- Cua (people)
Vietnam: Languages: Pacoh, Katu, Cua, Hre, Rengao, Sedang, Bahnar, Mnong, Mang (Maa), Muong, and Stieng—speak Mon-Khmer languages, connecting them with the Khmer. French missionaries and administrators provided Roman script for some of the Montagnard languages,
- Cua, Paulus (Vietnamese scholar)
Paulus Cua was a Vietnamese scholar who contributed to the popular usage of Quoc-ngu, a romanized system of transcribing the Vietnamese language devised by mid-17th-century Portuguese missionaries and further modified by Alexandre de Rhodes, a 17th-century French missionary. Cua helped make
- CuACC (chemistry)
Morten P. Meldal: …particular for his work on copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuACC), a highly efficient chemical reaction in click chemistry, which he developed simultaneously and independently of American chemist K. Barry Sharpless. The discovery of the CuACC reaction opened up new opportunities in research and development, especially in the areas of materials science…
- cuaderna vía (verse form)
mester de clerecía: …common metrical form is the cuaderna vía (“fourfold way”). The mester de clerecía is characterized by its metrical regularity, diverse scholarly topics, narrative style, and didactic intent. Many works of this school are based directly on Latin sources. Among its most prominent representatives are Gonzalo de Berceo and Juan Ruiz.
- cuaderno de Maya, El (novel by Allende)
Isabel Allende: El cuaderno de Maya (2011; Maya’s Notebook) takes the form of a teenage girl’s diary, written in the wake of a disastrous episode of drug use and prostitution. In El juego de Ripper (2014; Ripper), Allende tells the story of a teenage girl tracking a serial killer. Her later novels…
- cuadrilla (bullfighting)
bullfighting: Performers: …each corrida; three matadors, whose cuadrillas (team of assistants) consist of two or three banderilleros and two picadors, alternate in the performance according to seniority in the profession (the most senior matador taking the first and the fourth bull).
- cuadro de costumbres (literature)
costumbrismo: …then in prose sketches called cuadros de costumbres (“scenes of customs”) that stressed detailed descriptions of typical regional characters and social conduct, often with a satirical or philosophical intent.
- Cuadros phase (Mesoamerican history)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Early village life: …people of the Ocós and Cuadros phases raised a small-eared corn known as nal-tel, which was ground on metates and manos and cooked in globular jars. From the rich lagoons and estuaries in this area, the villagers obtained shellfish, crabs, fish, and turtles. Their villages were small, with perhaps 10…
- Cuajiniguilapa (Guatemala)
Cuilapa, city, southeastern Guatemala. The city lies in a bend of the southward-flowing Los Esclavos River on the southern flanks of the central highlands at an elevation of 2,916 feet (889 metres). In 1913 Cuilapa was destroyed by an earthquake; rebuilding was completed in 1920. Cuilapa is known
- Cuan, Loch (inlet, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Strangford Lough, inlet of the Irish Sea between the Ards and North Down district and the Newry, Mourne and Down district, Northern Ireland. The lough (lake) is about 16 miles (26 km) long and 4 miles (6 km) wide and has a very narrow entrance, which cuts across the northeast-southwest trend of the
- Cuando, Rio (river, Africa)
Kwando River, river in southern Africa, rising in central Angola and flowing southeast, forming for nearly 140 miles (225 km) the boundary between Angola and Zambia. Near the end of its course the Kwando reaches the northern boundary of the Caprivi Strip, which juts out from Namibia, and thereafter
- Cuango River (river, Africa)
African art: Lower Congo (Kongo) cultural area: The Kwango River area is the home of the Yaka, the Suku, the Mbala, and the Pende, whose masks, figures, and other carved objects show a dynamic stylization. Characterized by geometric patterns formed by the relationship of stylized body parts, Yaka figures lack the organic integration…
- Cuanza River (river, Angola)
Cuanza River, river in central Angola, rising about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of Chitembo on the Bié Plateau at an elevation of 5,000 feet (1,500 metres). It flows northward for about 320 miles (510 km) and then curves westward to enter the Atlantic Ocean 30 miles (50 km) south of Luanda after a
- Cuao River (river, South America)
Orinoco River: Physiography of the Orinoco: Sipapo, Autana, and Cuao rivers from the Guiana Highlands.
- Cuareim (river, Uruguay)
Río de la Plata: Physiography of the Uruguay basin: The Ijuí, Ibicuí, and the Cuareim are short rivers but of considerable volume; the last forms part of the boundary between Brazil and Uruguay. At the mouth of the Cuareim, the Uruguay becomes the boundary line between Argentina and Uruguay, and the river flows almost directly south. A dam above…
- Cuarón Orozco, Alfonso (Mexican director and screenwriter)
Alfonso Cuarón is a Mexican director and screenwriter who earned an international reputation for fluid storytelling in a versatile range of genres. Cuarón studied film at the Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos (a school within the National Autonomous University of Mexico) but was
- Cuarón, Alfonso (Mexican director and screenwriter)
Alfonso Cuarón is a Mexican director and screenwriter who earned an international reputation for fluid storytelling in a versatile range of genres. Cuarón studied film at the Centro Universitario de Estudios Cinematográficos (a school within the National Autonomous University of Mexico) but was
- Cuarto Reich, El (comic strip)
comic strip: Comics in Latin America: …known for a strip titled El Cuarto Reich (begun 1977; “The Fourth Reich”) in the newspaper Uno Más Uno. It featured a tiny Wizard-of-Id-like dictator backed by U.S.-trained death squads and notable for his contempt for and exploitation of his people. This gag strip may be the only one of…
- cuataquil (mammal)
olingo, (genus Bassaricyon), any of six species of small arboreal carnivores of the raccoon family, Procyonidae, found in the jungles of Central and northern South America. Olingos are slender, grayish brown animals 35–50 cm (14–20 inches) long, excluding the bushy, faintly ringed tail, which
- cuatequil (colonial Spanish-American history)
repartimiento, in colonial Spanish America, a system by which the crown allowed certain colonists to recruit indigenous peoples for forced labour. The repartimiento system, frequently called the mita in Peru and the cuatequil (a Spanish-language corruption of Nahuatl coatequitl or cohuatequitl) in
- Cuatrecasas, Pedro (chemist)
chromatography: Subsequent developments: …chromatography, was first described by Pedro Cuatrecasas and his coworkers in 1968. In these separations, a biomolecule such as an enzyme binds to a substrate attached to the solid phase while other components are eluted. The retained molecule can subsequently be eluted by changing the chemical conditions of the separation.
- cuatro (musical instrument)
stringed instrument: The production of sound: …and often the Puerto Rican cuatro (a lute)—the bodies of most wooden instruments are constructed from multiple pieces of wood. The instruments are built up of many pieces of wood glued together; the shaping of curved pieces is accomplished by gouging and planing (as in the belly of the violin)…
- Cuatro de Junio (county, Argentina)
Lanús: … (county seat) and partido (county) of Gran (Greater) Buenos Aires, eastern Argentina. It is located directly south of the city of Buenos Aires, in Buenos Aires provincia (province). Much of the early settlement of Lanús, formerly called the county of Cuatro de Junio, was linked to the colonization and…
- cuatro jinetes del Apocalipsis, Los (work by Blasco Ibáñez)
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez: …cuatro jinetes del Apocalipsis (1916; The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, 1918), was used as the basis for two U.S. films. He was associated with the Generation of ’98 (q.v.).
- Cuatro Puertas, Montaña de (mountain, Canary Islands, Spain)
Telde: The nearby Montaña de Cuatro Puertas (“Mountain of Four Doors”), held sacred by the Guanches, is now the site of archaeological excavations. Telde was once a major producer of sugar, wines, and dyes, which were exported via Melenara Bay to the southeast. The trade declined in the…
- Cuauhnáhuac (Mexico)
Cuernavaca, city, capital of Morelos estado (state), south-central Mexico. It is located in the Valley of Morelos, some 40 miles (65 km) south of Mexico City, at an elevation of about 5,000 feet (1,500 meters). Cuernavaca, which translates as “cow horn,” is a Spanish corruption of the Indigenous
- Cuauhtémoc (Aztec emperor)
Cuauhtémoc was the 11th and last Aztec emperor, nephew and son-in-law of Montezuma II. Cuauhtémoc became emperor in 1520 on the death of Montezuma’s successor, Cuitláhuac. Hernán Cortés, with powerful Indian allies, was then marching on Tenochtitlán, the Aztec capital. Cuauhtémoc’s frontier forces
- Cuauhtlatoatzin (Mexican saint)
St. Juan Diego ; canonized July 31, 2002; feast day December 9) was an indigenous Mexican convert to Roman Catholicism and saint who, according to tradition, was visited by the Virgin Mary (Our Lady of Guadalupe). Little is known of the early life of Juan Diego, whose original name was
- Cub Scouts (American organization)
Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell: … in Great Britain (known as Cub Scouts in the United States) for boys under the age of 11. At the first international Boy Scout Jamboree (London, 1920), he was acclaimed chief scout of the world.
- cub shark (fish, Carcharhinus leucas)
bull shark, (Carcharhinus leucas), species of large predatory shark found in shallow coastal lagoons, estuaries, and harbours in tropical and subtropical oceans and seas worldwide. The bull shark is one of only a few shark species also capable of living and breeding in freshwater environments. Bull
- Cub, Mr. (American baseball player)
Ernie Banks was an American professional baseball player, regarded as one of the finest power hitters in the history of the game. Banks starred for the Chicago Cubs from 1953 to 1971. An 11-time All-Star, Banks was named the National League’s (NL) Most Valuable Player for two consecutive seasons
- Cuba
Cuba, country of the West Indies, the largest single island of the archipelago, and one of the more-influential states of the Caribbean region. The domain of the Arawakan-speaking Taino, who had displaced even earlier inhabitants, Cuba was claimed by Christopher Columbus for Spain in 1492. It
- Cuba, flag of
national flag with three blue and two white horizontal stripes and a red triangle at the hoist bearing a white star. The width-to-length ratio of the flag is 1 to 2.In the 19th century in New York City, anti-Spanish Cuban exiles under the leadership of Narciso López adopted a flag suggested by the
- Cuba, history of
Cuba: History: The following discussion focuses on Cuba since European contact. For additional treatment in a regional context, see Latin America, history of.
- Cuba, Republic of (Cuban history [1902–1959])
Cuba: The Republic of Cuba: A republican administration that began on May 20, 1902, under Estrada Palma was subject to heavy U.S. influence. Estrada Palma tried to retain power in the 1905 and 1906 elections, which were contested by the Liberals, leading to rebellion and a second…
- Cuba, Republic of
Cuba, country of the West Indies, the largest single island of the archipelago, and one of the more-influential states of the Caribbean region. The domain of the Arawakan-speaking Taino, who had displaced even earlier inhabitants, Cuba was claimed by Christopher Columbus for Spain in 1492. It
- Cuba, República de
Cuba, country of the West Indies, the largest single island of the archipelago, and one of the more-influential states of the Caribbean region. The domain of the Arawakan-speaking Taino, who had displaced even earlier inhabitants, Cuba was claimed by Christopher Columbus for Spain in 1492. It
- Cubagua (island, Venezuela)
Nueva Esparta: …islands, and 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.
- Cuban (nationality)
Hispanics in the United States: The U.S. Census of 2000: government as a “person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin,” regardless of skin colour. From 1990 to 2000 the Hispanic population in the United States rose by nearly 60 percent, from 22.4 million in 1990 to 35.3 million in 2000, and…
- Cuban Adjustment Act (United States and Cuba [1966])
Cuban Adjustment Act, U.S. federal law (November 2, 1966) that was enacted with the intent of allowing Cuban natives or citizens in the United States to bypass standard immigration rules to more quickly and easily obtain lawful permanent residency (often called a “green card”). Key among the
- Cuban Aviation Enterprise (Cuban company)
Cuba: Transportation and telecommunications: The Cuban Aviation Enterprise (Empresa Cubana de Aviación), or Cubana, is the state-run airline. International airports operate at Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Camagüey, and Varadero, and domestic airports serve Guantánamo, Holguín, Las Tunas, La Colonia (in Pinar del Río), Nueva Gerona, and several other locations.
- Cuban Baseball League (baseball league, Cuba)
Cuban League, the earliest baseball league founded in Latin America (see also Sidebar: Latin Americans in Major League Baseball). Baseball was introduced to Cuba in 1864 when students returned home from the United States with a bat and ball. A baseball league was established there in 1878, and it
- Cuban Bon Bon (Cuban boxer)
Kid Chocolate was a Cuban professional boxer, world junior lightweight (130 pounds) champion from 1931 to 1933. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Kid Chocolate officially turned professional in 1927 after winning all 100 of his recorded amateur bouts in Cuba, 86 by knockout;
- Cuban Comet, the (Cuban baseball player)
Minnie Miñoso was a Cuban professional baseball player known for his speed and baserunning ability and who was the first Black major league star from Latin America. Miñoso began his career playing on teams in the Cuban sugar-mills league, and in 1945 he joined the Negro leagues’ New York Cubans. In
- Cuban Communist Party (political party, Cuba)
Communist Party of Cuba: The Cuban Communist Party (Partido Comunista Cubano) was founded in 1925 by Moscow-trained members of the Third International (Comintern). For three decades it adhered to the Stalinist line but, nevertheless, opportunistically collaborated with the regime of Fulgencio Batista in the 1940s and early ’50s, its members…
- Cuban Counterpoint: Tobacco and Sugar (work by Ortiz)
Fernando Ortiz: …tabaco y el azúcar (Cuban Counterpoint: Tobacco and Sugar), an interpretation of the island’s culture through its two principal products, and in the 1950s he contributed two more decisive volumes: La africanía de la música folklórica de Cuba (1950; “The Africanness of Folkloric Cuban Music”) and Los bailes y…
- Cuban crocodile (reptile)
Cuban crocodile, (Crocodylus rhombifer), species of crocodile inhabiting freshwater swamps and streams of the Zapata Peninsula on the island of Cuba. The species has the smallest geographic range of all living crocodiles, and it is one of the most endangered crocodiles in the world. Cuban
- Cuban espresso (beverage)
café cubano, type of espresso originating in Cuba that has been sweetened with demerara sugar during brewing. It is typically made with dark roasted finely ground coffee beans. Traditional café cubano is brewed in a cafetera moka, a stove-top espresso maker of Italian origin. The first few drops of
- Cuban Federation of Women (Cuban organization)
Vilma Espín Guillois: She also founded the Cuban Federation of Women and oversaw its development into a national organization for women’s rights. Espín frequently represented Cuba at the United Nations General Assembly. She officially became first lady in 2006 after an ailing Fidel ceded power to Raúl, who assumed the title of…
- Cuban Giants (American baseball team)
baseball: Segregation: …exhibition game against the all-Black Cuban Giants. The night before the scheduled game, eight members of the Browns handed a message to the team’s owner that read: "[We] do not agree to play against Negroes tomorrow. We will cheerfully play against white people at any time."
- Cuban Independence Movement (Cuban history)
Cuban Independence Movement, nationalist uprising in Cuba against Spanish rule. It began with the unsuccessful Ten Years’ War (Guerra de los Diez Años; 1868–78) and culminated in the U.S. intervention that ended the Spanish colonial presence in the Americas (see Spanish-American War). Dissatisfied
- Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry (Cuban cultural organization)
Cuba: Film: …has been supported by the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry, which has produced feature and documentary films. The institute also has an extensive film library, and its movie house, the Charles Chaplin Theatre, regularly shows the best of both world and Cuban cinema. The institute provides a variety…
- Cuban ivory-billed woodpecker (bird)
ivory-billed woodpecker: A subspecies, the Cuban ivory-billed woodpecker (Campephilus principalis bairdii), was last officially sighted in the late 1980s and is believed to be extinct. A related species, the imperial woodpecker (C. imperialis) of Mexico, is the largest woodpecker in the world. It is critically endangered and possibly extinct. All…
- Cuban League (baseball league, Cuba)
Cuban League, the earliest baseball league founded in Latin America (see also Sidebar: Latin Americans in Major League Baseball). Baseball was introduced to Cuba in 1864 when students returned home from the United States with a bat and ball. A baseball league was established there in 1878, and it
- Cuban literature
Cuba: Literature: A recognizably Cuban literature first began to emerge after the end of the 18th century. In the early 19th century several writers gained prominence espousing intellectualism and the concept of freedom. These ideas gained perhaps their greatest intensity in the writings of José Martí,…
- Cuban Ministry of the Interior (Cuban government agency)
intelligence: Cuba: The Cuban Ministry of the Interior (MININT), which was modeled on the Soviet KGB, rivaled the East German Stasi for effectiveness and ruthlessness. Its most important division is the DGI (General Directorate of Intelligence), which is responsible for foreign intelligence collection and covert action. The DGI,…
- Cuban missile crisis (international incident [1962])
Cuban missile crisis, (October 1962), major confrontation that brought the United States and the Soviet Union close to war over the presence of Soviet nuclear-armed missiles in Cuba. Having promised in May 1960 to defend Cuba with Soviet arms, the Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev assumed that the
- Cuban People’s Party (political party, Cuba)
Fidel Castro: …a member of the reformist Cuban People’s Party (called Ortodoxos). He became their candidate for a seat in the House of Representatives from a Havana district in the elections scheduled for June 1952. In March of that year, however, the former Cuban president, Gen. Fulgencio Batista, overthrew the government of…
- Cuban Revolution (Cuban history)
Cuban Revolution, armed uprising in Cuba that overthrew the government of Fulgencio Batista on January 1, 1959. The revolution’s leader, Fidel Castro, went on to rule Cuba from 1959 to 2008. As a result of the Spanish-American War, control of Cuba passed from Spain to the United States on January
- Cuban Revolutionary Party (Cuban history)
José Martí: …be called president) of the Partido Revolucionario Cubano (“Cuban Revolutionary Party”) that he had helped to form. Making New York City the centre of operations, he began to draw up plans for an invasion of Cuba. He left New York for Santo Domingo on January 31, 1895, accompanied by the…
- Cuban sisal (plant)
henequen, (Agave fourcroydes), fibre plant of the asparagus family (Asparagaceae), native to Mexico and Guatemala. Henequen fibre is an important leaf fibre and has been used since pre-Columbian times. The plant was introduced to Cuba in the 19th century and became the country’s chief fibre crop by
- Cuban solenodon (mammal)
Cuba: Plant and animal life: Solenodons (Atopogale cubana), which are nearly extinct ratlike insectivores, are found only in the remotest eastern regions. Other mammals include hutias (edible rodents) and manatees, or sea cows, which inhabit river mouths. Several types of bats prey on mosquitoes and insects harmful to agriculture, and in…
- Cuban Workers, Confederation of
Cuba: Labour and taxation: …recognized labour organization is the Confederation of Cuban Workers, which is designed to support the government, raise the political consciousness of workers, and improve managerial performance and labour discipline.
- Cuban, Mark (American businessman and television personality)
Mark Cuban is an American entrepreneur, venture capitalist, businessman and television personality who cofounded (1995) Broadcast.com, an Internet audio and video streaming service, and who was active in numerous other companies. He also purchased the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball
- Cuban-American (people)
Hispanic Americans: Cubans: In January 1959 revolutionary Fidel Castro overthrew the Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. Relations between Cuba and the United States soon began to deteriorate. Castro confiscated property belonging to American companies and announced his intention of stirring up a communist revolution throughout Latin America. He…
- Cubana (Cuban company)
Cuba: Transportation and telecommunications: The Cuban Aviation Enterprise (Empresa Cubana de Aviación), or Cubana, is the state-run airline. International airports operate at Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Camagüey, and Varadero, and domestic airports serve Guantánamo, Holguín, Las Tunas, La Colonia (in Pinar del Río), Nueva Gerona, and several other locations.
- Cubango River (river, Africa)
Okavango River, fourth longest river system in southern Africa, running basically southeastward for 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from central Angola, where it is known as the Kubango, to the Kalahari (desert) in northern Botswana, where the river terminates in an immense inland delta known as the
- cubanite (mineral)
cubanite, a copper and iron sulfide mineral (CuFe2S3) that characteristically occurs with chalcopyrite or pyrrhotite in deposits formed at high temperatures, as in Barracanao, Cuba; Sudbury, Ont., Can.; and Fierro, N.M., U.S. The mineral forms opaque, brassy or bronze-yellow crystals that belong to
- Cubas Grau, Raúl (president of Paraguay)
Paraguay: Democratic freedoms: Oviedo’s vice presidential running mate, Raúl Cubas Grau, replaced Oviedo as the party candidate and won the presidency for the Colorado Party with a convincing majority.
- Cubatão (Brazil)
Cubatão, city, eastern São Paulo estado (state), southeastern Brazil. It is situated on the Atlantic coastal lowlands 16 miles (26 km) northwest of the port of Santos. Created in 1948 from several municipalities of Santos, Cubatão has become one of the state’s principal banana producers as well as
- cubature (mathematics)
quadrature: …volume, the process is called cubature. A similar process called rectification is used in determining the length of a curve. The curve is divided into a sequence of straight line segments of known length. Because the definite integral of a function determines the area under its curve, integration is still…
- Cubberley, Ellwood (American educator and administrator)
Ellwood Cubberley was an American educator and administrator who—as head (1898–1933) of Stanford University’s department of education and, later, its School of Education—helped establish education as a university-level subject. Cubberley studied physics at Indiana University. While there, he served
- Cubberley, Ellwood Patterson (American educator and administrator)
Ellwood Cubberley was an American educator and administrator who—as head (1898–1933) of Stanford University’s department of education and, later, its School of Education—helped establish education as a university-level subject. Cubberley studied physics at Indiana University. While there, he served
- Cubbies (American baseball team)
Chicago Cubs, American professional baseball team that plays its home games at Chicago’s Wrigley Field. Despite limited success, the Cubs have one of the most loyal fan bases and are among the most popular franchises in baseball. The Cubs play in the National League (NL) and have won three World
- cube (geometry)
cube, in Euclidean geometry, a regular solid with six square faces; that is, a regular hexahedron. Since the volume of a cube is expressed, in terms of an edge e, as e3, in arithmetic and algebra the third power of a quantity is called the cube of that quantity. That is, 33, or 27, is the cube of
- cube root (mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: Square and cube roots: In The Nine Chapters, algorithms for finding integral parts of square roots or cube roots on the counting surface are based on the same idea as the arithmetic ones used today. These algorithms are set up on the surface in the same way…
- cube strength (geology)
compressive strength test: The crushing strength of concrete, determined by breaking a cube, and often called the cube strength, reaches values of about 3 tons per square inch, that of granite 10 tons per square inch, and that of cast iron from 25 to 60 tons per square inch.
- Cubi (ancient Celtic people)
Bituriges: …divided into two groups: the Cubi, with a capital at Avaricum (modern Bourges) in the region later known as Berry; and the Vivisci, with a capital at the port of Burdigala (modern Bordeaux) on the shore of the Gironde Estuary. During the Gallic revolt of 52 bc, the Cubi defended…
- Cubi (sculpture series by Smith)
David Smith: …of planes, but in his Cubi (begun in 1963), his last great series, Smith relied instead on the light of the sculptures’ outdoor surroundings to bring their burnished stainless-steel surfaces to life. These pieces abandon two-dimensional planes for cylinders and rectilinear solids that achieve a sense of massive volume. Smith…
- cubic curve (mathematics)
computer graphics: 3-D rendering: …described by cubic equations; a cubic curve is determined by four points or, equivalently, by two points and the curve’s slopes at those points. Two cubic curves can be smoothly joined by giving them the same slope at the junction. Bezier curves, and related curves known as B-splines, were introduced…
- cubic equation (mathematics)
discriminant: …b2 − 4ac; for a cubic equation x3 + ax2 + bx + c = 0, the discriminant is a2b2 + 18abc − 4b3 − 4a3c − 27c2. The roots of a quadratic or cubic equation with real coefficients are real and distinct if the discriminant is positive, are real…
- cubic nitre (chemical compound)
Chile saltpetre, sodium nitrate, a deliquescent crystalline sodium salt that is found chiefly in northern Chile (see
- cubic system (crystallography)
isometric system, one of the crystal systems to which a given crystalline solid can be assigned. Crystals in this system are referred to three mutually perpendicular axes of equal lengths. If the atoms or atom groups in the solid are represented by points and the points are connected, the resulting
- cubical capital (architecture)
capital: Cubiform, or cushion, capitals, square on top and rounded at the bottom, served as transitional forms between the angular springing of the arches and the round columns supporting them. Grotesque animals, birds, and other figurative motifs characterize capitals of the Romanesque period. At the beginning of the…
- Cubical City, The (novel by Flanner)
Janet Flanner: …essays, Flanner wrote a novel, The Cubical City (1926, reprinted 1974), and translated Colette’s Chéri (1920) and Georgette Leblanc’s Ma vie avec Maeterlinck (U.S. title Souvenirs: My Life with Maeterlinck, 1932).
- cubical epithelium (anatomy)
epithelium: Cubical epithelium is found in many glands and ducts (e.g., the kidney), the middle ear, and the brain. Squamous, or flattened, epithelial cells, very thin and irregular in outline, occur as the covering epithelium of the alveoli of the lung and of the glomeruli and…
- cubiform capital (architecture)
capital: Cubiform, or cushion, capitals, square on top and rounded at the bottom, served as transitional forms between the angular springing of the arches and the round columns supporting them. Grotesque animals, birds, and other figurative motifs characterize capitals of the Romanesque period. At the beginning of the…
- Cubism (art)
Cubism, highly influential visual arts style of the 20th century that was created principally by the artists Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in Paris between 1907 and 1914. The Cubist style emphasized the flat, two-dimensional surface of the picture plane, rejecting the traditional techniques of
- Cubist poetry (poetic form)
pattern poetry, verse in which the typography or lines are arranged in an unusual configuration, usually to convey or extend the emotional content of the words. Of ancient (probably Eastern) origin, pattern poems are found in the Greek Anthology, which includes work composed between the 7th century
- cubit (measurement)
cubit, unit of linear measure used by many ancient and medieval peoples. It may have originated in Egypt about 3000 bc; it thereafter became ubiquitous in the ancient world. The cubit, generally taken as equal to 18 inches (457 mm), was based on the length of the arm from the elbow to the tip of
- cubital tunnel syndrome (pathology)
nervous system disease: Demyelinating neuropathies: Cubital tunnel syndrome is a similar problem affecting the ulnar nerve at the elbow. Surgical intervention may be necessary to release the entrapped nerve.
- Cubitt, Sir William (British inventor)
windmill: In 1807 Sir William Cubitt invented his “patent sail” combining Meikle’s hinged shutters with Hooper’s remote control by chain from the ground via a rod passing through a hole drilled through the windshaft; the operation was comparable to operating an umbrella; by varying the weights hung on…
- Cubitt, Thomas (British architect)
Osborne House: …was completed in 1851 by Thomas Cubitt from plans prepared by Prince Albert. The grounds were laid out and planted under the supervision of the prince. Osborne was the queen’s private property and was, therefore, not subject to government control. Victoria died there on January 22, 1901, and after her…
- cubitus (measurement)
cubit, unit of linear measure used by many ancient and medieval peoples. It may have originated in Egypt about 3000 bc; it thereafter became ubiquitous in the ancient world. The cubit, generally taken as equal to 18 inches (457 mm), was based on the length of the arm from the elbow to the tip of
- Cubo-Futurism (art movement)
Cubo-Futurism, Russian avant-garde art movement in the 1910s that emerged as an offshoot of European Futurism and Cubism. The term Cubo-Futurism was first used in 1913 by an art critic regarding the poetry of members of the Hylaea group (Russian Gileya), which included such writers as Velimir
- Cubozoa (cnidarian)
box jellyfish, (class Cubozoa), any cnidarian (or coelenterate) belonging to the class Cubozoa. The class is made up of approximately 50 species, which are known for their semitransparent box-shaped bell and the toxic venom produced by some species. Box jellyfish live in warm coastal marine waters
- cubozoan (cnidarian)
box jellyfish, (class Cubozoa), any cnidarian (or coelenterate) belonging to the class Cubozoa. The class is made up of approximately 50 species, which are known for their semitransparent box-shaped bell and the toxic venom produced by some species. Box jellyfish live in warm coastal marine waters
- Cubs (American baseball team)
Chicago Cubs, American professional baseball team that plays its home games at Chicago’s Wrigley Field. Despite limited success, the Cubs have one of the most loyal fan bases and are among the most popular franchises in baseball. The Cubs play in the National League (NL) and have won three World
- Cubs Park (baseball park, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Wrigley Field, baseball stadium in Chicago that, since 1916, has been home to the Cubs, the city’s National League (NL) team. Built in 1914, it is one of the oldest and most iconic Major League Baseball parks in the United States. The stadium was designed by brothers Zachary Taylor Davis and
- Cubs, and Other Stories, The (work by Vargas Llosa)
Mario Vargas Llosa: Los jefes (1967; The Cubs and Other Stories, filmed as The Cubs, 1973) is a psychoanalytic portrayal of an adolescent who has been accidentally castrated. Conversación en la catedral (1969; Conversation in the Cathedral) deals with Manuel Odría’s regime (1948–56). The novel Pantaleón y las visitadoras (1973; “Pantaleón…