- Curie, Marie (Polish-born French physicist)
Marie Curie was a Polish-born French physicist, famous for her work on radioactivity and twice a winner of the Nobel Prize. With Henri Becquerel and her husband, Pierre Curie, she was awarded the 1903 Nobel Prize for Physics. She was the sole winner of the 1911 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. She was
- Curie, Paul-Jacques (French scientist)
piezoelectricity: …in 1880 by Pierre and Paul-Jacques Curie, who found that when they compressed certain types of crystals including quartz, tourmaline, and Rochelle salt, along certain axes, a voltage was produced on the surface of the crystal. The next year, they observed the converse effect, the elongation of such crystals upon…
- Curie, Pierre (French chemist)
Pierre Curie was a French physical chemist, cowinner with his wife Marie Curie of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903. He and Marie discovered radium and polonium in their investigation of radioactivity. An exceptional physicist, he was one of the main founders of modern physics. (Read Marie
- Curie–Weiss law (physics)
magnetism: Magnetic properties of matter: This equation is called the Curie–Weiss law (after Curie and Pierre-Ernest Weiss, another French physicist). From the form of this last equation, it is clear that at the temperature T = θ, the value of the susceptibility becomes infinite. Below this temperature, the material exhibits spontaneous magnetization—i.e., it becomes ferromagnetic.…
- Curimato (fish)
South America: The Amazonian and Guianan forests: …of which is highly valued; coumarou (Curimato), which is a toothless vegetarian fish resembling the marine mullet; electric eel (Electrophorus electricus); pirarucu (Arapaima gigas), which can attain a length of 15 feet (4.5 metres) and a weight of 200 pounds (90 kg); and piranha, having teeth so sharp that they…
- curing (clothing manufacturing)
clothing and footwear industry: Curing: Curing consists of baking a garment or garment section in a heated chamber to either set creases in the fabric permanently or to decompose auxiliary media used as a sewing aid. For example, curing permanently sets previously pressed creases in certain permanent press, durable…
- curing (chemical process)
adhesive: Adhesive materials: …polymerization) can occur during a “cure” step, in which polymerization takes place simultaneously with adhesive-bond formation (as is the case with epoxy resins and cyanoacrylates), or the polymer may be formed before the material is applied as an adhesive, as with thermoplastic elastomers such as styrene-isoprene-styrene block copolymers. Polymers impart…
- curing (preservation process)
fish processing: Curing: Curing reduces water activity through the addition of chemicals, such as salt, sugars, or acids. There are two main types of salt-curing used in the fish industry: dry salting and pickle-curing. In dry salting the butchered fish is split along the backbone and buried…
- Curio, Gaius Scribonius (Roman statesman [died 53 BCE])
Gaius Scribonius Curio was a Roman statesman and orator, father of a noted politician of the same name. Curio opposed Saturninus in 100 bc, was tribune in 90 bc, and served in Sulla’s army in Greece against Archelaus, general of Mithradates, and as his legate in Asia, where he was commissioned to
- Curio, Gaius Scribonius (Roman politician [died 49 BCE])
Gaius Scribonius Curio was a Roman politician, partisan of Julius Caesar against Pompey. He was the son of a statesman and orator of the same name. Curio was elected tribune for the year 50 bc. When the Senate demanded that year that Caesar surrender his imperium before entering Rome, Curio
- Curiosa Americana (work by Mather)
Cotton Mather: …various American phenomena—published in his Curiosa Americana (1712–24)—won him membership in the Royal Society of London. His account of the inoculation episode was published in the society’s transactions. He corresponded extensively with notable scientists, such as Robert Boyle. His Christian Philosopher (1721) recognizes God in the wonders of the earth…
- curiosity (behavior)
creativity: Individual qualities of creative persons: A third crucial characteristic combines curiosity and problem seeking. Creative individuals seem to have a need to seek novelty and an ability to pose unique questions. In Defying the Crowd (1995), for example, the American psychologists Robert Sternberg and Todd Lubart likened the combined traits of autonomy and problem solving…
- Curiosity (Mars rover)
Curiosity, U.S. robotic vehicle, designed to explore the surface of Mars, which determined that Mars was once capable of supporting life. The rover was launched by an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on November 26, 2011, and landed in Gale crater on Mars on August 6, 2012. Curiosity is
- curiosity drive (behavior)
creativity: Individual qualities of creative persons: A third crucial characteristic combines curiosity and problem seeking. Creative individuals seem to have a need to seek novelty and an ability to pose unique questions. In Defying the Crowd (1995), for example, the American psychologists Robert Sternberg and Todd Lubart likened the combined traits of autonomy and problem solving…
- curiosity, cabinet of
freak show: …American entertainment known as the Dime Museum. Others, however, did not achieve such success and were instead, sometimes as involuntary performers, exploited by promoters and audiences.
- Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The (film by Fincher [2008])
Cate Blanchett: Hepburn, Dylan, and Academy Awards: …starred opposite Brad Pitt in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a drama about a man who ages backward. Two years later she appeared as Marion Loxley in Ridley Scott’s Robin Hood. The action drama starred Russell Crowe in the title role as the outlaw hero.
- Curious George (film by O’Callaghan [2006])
Joan Plowright: …movies included the children’s movies Curious George (2006), for which she supplied the voice of Miss Plushbottom, and The Spiderwick Chronicles (2008). She later had a cameo in the thriller Knife Edge (2009), which was her last feature film. She subsequently retired from acting because of macular degeneration, which ultimately…
- Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, The (novel by Haddon)
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, children’s book by British author Mark Haddon, published in 2003. Mathematical genius Christopher Boone is 15 and may have Asperger syndrome, a form of autism in which those who have it are often unable to interpret social or emotional cues from
- Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, The (play by Stephens)
Marianne Elliott: In 2012 she debuted The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Simon Stephens’s adaptation of Mark Haddon’s award-winning 2003 novel of the same name. The production drew acclaim for its innovative play-within-a-play structure and stunning visual effects that evoked the dreamlike, surreal nature of the story as…
- Curious Minds (novel by Evanovich and Sutton)
Janet Evanovich: Evanovich also wrote Curious Minds (2016; with Phoef Sutton) and Dangerous Minds (2017), both of which centre on the crime-solving duo of Riley Moon and Emerson Knight.
- Curious Savage, The (play by Patrick)
Lillian Gish: … (1946), Crime and Punishment (1947), The Curious Savage (1950), The Trip to Bountiful (1953), The Family Reunion (1958), All the Way Home (1960), I Never Sang for My Father (1967), and many others. Her last Broadway appearance was in A Musical Jubilee in 1975.
- Curitiba (Brazil)
Curitiba, city, capital of Paraná estado (state), southern Brazil. It lies about 3,050 feet (930 metres) above sea level near the Atlantic margin of the Brazilian Highlands and the headwaters of the Iguaçu River. It was founded in 1654 as a gold-mining camp, but the processing of maté (tea) and
- curium (chemical element)
curium (Cm), synthetic chemical element of the actinoid series of the periodic table, atomic number 96. Unknown in nature, curium (as the isotope curium-242) was discovered (summer 1944) at the University of Chicago by American chemists Glenn T. Seaborg, Ralph A. James, and Albert Ghiorso in a
- Curium (ancient city, Cyrpus)
Cyprus: Greek immigration: …ancient Greek kingdoms on Cyprus: Curium (Greek: Kourion), Paphos, Marion, Soli (Greek: Soloi), Lapithos, and Salamis. About 800 bce a Phoenician colony was founded at Citium (Greek: Kition), near modern Larnaca
- curl (mathematics)
curl, In mathematics, a differential operator that can be applied to a vector-valued function (or vector field) in order to measure its degree of local spinning. It consists of a combination of the function’s first partial derivatives. One of the more common forms for expressing it is: in which v
- Curl, Robert (American chemist)
Robert Curl was an American chemist who, with Richard E. Smalley and Harold W. Kroto, discovered buckminsterfullerene, a spherical form of carbon comprising 60 atoms, in 1985. The discovery opened a new branch of chemistry, and all three men were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their
- Curl, Robert Floyd, Jr. (American chemist)
Robert Curl was an American chemist who, with Richard E. Smalley and Harold W. Kroto, discovered buckminsterfullerene, a spherical form of carbon comprising 60 atoms, in 1985. The discovery opened a new branch of chemistry, and all three men were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their
- curl-leaf mountain mahogany (plant)
mountain mahogany: Common species: …mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus betuloides) and curl-leaf mountain mahogany (C. ledifolius) are both scaly-barked trees that may reach up to 9 metres (30 feet) in height. The true, or alder-leaf, mountain mahogany (C. montanus) is a long-lived shrub common to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains and is often heavily browsed…
- curled lettuce (vegetable)
lettuce: …into a compact head; (3) leaf, or curled, lettuce (variety crispa), with a rosette of leaves that are curled, finely cut, smooth-edged, or oak-leaved in shape; and (4) cos, or romaine, lettuce (variety longifolia), with smooth leaves that form a tall, oblong, loose head. There are two classes of head…
- curlew (bird)
curlew, any of numerous medium-sized or large shorebirds belonging to the genus Numenius (family Scolopacidae) and having a bill that is decurved, or sickle-shaped, curving downward at the tip. There are eight species. Curlews are streaked, gray or brown birds with long necks and fairly long legs.
- Curlew River (work by Britten)
Benjamin Britten: With the church parable Curlew River (1964), his conception of musical theatre took a new direction, combining influences from the Japanese Noh theatre and English medieval religious drama. Two other church parables, The Burning Fiery Furnace (1966) and The Prodigal Son (1968), followed. An earlier church-pageant opera, Noye’s Fludde…
- Curlewis, Ethel (Australian author)
Ethel Turner was an Australian novelist and writer for children, whose popular novel Seven Little Australians (1894) was filmed (1939), twice dramatized for television, once in Great Britain (1953) and once in Australia (1973), and made into a musical (1978). Turner’s parents immigrated with her to
- Curley, James Michael (American politician)
James Michael Curley was an American politician, one of the best known and most colourful big-city Democratic bosses, who dominated Boston politics throughout the first half of the 20th century. Reared in an Irish tenement neighbourhood, Curley never forgot the needs of new immigrants, and he owed
- curling (sport)
curling, a game similar to lawn bowls but played on ice. Two teams of four players (given the titles lead, second, third, and skip) participate in a curling match. Each player slides round stones, concave on the bottom and with a handle on the top, across the ice of a rink or a natural ice field
- Curll, Edmund (English bookseller)
Edmund Curll was an English bookseller remembered for his long quarrel with the poet Alexander Pope. Curll became a bookseller in 1705 and was set up in his own business by 1708. In 1716 he published Court Poems and suggested that Pope was one of the contributors. Pope, in an effort to suppress
- curly grass fern (plant)
fern: Annotated classification: …thickened cells; 2 genera (Schizaea and Actinostachys) with about 30 species, mostly tropical. Family Lygodiaceae Rhizomes long-creeping, hairy; leaves indeterminate in growth, climbing and often twining, the primary divisions alternate along the elongating stemlike rachis; sporangia often in 2 rows, densely spaced along specialized slender lobes of the
- curly mesquite (plant)
curly mesquite, (genus Hilaria), genus of about 10 species of grasses in the family Poaceae, native primarily to warm dry areas of southern North America. All the species are important range grasses; common curly mesquite (Hilaria belangeri) and James’s galleta (H. jamesii) are particularly
- curly pondweed (plant)
pondweed: …Europe and southern Asia, and P. crispus, of Europe but naturalized in the eastern United States and California. Cape pondweed, or water hawthorn (Aponogeton distachyos), of the family Aponogetonaceae, is native to South Africa and is grown as an ornamental in pools and greenhouses. Many species of those families serve…
- Curly Sue (film by Hughes [1991])
John Hughes: …he directed his last film, Curly Sue, in 1991. He produced Miracle on 34th Street (1994), a remake of the classic 1947 film, and New Port South (2001), a film written by his son James. Among the films he was credited with writing (under his pseudonym) were Maid in Manhattan…
- Curly Top (film by Cummings [1935])
Irving Cummings: …success to that time with Curly Top (1935), a remake of Mary Pickford’s Daddy-Long-Legs (1919). The family musical featured child star Shirley Temple, and the director and actress had another hit with Poor Little Rich Girl (1936), one of Temple’s strongest vehicles, thanks in part to the superior support of…
- curly top (plant disease)
curly top, viral disease affecting numerous cultivated and wild plants worldwide. Diseased plants are usually stunted or dwarfed and have thickened, yellowed, and bunched or curled leaves that frequently die early. Young plants often die quickly, and the disease can cause significant crop losses.
- curly-coated retriever (breed of dog)
curly-coated retriever, breed of sporting dog bred and trained to retrieve game both on land and in the water. Developed in England from water spaniels and retrievers, it is one of the oldest retriever breeds, first exhibited in the United Kingdom in 1860. Its distinctive coat is either black or
- Curme, George O. (American grammarian)
George O. Curme was an American grammarian and professor of German, best known for his Grammar of the German Language (1905, revised 1922) and for his Syntax (1931) and Parts of Speech and Accidence (1935)—the third and second volumes respectively of A Grammar of the English Language by Curme and
- Curme, George Oliver (American grammarian)
George O. Curme was an American grammarian and professor of German, best known for his Grammar of the German Language (1905, revised 1922) and for his Syntax (1931) and Parts of Speech and Accidence (1935)—the third and second volumes respectively of A Grammar of the English Language by Curme and
- Curnow, Allen (New Zealand author)
Allen Curnow was one of the major modern poets of New Zealand. The son of an Anglican clergyman, Curnow briefly attended Canterbury College before simultaneously studying theology at the College of St. John the Evangelist in Auckland and attending Auckland University College of the University of
- Curnow, Thomas Allen Monro (New Zealand author)
Allen Curnow was one of the major modern poets of New Zealand. The son of an Anglican clergyman, Curnow briefly attended Canterbury College before simultaneously studying theology at the College of St. John the Evangelist in Auckland and attending Auckland University College of the University of
- Curonian (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.
- Curonian Lagoon (gulf, Baltic Sea)
Curonian Lagoon, gulf of the Baltic Sea at the mouth of the Neman River, in Lithuania and Russia. The lagoon, with an area of 625 square miles (1,619 square km), is separated from the Baltic Sea by a narrow, dune-covered sandspit, the Curonian Spit (Lithuanian: Kuršiu Nerija; Russian: Kurskaya
- Curonian Spit (spit, Baltic Sea)
Curonian Lagoon: …a narrow, dune-covered sandspit, the Curonian Spit (Lithuanian: Kuršiu Nerija; Russian: Kurskaya Kosa), 60 miles (100 km) long and 1–2 miles (1.5–3 km) wide. A road along the spit connects resort and fishing villages. At its north end, the lagoon is connected to the Baltic Sea by a navigable strait,…
- Currach, An (plain, County Kildare, Ireland)
The Curragh, plain, or down, County Kildare, Ireland, noted for its excellent soils. Some 8 square miles (22 square km) in area, the down of Kildare apparently was an ancient meeting place, and The Curragh has been just such a common since at least the 12th century. The rich pastureland is renowned
- Currachee (Pakistan)
Karachi, city and capital of Sindh province, southern Pakistan. It is the country’s largest city and principal seaport and is a major commercial and industrial centre. Karachi is located on the coast of the Arabian Sea immediately northwest of the Indus River delta. The city has been variously
- curragh (boat)
coracle, primitive, light, bowl-shaped boat with a frame of woven grasses, reeds, or saplings covered with hides. Those still used, in Wales and on the coasts of Ireland, usually have a canvas and tar covering. American Indians used the similar bullboat, covered with buffalo hides, on the Missouri
- Curragh, The (plain, County Kildare, Ireland)
The Curragh, plain, or down, County Kildare, Ireland, noted for its excellent soils. Some 8 square miles (22 square km) in area, the down of Kildare apparently was an ancient meeting place, and The Curragh has been just such a common since at least the 12th century. The rich pastureland is renowned
- Curral del Rey, Serra do (mountain ridge, Brazil)
Belo Horizonte: …wide plateau encircled by the Curral del Rey Mountains, a hilly ridge forming the “beautiful horizon” for which the city was named. Belo Horizonte lies on the eastern edge of the sertão, or dry interior, of Brazil. The site was chosen in the late 19th century after the city of…
- Curran, Charles (British broadcasting administrator)
Charles Curran was a British broadcasting administrator best known for his leadership at the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Curran was a graduate of Magdalene College, Cambridge. He served in the Indian army during World War II and joined the BBC in 1947 as a producer of informative talks.
- Curran, John Philpot (Irish statesman)
John Philpot Curran was an Irish lawyer and statesman who is remembered as a great advocate and as a champion of Irish liberties. Although handicapped by small stature and a speech impediment, he soon became celebrated for his quick wit and courage in defending apparently hopeless cases. Though not
- currant (shrub)
currant, any of a number of flowering shrubs of the genus Ribes (family Grossulariaceae) and their edible fruits. The piquant juicy berries are used chiefly in jams and jellies and can be eaten fresh or dried. Several species are grown as garden ornamentals. Currants are natives of temperate
- currant borer (insect)
clearwing moth: The currant borer (Synanthedon tipuliformis) is the most widely distributed species of the family. Originating in Europe, it is now found in Asia, North America, Australia, and New Zealand. It is a serious pest of currants, gooseberries, black alders, and sumacs. The larvae overwinter in the…
- currant family (shrub family)
ribes: the gooseberries, constituting the family Grossulariaceae. They are native to the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, extending southward in the Americas into the Andes. Some authorities formerly separated the gooseberries as the genus Grossularia. The tart fruits of both groups are used in cooking and baking, and several species…
- currant tomato (fruit)
tomato: Physical description and cultivation: The tiny currant tomato (S. pimpinellifolium) is a closely related species and has been used by breeders to hybridize several pest- and disease-resistant tomato varieties.
- currawong (bird)
currawong, any of several songbirds of the Australian family Cracticidae (order Passeriformes). They are large, up to 50 centimetres (20 inches) long, with black, gray, or black-and-white plumage and yellow eyes. All have resounding, metallic voices. Found in woodlands and occasionally flocking
- Curren, Kevin (South African tennis player)
Boris Becker: …the finals, where he defeated Kevin Curren in four sets. Excelling on the fast grass surface, he won Wimbledon again in 1986 and 1989 and was a finalist there in 1988, 1990, 1991, and 1995. He won the Australian Open twice (1991, 1996) and the U.S. Open (1989). In international…
- currency (economics)
currency, in industrialized nations, portion of the national money supply, consisting of bank notes and government-issued paper money and coins, that does not require endorsement in serving as a medium of exchange; among less developed societies, currency encompasses a wide diversity of items
- Currency Act (Great Britain [1764])
United States: The tax controversy: …economic prospects by passing a Currency Act (1764) to withdraw paper currencies, many of them surviving from the war period, from circulation. This was not done to restrict economic growth so much as to take out currency that was thought to be unsound, but it did severely reduce the circulating…
- Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act (United States [1970])
Bank Secrecy Act, U.S. legislation, signed into law in 1970 by Pres. Richard Nixon, that requires banks and other financial entities in the United States to maintain records and file reports on currency transactions and suspicious activity with the government. The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA), sometimes
- currency board (economics)
money: After Bretton Woods: …19th-century system known as a currency board. In such a case there is no central bank and the exchange rate is fixed. Local banks increase the number of Hong Kong dollars only when they receive additional U.S. dollars, and they reduce the stock of Hong Kong dollars when U.S. dollar…
- currency of intervention (economics)
international payment and exchange: The IMF system of parity (pegged) exchange rates: …it to be called a currency of “intervention.”
- current (physics)
electric current, any movement of electric charge carriers, such as subatomic charged particles (e.g., electrons having negative charge, protons having positive charge), ions (atoms that have lost or gained one or more electrons), or holes (electron deficiencies that may be thought of as positive
- current (fluid flow)
jetty: …be narrowed to concentrate the current and thus help maintain a navigable channel. These structures—variously termed spurs, spur dikes, and groins—may also be projected from the concave side of a river to retard bank erosion.
- current account (accounting)
international payment and exchange: Balance-of-payments accounting: …of accounts used are the current account and the capital account.
- current asset (accounting)
corporate finance: …basic categories of investments are current assets and fixed assets. Current assets include cash, inventory, and accounts receivable. Examples of fixed assets are buildings, real estate, and machinery. In addition, the resource allocation function is concerned with intangible assets such as goodwill, patents, workers, and brand names.
- current density (physics)
electromagnetism: Effects of varying electric fields: …the total flux of the current density J through any surface surrounded by the closed path. In Figure 6A, the closed path is labeled P, and a surface S1 is surrounded by path P. All the current density through S1 lies within the conducting wire. The total flux of the…
- current gain (electronics)
semiconductor device: Bipolar transistors: The current gain for the common-base configuration is defined as the change in collector current divided by the change in emitter current when the base-to-collector voltage is constant. Typical common-base current gain in a well-designed bipolar transistor is very close to unity. The most useful amplifier…
- current liability (accounting)
accounting: The balance sheet: …liabilities are similarly divided into current liabilities and noncurrent liabilities. Most amounts payable to the company’s suppliers (accounts payable), to employees (wages payable), or to governments (taxes payable) are included among the current liabilities. Noncurrent liabilities consist mainly of amounts payable to holders of the company’s long-term bonds and such…
- current mark (geology)
sedimentary rock: Deformation structures: Current marks can form by the action of water currents on upper surfaces of the beds or by “tools” (such as wood and fossils) that are transported by currents over soft sediment.
- current meter (instrument)
V. Walfrid Ekman: The Ekman current meter, an instrument with a simple and reliable mechanism, has been used, with subsequent improvements, to the present, while the Ekman reversing water bottle is used in freshwater lakes and sometimes in the ocean to obtain water samples at different depths with a simultaneous…
- current mode (radiation detection)
radiation measurement: Current mode: One way to provide an electrical signal from such a detector is to connect its output to an ammeter circuit with a slow response time. If this response time is long compared with the average time spacing between current bursts, then the ammeter…
- current ratio (business)
business finance: Financial ratio analysis: This is known as a liquidity ratio. Financial leverage ratios (such as the debt–asset ratio and debt as a percentage of total capitalization) are used to make judgments about the advantages to be gained from raising funds by the issuance of bonds (debt) rather than stock. Activity ratios, relating to…
- Current River (river, United States)
Current River, river of southeastern Missouri and northeastern Arkansas, U.S. It rises in Montauk Spring in the Ozark Mountains, in Dent county, Missouri, and is fed by the Welch, Cave, Pulltite, Big, Blue, and Round springs as it flows about 225 miles (360 km) generally southeast into the Black
- Current TV (American company)
Al Gore: …achievement in interactive television for Current TV, a user-generated-content channel he cofounded in 2005; the channel was sold to Al Jazeera, an Arabic-language cable television news network, in 2013. That year Gore also published The Future: Six Drivers of Global Change, which analyzed the impact of various sociopolitical, technological, and…
- current U.S. governors
Each U.S. state is headed by a governor who serves as its chief executive. They are directly elected and share certain responsibilities. For instance, all governors implement state laws, pursue a legislative platform, and develop budgets. In addition, the governor acts as the state’s liaison with
- Current War, The (film by Gomez-Rejon [2019])
Benedict Cumberbatch: Doctor Strange and The Grinch: …Britain from the European Union; The Current War (completed in 2017 and released two years later), about the contest between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse to determine which electrical system would power the United States; and the World War I drama 1917, which was directed by Sam Mendes. Cumberbatch later…
- current-awareness service (library science)
library: Current-awareness service: The purpose of a current-awareness service is to inform the users about new acquisitions in their libraries. Public libraries in particular have used display boards and shelves to draw attention to recent additions, and many libraries produce complete or selective lists for circulation…
- curricle (carriage)
curricle, open, two-wheeled gentleman’s carriage, popular in England from about 1700 to 1850. It was pulled by two matched horses yoked abreast and was therefore equipped with a pole, rather than shafts. The pole had to be very strong because it both directed the carriage and bore its weight. To
- curricular validity (examination)
psychological testing: Primary characteristics of methods or instruments: …simply to see if its content seems appropriate to its intended purpose. Such content validation is widely employed in measuring academic achievement but with recognition of the inevitable role of judgment. Thus, a geometry test exhibits content (or curricular) validity when experts (e.g., teachers) believe that it adequately samples the…
- curriculum (education)
multiculturalism: Multiculturalism’s impact on education: …are found in revisions of curricula, particularly in Europe and North America, and the expansion of the Western literary and other canons that began during the last quarter of the 20th century. Curricula from the elementary to the university levels were revised and expanded to include the contributions of minority…
- curriculum vitae (summary of career)
curriculum vitae (CV), document that describes an individual’s qualifications and career history and typically constitutes the gateway to a job interview and potential employment. Derived from a Latin phrase that translates as “course of one’s life,” a curriculum vitae, or CV, highlights
- Currie Cup (rugby trophy)
rugby: South Africa: …between provincial teams for the Currie Cup, first given in 1891 by Sir Donald Currie.
- Currie, Brainerd (American legal scholar)
conflict of laws: Contemporary developments: …by the American legal scholar Brainerd Currie, began to emerge in the 1950s. Currie’s approach sought to determine whether a “true” or “false” conflict exists between the law of the forum state and that of the other involved state. A false conflict exists if the laws of both states do…
- Currie, Sir Arthur William (Canadian military commander)
Sir Arthur William Currie was the first Canadian commander, from 1917, of Canada’s overseas forces in World War I. Currie taught school before going into business in Victoria, B.C. He enlisted in the militia and rose from the ranks to become lieutenant colonel of artillery. In spite of this minimum
- Currie, Sir Donald (British shipowner and politician)
Sir Donald Currie was a shipowner and politician, founder of the Castle Line of steamers between England and South Africa, and later head of the amalgamated Union–Castle Line. After a number of years with the Cunard Steamship Line, Currie established the Castle Line of sailing ships between
- Currie, Steve (British musician)
T. Rex: Glam rock success: …conga drums and backup vocals, Steve Currie on bass, and Bill Legend on drums, released Electric Warrior, widely held to be the first glam rock album. Produced by Tony Visconti, who was known for his work with David Bowie, the album contained the hit “Get It On,” a glam rock…
- Currier & Ives (American company)
Currier & Ives, firm whose lithographs were among the most popular wall hangings in 19th-century America. The prints of Nathaniel Currier (b. March 27, 1813, Roxbury, Massachusetts, U.S.—d. November 20, 1888, New York, New York) and James Merritt Ives (b. March 5, 1824, New York, New York, U.S.—d.
- Currier, Nathaniel (American lithographer)
Currier & Ives: The prints of Nathaniel Currier (b. March 27, 1813, Roxbury, Massachusetts, U.S.—d. November 20, 1888, New York, New York) and James Merritt Ives (b. March 5, 1824, New York, New York, U.S.—d. January 3, 1895, Rye, New York), which typically depict the history and customs of the American…
- Curry (county, New Mexico, United States)
Curry, county, eastern New Mexico, U.S., a farming region in the High Plains, bordered on the east by Texas. It is an extremely flat area, varied only by a few canyons and dry creek beds. Black-Water Draw National Archaeological Site and Cannon Air Force Base are located in the county. The area has
- curry (food)
curry, (from Tamil kari: “sauce”), in Western usage, a dish composed with a sauce or gravy seasoned with a mixture of ground spices that is thought to have originated in India and has since spread to many regions of the world. The foundation of many Indian curries is a mixture of onion, ginger, and
- Curry, Ann (American journalist, television news reporter and anchor)
Ann Curry is an American journalist and television news reporter and anchor who was best known for her role as a correspondent on the Today show, a morning news program aired by the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC). Curry was noted especially for her reporting on humanitarian crises in war-torn
- Curry, Dell (American basketball player)
New Orleans Pelicans: …guard Muggsy Bogues and sharpshooter Dell Curry, but, like most expansion teams, they won few of their games. The team drafted forward Larry Johnson in 1991 and centre Alonzo Mourning in 1992, and the pair helped Charlotte to its first playoff appearance (and postseason series win) in the 1992–93 season.…
- Curry, Haskell Brooks (American mathematician)
Haskell Brooks Curry was an American mathematician and educator whose research in logic led to his theory of formal systems and processes as well as to the formulation of a logical calculus using inferential rules. Curry graduated from Harvard University in 1920 and received postgraduate degrees
- Curry, John (British figure skater)
John Curry was an English figure skater who redefined the sport with his elegant balletic style. Known as “the Nureyev of the ice,” he won the gold medal at the 1976 Olympic Games in Innsbruck, Austria. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on figure skating.) Curry had an early interest in