate
- county (division of government)
county, internal territorial and administrative division in the United Kingdom, United States, and other English-speaking countries. In the United Kingdom the county, or shire, has historically been the principal subdivision of the country for political, administrative, judicial, and cultural
- county cricket (sports)
cricket: County and university cricket: …a kind of nursery for county cricket—i.e., matches between the various counties of England. Although the press acclaimed a “champion county” (Sussex) as early as 1827, qualification rules for county cricket were not laid down until 1873, and it was only in 1890 that the format of the county championship…
- County Hall (building, London, United Kingdom)
County Hall, former seat of the London County Council and its successor, the Greater London Council. Since 1997 it has been the site of the London Aquarium. It is located on the south bank of the River Thames, across Westminster Bridge from the Houses of Parliament. In the late 19th century the
- county home (American institution)
almshouse, in the United States, a locally administered public institution that provided housing and health care to people who were of limited financial means and were otherwise disadvantaged. Almshouses radically declined in number in the United States during the mid-20th century, being replaced
- County Kerry (county, Ireland)
Kerry, county in the province of Munster, southwestern Ireland. Kerry is bounded by Counties Limerick and Cork to the east and by the Atlantic Ocean or its inlets to the south, west, and north. Tralee, in the west, is the county town (seat). Composed of sandstone, the principal highlands of Kerry
- coup (political intervention)
coup d’état, the sudden, violent overthrow of an existing government by a small group. The chief prerequisite for a coup is control of all or part of the armed forces, the police, and other military elements. Unlike a revolution, which is usually achieved by large numbers of people working for
- coup d’état (political intervention)
coup d’état, the sudden, violent overthrow of an existing government by a small group. The chief prerequisite for a coup is control of all or part of the armed forces, the police, and other military elements. Unlike a revolution, which is usually achieved by large numbers of people working for
- Coup d’État, the Technique of Revolution (work by Malaparte)
Curzio Malaparte: …Technique du coup d’état (1931; Coup d’État, the Technique of Revolution; Italian trans., Tecnica del colpo di stato). His early fiction—Avventure di un capitano di Sventura (1927); Sodoma e Gomorra (1931); and Sangue (1937)—also showed a fascist slant.
- Coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard, poème, Un (poem by Mallarmé)
Stéphane Mallarmé: …ideal world, and in Un Coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard, poème (“A Throw of Dice Will Never Abolish the Hazard, Poem”), the work that appeared in 1897, the year before his death, he found consolation in the thought that he had met with some measure of success in…
- Coup de Lance, Le (painting by Rubens)
Peter Paul Rubens: Return to Antwerp: 1616) and Christ on the Cross (also called Le Coup de Lance, 1620). Yet during this same decade Rubens also produced many paintings on secular themes—mythological, historical, and allegorical subjects, hunting scenes, and portraits. Among the finest of his mythological paintings is the Rape of the Daughters…
- Coup de semonce, Le (play by Louvet)
Jean Louvet: …of the petty bourgeoisie; and Le Coup de semonce (1995; figuratively, “The Shot Across the Bow” or “Warning Shot”), which dramatizes the 1945 Walloon Congress.
- Coup, W.C. (American circus manager)
W.C. Coup was an American businessman, cofounder and manager of P.T. Barnum’s “Greatest Show on Earth.” Working his way from circus roustabout to manager, Coup, in 1872, persuaded P.T. Barnum to end his retirement and join him in starting the circus that later became “The Greatest Show on Earth.”
- Coup, William Cameron (American circus manager)
W.C. Coup was an American businessman, cofounder and manager of P.T. Barnum’s “Greatest Show on Earth.” Working his way from circus roustabout to manager, Coup, in 1872, persuaded P.T. Barnum to end his retirement and join him in starting the circus that later became “The Greatest Show on Earth.”
- Coupe (carriage)
coupé, four-wheeled, horse-drawn carriage that was based on the coach but was smaller and lighter in weight. While originally the word coupé described any cut-down coach body, it later became associated with a specific type of truncated coach body that came into general use in western Europe and
- coupé (carriage)
coupé, four-wheeled, horse-drawn carriage that was based on the coach but was smaller and lighter in weight. While originally the word coupé described any cut-down coach body, it later became associated with a specific type of truncated coach body that came into general use in western Europe and
- coupe de mariage (metalwork)
loving cup: The French coupe de mariage is a somewhat shallow form of loving cup.
- Couper, Archibald Scott (Scottish chemist)
Archibald Scott Couper was a Scottish chemist who, independently of August Kekule, proposed the tetravalency of carbon and the ability of carbon atoms to bond with one another. Couper was a student at the universities of Glasgow and Paris and became an assistant at the University of Edinburgh.
- Couper, Thomas (English bishop and author)
Thomas Cooper was an English bishop and author of a famous dictionary. (Read H.L. Mencken’s 1926 Britannica essay on American English.) Educated at the University of Oxford, Cooper became master of Magdalen College school and afterward practiced as a physician in Oxford. In 1565 appeared the first
- Couperet, Le (film by Costa-Gavras [2005])
Costa-Gavras: …camps, and Le Couperet (2005; The Axe), about a frustrated unemployed man who decides to kill the other people competing against him for a job.
- Couperin Le Grand (French composer [1668-1733])
François Couperin was a French composer and harpsichordist, the most renowned of the Couperin dynasty of 17th- and 18th-century musicians. He was the nephew of Louis Couperin. Although François Couperin was only 10 years old when his father, Charles Couperin, died, the wardens of the Church of
- Couperin, Charles (French composer)
Louis Couperin: 1631–1708/12) and Charles (1638–79), learned to play respectably on the violin, viol, harpsichord, and organ. Still, they might have remained provincial musicians but for Jacques Champion de Chambonnières, the best harpsichordist in France, who heard one of Louis’s compositions in 1650 and insisted that the young man…
- Couperin, François (French composer [1668-1733])
François Couperin was a French composer and harpsichordist, the most renowned of the Couperin dynasty of 17th- and 18th-century musicians. He was the nephew of Louis Couperin. Although François Couperin was only 10 years old when his father, Charles Couperin, died, the wardens of the Church of
- Couperin, François (French composer [1631–1708/1712])
Louis Couperin: …and his two younger brothers, François (c. 1631–1708/12) and Charles (1638–79), learned to play respectably on the violin, viol, harpsichord, and organ. Still, they might have remained provincial musicians but for Jacques Champion de Chambonnières, the best harpsichordist in France, who heard one of Louis’s compositions in 1650 and insisted…
- Couperin, Louis (French composer)
Louis Couperin was a French composer, organist, and harpsichordist, the first major member of the Couperin dynasty of musicians of the 17th and 18th centuries. Couperin’s father, a merchant and small landowner in Chaumes-en-Brie, France, was also the organist of the local abbey church, and Louis
- Couperus, Louis Marie Anne (Dutch author)
Louis Marie Anne Couperus was one of the greatest Dutch novelists of the 1880 literary revival. Couperus grew up in Batavia (now Jakarta) in the Dutch East Indies. After returning to the Netherlands, he settled in Italy. During World War I he returned to The Hague and later traveled through Africa
- Coupeville (Washington, United States)
Coupeville, town, seat (1881) of Island county, northwestern Washington, U.S., on Whidbey Island. One of the oldest towns in the state and originally called the Port of Sea Captains for the retired mariners who settled there, it was renamed for one of them, Captain Thomas Coupe, who staked a claim
- Coupland, Douglas (Canadian journalist and novelist)
Douglas Coupland is a Canadian journalist and novelist best known for his observations on modern-day American culture and for popularizing the term Generation X. Coupland was born on a Canadian military base in Germany. His family relocated to Canada in the mid-1960s, and he grew up in Vancouver.
- Coupland, Douglas Campbell (Canadian journalist and novelist)
Douglas Coupland is a Canadian journalist and novelist best known for his observations on modern-day American culture and for popularizing the term Generation X. Coupland was born on a Canadian military base in Germany. His family relocated to Canada in the mid-1960s, and he grew up in Vancouver.
- couple (physics)
couple, in mechanics, pair of equal parallel forces that are opposite in direction. The only effect of a couple is to produce or prevent the turning of a body. The turning effect, or moment, of a couple is measured by the product of the magnitude of either force and the perpendicular distance
- couple dance (dance)
Native American dance: Patterns and body movement: …Austrian influences probably inspired the couple dances of Latin America, for aboriginal dances juxtapose male and female partners only rarely, and never in overt courtship mime.
- Couple, Le (work by Lilar)
Suzanne Lilar: Le Couple (1963; Aspects of Love in Western Society), perhaps her best work, is a neoplatonic idealization of love filtered through personal experience; in the same vein she later wrote highly critical essays on Jean-Paul Sartre (À propos de Sartre et de l’amour, 1967; “About Sartre and About…
- Couple, The (work by Lipchitz)
Jacques Lipchitz: With such transparents as The Couple (1928–29), Lipchitz attempted to express emotion instead of merely addressing formal concerns, as he had in his earlier works.
- coupled oscillator (physics)
mechanics: Coupled oscillators: In the section on simple harmonic oscillators, the motion of a single particle held in place by springs was considered. In this section, the motion of a group of particles bound by springs to one another is discussed. The solutions of this seemingly…
- coupled substitution (chemistry)
mineral: Compositional variation: …such as this are termed coupled substitutions. The plagioclase feldspar series exhibits complete solid solution, in the form of coupled substitutions, between its two end-members, albite (NaAlSi3O8) and anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8). Every atomic substitution of Na+ by Ca2+ is accompanied by the replacement of a
- coupled-cavity traveling-wave tube (electronics)
electron tube: Traveling-wave tubes: …cavities have bandwidth limitations, the coupled-cavity TWT also is bandwidth-limited to typically 10 to 20 percent. The helix TWT, however, has no particular bandwidth limitations, and, for all practical purposes, an octave bandwidth (100 percent) is attainable.
- coupler (music)
accordion: Couplers, or “registers,” in some double-action instruments activate extra sets of reeds, one pitched an octave below the main set and another off-tuned from the main set to give a tremulant through “beating” (sound-wave interference). Other registers may include a high-octave set of reeds and…
- coupler (train device)
railroad coupling, device by which a locomotive is connected to a following car and by which succeeding cars in a train are linked. The first couplings were chains with solid buffers to help absorb shock during braking. Later, spring buffers were introduced, with screw couplings that permit two
- coupler dog (musical instrument device)
keyboard instrument: Couplers: …upright pieces of wood called coupler dogs, which reached upward toward the underside of the upper-manual keys. The upper manual was constructed to slide forward and back by about 1 4 inch. When it was pushed into the instrument, the coupler dogs were positioned below the back ends of upper-manual…
- Couples (work by Updike)
American literature: Realism and metafiction: …to Rabbit at Rest [1990]), Couples (1968), and Too Far to Go (1979), a sequence of tales about the quiet disintegration of a civilized marriage, a subject Updike revisited in a retrospective work, Villages (2004). In sharp contrast, Nelson Algren (The Man with the Golden Arm [1949]) and
- Couples Retreat (film by Billingsley [2009])
Jason Bateman: Later life and career: Sarah Marshall (2008), Hancock (2008), Couples Retreat (2009), The Switch (2010), Horrible Bosses (2011), and Bad Words (2013), which he also directed. He has been good friends with American actress Jennifer Aniston since the mid-1990s, and they have appeared together in several movies, including The Break-Up, The
- couplet (poetic form)
couplet, a pair of end-rhymed lines of verse that are self-contained in grammatical structure and meaning. A couplet may be formal (or closed), in which case each of the two lines is end-stopped, or it may be run-on (or open), with the meaning of the first line continuing to the second (this is
- couplet silicate (mineral)
sorosilicate, any member of a group of compounds with structures that have two silicate tetrahedrons (each consisting of a central silicon atom surrounded by four oxygen atoms at the corners of a tetrahedron) linked together. Because one oxygen atom is shared by two tetrahedrons, the chemical
- Coupleux-Givelet synthesizer (musical instrument)
electronic instrument: Early electronic instruments: …first of these was the Coupleux-Givelet synthesizer, which the inventors introduced in 1929 at the Paris Exposition. This instrument used a player-piano-like paper roll to “play” electronic circuits that generated the tone waveforms. Unlike a player piano, however, the Coupleux-Givelet instrument provided for control of pitch, tone colour, and loudness,…
- coupling (machinery)
coupling, in machinery, a device that links two rotatable shafts. See hydraulic transmission; shaft
- Coupling, J. J. (American scientist)
John Robinson Pierce was an American communications engineer, scientist, and father of the communications satellite. Pierce attended the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, receiving his Ph.D. in electrical engineering in 1936. That year he began working for Bell Telephone
- coupon
In the bond market, the coupon, also known as the coupon payment, is the interest payment that a bond issuer promises to pay a bondholder regularly until the bond reaches maturity. The coupon rate, or coupon yield, is a bond’s coupon expressed as an annual percentage of the bondholder’s principal.
- coupon payment
In the bond market, the coupon, also known as the coupon payment, is the interest payment that a bond issuer promises to pay a bondholder regularly until the bond reaches maturity. The coupon rate, or coupon yield, is a bond’s coupon expressed as an annual percentage of the bondholder’s principal.
- Coups de pilon (work by Diop)
David Diop: Diop’s works in Coups de pilon (1956; “Pounding”), his only surviving collection, are angry poems of protest against European cultural values, enumerating the sufferings of his people first under the slave trade and then under the domination of colonial rule and calling for revolution to lead to a…
- Cour (people)
Courland: …inhabitants, the Latvian tribe of Curonians (Kurs, Cori, Cours; Latvian: Kursi). The duchy of Courland, formed in 1561, included this area as well as Semigallia (Zemgale), a region located east of Courland proper.
- Cour Carrée (courtyard, Paris, France)
Paris: The Louvre: …original square, known as the Cour Carrée (Square Court), two galleries extend westward for about 1,640 feet (500 metres), one along the river and the other along the rue de Rivoli. In 1871, only 19 years after the huge oblong was completed, its western face, the Tuileries Palace (begun 1563),…
- cour d’assises (French law)
procedural law: Criminal courts: The French cour d’assises, which hears serious criminal matters, is composed of three professional judges and nine lay assessors. Such “mixed courts” of professionals and ordinary citizens deliberate together and decide by majority vote, with lawyers and laypersons having one vote each.
- Cour de Cassation (French law)
Cour de Cassation, (French: “Court of Cassation,” or “Abrogation”), the highest court of criminal and civil appeal in France, with the power to quash (casser) the decisions of lower courts. The high court considers decisions only from the point of view of whether the lower court has applied the law
- Cour de sûreté de l’État (French law)
France: The judiciary: …from 1963 to 1981, the Court of State Security, which tried felonies and misdemeanours against national security. Very exceptionally, in cases of high treason, a High Court of Justice (Cour de Justice de la République), composed of members of the National Assembly and of senators, is empowered to try the…
- Cour des Aides (French law)
France: Governmental reforms: …in 1390, of which the Cour des Aides (board of excise) had provincial divisions set up at Toulouse in 1439 and at Rouen in 1450. A provincial parlement was definitively established at Toulouse in 1443, and there were to be others at Grenoble and Bordeaux. With all these changes, the…
- Cour des Comptes (French court)
François, marquis de Barbé-Marbois: …appointed first president of the Cour des Comptes (an administrative court handling public accounts of the country) in 1808 and was made a senator and a count in 1813. When Napoleon’s fall became likely, Barbé-Marbois hastily and successfully attached himself to the Bourbons and was made a peer of France…
- Courage (album by Dion)
Céline Dion: In 2019 Dion released Courage, her first English-language album in six years. Three years later the singer announced that she had been diagnosed with stiff-person syndrome. The rare neurological disorder was causing spasms that affected her mobility and vocal chords. As she underwent treatment, Dion canceled or postponed various…
- Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight (work by Rove)
Karl Rove: …2010 he published the memoir Courage and Consequence: My Life As a Conservative in the Fight, in which he defended the Bush administration and denied various allegations against him, including claims that he smeared political rivals. That year he cofounded American Crossroads and its affiliate Crossroads GPS, organizations that played…
- Courage to Be, The (book by Tillich)
Paul Tillich: Departure from Nazi Germany of Paul Tillich: …his most widely read books, The Courage to Be and Dynamics of Faith, he argued that the deepest concern of humans drives them into confrontation with a reality that transcends their own finite existence. Tillich’s discussion of the human situation in these books shows a profound grasp of the problems…
- Courage Under Fire (film by Zwick [1996])
Matt Damon: Early life and career: …the Persian Gulf War in Courage Under Fire (1996). This portrayal attracted the attention of director Francis Ford Coppola, who cast Damon as a novice lawyer opposite Danny DeVito in The Rainmaker (1997).
- Courage, Mother (fictional character)
Mother Courage, fictional character, the protagonist of the play Mother Courage and Her Children (1941) by Bertolt