- Caracciolo, Francesco, duca di Brienza (Italian admiral)
Francesco Caracciolo, duke di Brienza , duke di Brienza was a Neapolitan admiral who was executed on the orders of the British admiral Horatio Nelson for supporting the republican revolution at Naples in 1799. Considered a traitor by some Italians, he at first supported King Ferdinand IV of Naples
- Caracciolo, Giovanni (Italian courtier)
Joan II: Joan appointed her next lover, Giovanni Caracciolo (called Sergianni), as grand seneschal; he made peace with Sforza and appointed him grand constable. Nevertheless, Sforza supported Louis III of Anjou’s claim to the Neapolitan throne. Joan thereupon called on Alfonso V the Magnanimous of Aragon for aid, adopting him as her…
- Caracol (archaeological site, Belize)
Caracol, major prehistoric Mayan city, now an archaeological site in west-central Belize, 47 miles (76 km) southeast of the Guatemalan Mayan city of Tikal. The name is Spanish (meaning “snail”); the original Mayan name is unknown. Discovered in 1938 by a woodcutter, the ruins were first tentatively
- Caracol, El (observatory, Mexico)
astronomical observatory: …out the same practice at El Caracol, a dome-shaped structure somewhat resembling a modern optical observatory. There is again no evidence of any scientific instrumentation, even of a rudimentary nature.
- caracole (military tactic)
tactics: Adaptation of pike and cavalry tactics: …dance and known as the caracole. Insofar as they sacrificed the cavalry’s greatest advantages—namely, its mobility and sheer mass—such methods were never very effective. A much better system was to rely on combined arms, bombarding infantry formations with artillery (another 14th-century invention that began to make its impact felt on…
- Caracole (novel by White)
Edmund White: …he issued the bizarrely comic Caracole, about the bacchanalian escapades of the denizens of an imagined city. Some of White’s short fiction was collected as Skinned Alive (1995), in which he related tales of homosexual love, thwarted and requited, in the coruscating prose that was his trademark. With the publication…
- Caractacus (king of a large area in southern Britain)
Caratacus was the king of a large area in southern Britain, son of Cunobelinus. Caratacus was from the Catuvellauni tribe, but his kingdom included other peoples, most notably the Trinovantes. He ruled an area that embraced the Atrebates of Hampshire and probably the Dobunni of Gloucestershire. At
- Caracteres de Theophraste traduits du grec avec Les Caracteres ou les moeurs de ce siecle, Les (work by La Bruyère)
Jean de La Bruyère: …moeurs de ce siècle (1688; The Characters, or the Manners of the Age, with The Characters of Theophrastus), which is considered to be one of the masterpieces of French literature.
- Caractères originaux de l’histoire rurale française, Les (work by Bloch)
Marc Bloch: …de l’histoire rurale française (1931; French Rural History: An Essay on Its Basic Characteristics), is a rich, evocative study of France’s diverse field patterns and its forms of agrarian civilization from the Middle Ages to the French Revolution, drawing on the disciplines of agronomy, cartography, economics, geography, philology, psychology, sociology,…
- Caradeuc de la Chalotais, Louis-René de (French magistrate)
Louis-René de Caradeuc de La Chalotais was a French magistrate who led the Breton Parlement (high court of justice) in a protracted legal battle against the authority of the government of King Louis XV. The struggle resulted in the purging and suspensions (1771–74) of the Parlements. La Chalotais
- Caradoc (king of a large area in southern Britain)
Caratacus was the king of a large area in southern Britain, son of Cunobelinus. Caratacus was from the Catuvellauni tribe, but his kingdom included other peoples, most notably the Trinovantes. He ruled an area that embraced the Atrebates of Hampshire and probably the Dobunni of Gloucestershire. At
- Caradon (district, England, United Kingdom)
Caradon, former district, Cornwall unitary authority, England. It lies between Bodmin Moor and the English Channel in southeastern Cornwall. The River Tamar forms the boundary with Devon to the east. The district depends on Plymouth in Devon for many services and is linked to that city by road and
- Caradon of St. Cleer, Hugh Mackintosh Foot, Baron (British diplomat)
Hugh Foot was a British diplomat who led British colonies to their independence. Foot was the son of a Liberal member of Parliament, and his three brothers were also elected to Parliament. After attending the University of Cambridge (B.A., 1929) Foot entered the civil administrative service. After
- Carafa, Gian Pietro (pope)
Paul IV was an Italian Counter-Reformation pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs. Of noble birth, he owed his ecclesiastical advancement to the influence of his uncle Cardinal Oliviero Carafa. As bishop of Chieti, Carafa served Pope Leo X
- Carafa, Oliviero (Italian cardinal)
Donato Bramante: Roman period of Donato Bramante: …had come in contact with Oliviero Carafa, the wealthy and politically influential cardinal of Naples, who had a deep interest in letters, the arts, and antiquity. Carafa commissioned the first work in Rome known to be by Bramante: the monastery and cloister of Santa Maria della Pace (finished 1504). Bramante…
- carageenan extract (substance)
Irish moss: …moss is a gelatinous substance, carrageenan, which can be extracted by boiling. Carrageenan is used for curing leather and as an emulsifying and suspending agent in pharmaceuticals, food products, cosmetics, and shoe polishes. It is often harvested from shallow water by dredging with special rakes or obtained from broken fronds…
- Caragiale, Costache (Romanian actor)
Costache Caragiale was an actor-manager who helped to encourage the development of a unique Romanian drama. Caragiale made his stage debut in 1835 in Bucharest, and in 1838 he organized a theatre of contemporary drama in Iași (now Jassy). During the next 15 years he worked with regional theatres,
- Caragiale, Ion Luca (Romanian author)
Ion Luca Caragiale was a Romanian playwright and prose writer of great satirical power. Caragiale’s comedies expose the effects on Romanian urban society of the hasty introduction of a modern way of life and the comical results of social and political change. Conul Leonida (1879; “Mr. Leonida”), O
- Carajá (people)
Carajá, tribe of South American Indians living along the Araguaia River, near the inland island of Bananal, in central Brazil. Their language may be distantly related to Ge, which is spoken by most of the surrounding tribes. The three subtribes of the Carajá—the Carajá proper, the Shambioá, and the
- Carajás Mountains (mountains, Brazil)
mineral deposit: Iron deposits: …Labrador Trough deposits of Canada, Serra dos Carajas in Brazil, the Transvaal Basin deposits of South Africa, and the Hamersley Basin of Australia.
- Carajás, Serra dos (mountains, Brazil)
mineral deposit: Iron deposits: …Labrador Trough deposits of Canada, Serra dos Carajas in Brazil, the Transvaal Basin deposits of South Africa, and the Hamersley Basin of Australia.
- Caraka-saṃhitā (Indian medical text)
Charaka-samhita, comprehensive text on ancient Indian medicine credited to Charaka, who was a practitioner of the traditional system of Indian medicine known as Ayurveda. Charaka is thought to have flourished sometime between the 2nd century bce and the 2nd century ce. The Charaka-samhita as it
- Caraka-samhita (Indian medical text)
Charaka-samhita, comprehensive text on ancient Indian medicine credited to Charaka, who was a practitioner of the traditional system of Indian medicine known as Ayurveda. Charaka is thought to have flourished sometime between the 2nd century bce and the 2nd century ce. The Charaka-samhita as it
- Carales (Italy)
Cagliari, city, capital of the island regione of Sardinia, Italy. It lies at the northern extremity of the Gulf of Cagliari, on the south coast of the island. Although it was probably occupied in prehistoric times, its foundation is attributed to the Phoenicians. It was known to the Greeks as
- Caralis (Italy)
Cagliari, city, capital of the island regione of Sardinia, Italy. It lies at the northern extremity of the Gulf of Cagliari, on the south coast of the island. Although it was probably occupied in prehistoric times, its foundation is attributed to the Phoenicians. It was known to the Greeks as
- Caramanlis, Constantine (Greek statesman)
Konstantinos Karamanlis was a Greek statesman who was prime minister from 1955 to 1963 and again from 1974 to 1980. He then served as president from 1980 to 1985 and from 1990 to 1995. Karamanlis gave Greece competent government and political stability while his conservative economic policies
- carambola (fruit)
carambola, (Averrhoa carambola), woody plant of the wood sorrel family (Oxalidaceae) and its edible fruit, native to tropical Asia and extensively cultivated in tropical areas. Barely ripe carambola has a verjuicelike sharpness. As it ripens, it acquires notes of pear, melon, and gooseberry, with a
- caramel (candy)
caramel, candy substance obtained by boiling sugar to or beyond approximately 240 °F (115 °C), at which point its mass takes on a slightly yellowish colour and pleasantly burnt smell. Caramels vary in consistency between the short, or soft, and the long, or more chewy, types depending upon the
- caramelization (food processing)
candy: Caramels and toffee: This process is termed caramelization.
- Caramelo; o puro cuento (work by Cisneros)
Sandra Cisneros: …returned to long fiction with Caramelo; o, puro cuento (2002), a semiautobiographical work that echoes her own peripatetic childhood in a large family. Have You Seen Marie? (2012) concerns the efforts of a middle-aged woman to help her friend find a lost cat while meditating on her mother’s death. The…
- Caramúru: Poema épico do descubrimento da Bahia (poem by Durão)
José de Santa Rita Durão: …known for his long poem Caramúru. Durão was a pioneer in his use of the South American Indians as subjects of literature.
- Cāraṇ (Hindu caste)
Caran, Hindu caste of hereditary genealogists, bards, and storytellers located in Gujarat state in western India, historically associated with the Rajput caste of Rajasthan. Many of their customs are similar to those of their northern Indian counterparts, the Bhaṭs; both groups had a reputation of
- Caran (Hindu caste)
Caran, Hindu caste of hereditary genealogists, bards, and storytellers located in Gujarat state in western India, historically associated with the Rajput caste of Rajasthan. Many of their customs are similar to those of their northern Indian counterparts, the Bhaṭs; both groups had a reputation of
- Caran d’Ache (Russian-French caricaturist)
Caran d’Ache was a caricaturist and illustrator whose line drawing was notable for its crisp, forceful simplicity. The name Caran d’Ache transliterates the Russian word for pencil. He was educated in Moscow but settled in Paris, where he gained great popularity as a contributor to several
- Caranchos de la Florida, Los (work by Lynch)
Benito Lynch: His first important novel, Los caranchos de la Florida (1916; “The Vultures of La Florida”), deals with the conflict between a father, master of a cattle ranch, and his son, who has returned after study in Europe.
- Carangi, Gia (American fashion model)
Cindy Crawford: …the late top fashion model Gia Carangi, Crawford immediately secured work. Her big break came when she was chosen as the cover model for the August 1986 issue of Vogue, the leading fashion magazine, whose decision not to airbrush out the beauty mark above her upper lip—which many industry professionals…
- carangid (fish)
carangid, any fish of the family Carangidae (order Perciformes), which contains more than 200 species of marine fishes, including such well-known forms as the jacks and pompanos. Carangids are swift, predatory, usually silvery fishes found throughout the world in warm and tropical regions. They are
- Carangidae (fish)
carangid, any fish of the family Carangidae (order Perciformes), which contains more than 200 species of marine fishes, including such well-known forms as the jacks and pompanos. Carangids are swift, predatory, usually silvery fishes found throughout the world in warm and tropical regions. They are
- carangiform locomotion (biology)
locomotion: Carangiform and ostraciiform locomotion: Fish with fusiform bodies exhibit carangiform locomotion, in which only the posterior half of the body flexes with the passage of contraction waves. This arrangement of body form and locomotion apparently is the most efficient one, for it occurs in the most active and fastest of fish. The advantage of…
- Caranjee (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
- Caranqui (people)
pre-Columbian civilizations: The highlands and the low countries: The Karanqa also controlled corn (maize) fields at less lofty altitudes in what today is Chilean territory, several days’ walk away. Farther west and closer to the coast were their fruit and coca-leaf gardens. Finally, even farther north, across the Atacama Desert near the modern city…
- Caranx bartholomaei (fish)
jack: …warm Atlantic waters and the yellow jack (C. bartholomaei), which frequents warm Atlantic waters and is noted for its golden-yellow sides and fins.
- Caranx crysos (fish)
runner: The blue runner (Caranx crysos) is a shiny, greenish or bluish fish of the Atlantic. Like others in the family, blue runners have deeply forked tails. They are popular game fish that reach lengths of 60 cm (2 feet).
- Caranx hippos (fish)
jack: …game fish, such as the crevalle jack (C. hippos) of warm Atlantic waters and the yellow jack (C. bartholomaei), which frequents warm Atlantic waters and is noted for its golden-yellow sides and fins.
- Caranx speciosus (fish)
jack: …warm Atlantic waters and the yellow jack (C. bartholomaei), which frequents warm Atlantic waters and is noted for its golden-yellow sides and fins.
- carapace (biology)
boxfish: …by a hard, boxlike, protective carapace covering most of the body. The alternative name cowfish refers to the hornlike projections on the heads of some species. The members of the family, found along the bottom in warm and tropical seas throughout the world, are considered good to eat and are…
- Carapichea ipecacuanha (plant)
emetic: …from the dried roots of Carapichea ipecacuanha, a plant indigenous to Brazil and Central America.
- Carapidae (fish)
pearlfish, any of about 32 species of slim, eel-shaped marine fishes of the family Carapidae noted for living in the bodies of sea cucumbers, pearl oysters, starfishes, and other invertebrates. Pearlfishes are primarily tropical and are found around the world, mainly in shallow water. They are
- Carapus acus (fish)
paracanthopterygian: Life cycle and reproduction: In the Mediterranean pearlfish (Carapus acus), a member of the order Ophidiiformes (family Carapidae), clumps of eggs released by the female in late summer appear at the surface and hatch into a specialized larva, the vexillifer, which lives amid the plankton. After attaining a length of about…
- Caraquet (New Brunswick, Canada)
Caraquet, town and fishing port, Gloucester county, northeastern New Brunswick, Canada. It lies along Caraquet Bay (an inlet of Chaleur Bay), near the mouth of the Caraquet River, 42 miles (68 km) northeast of Bathurst. Founded about 1760 by shipwrecked French seamen, it is one of the province’s
- Caraș-Severin (county, Romania)
Caraș-Severin, județ (county), southwestern Romania. It is bounded on the south and west by Serbia. The Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians), including the ranges of Semenic, Cernei, and Poiana Rușcă, rise above settlement areas in the intermontane valleys. The eastward-flowing Danube River
- Carassius auratus (fish)
goldfish, (Carassius auratus), ornamental aquarium and pond fish of the carp family (Cyprinidae) native to East Asia but introduced into many other areas. The goldfish resembles the carp (Cyprinus carpio) but differs from its relative in having no mouth barbels. It was domesticated by the Chinese
- Carassius carassius (fish)
carp: Common carp: The crucian carp (Carassius carassius) is a barbel-less European relative of the goldfish. The common carp was introduced to North America as a sport fish and food fish during the middle of the 19th century, and it was farmed by private interests as well as by…
- carat (gem measurement)
carat, unit of weight for diamonds and certain other precious gems. Before 1913 the weight of a carat varied in different gem centres. Originally based on the weight of grains or leguminous seeds, which, of course, varied in size from place to place, the carat was equivalent to 0.2053 gram (3.168
- carat (gold measurement)
karat, a measure of the fineness (i.e., purity) of gold. It is spelled carat outside the United States but should not be confused with the unit used to measure the weight of gems, also called carat. A gold karat is 1 24 part, or 4.1667 percent, of the whole, and the purity of a gold alloy is
- Caratacus (king of a large area in southern Britain)
Caratacus was the king of a large area in southern Britain, son of Cunobelinus. Caratacus was from the Catuvellauni tribe, but his kingdom included other peoples, most notably the Trinovantes. He ruled an area that embraced the Atrebates of Hampshire and probably the Dobunni of Gloucestershire. At
- Caratasca Lagoon (lagoon, Honduras)
Caratasca Lagoon, lagoon in northeastern Honduras. The country’s largest lagoon, Caratasca extends inland from the Caribbean Sea for approximately 25 miles (40 km) and measures up to 55 miles (88 km) from northwest to southeast. It is linked to the Caribbean by a 3-mile (5-kilometre) channel, on
- Carathéodory, Constantin (Greek-German mathematician)
Constantin Carathéodory was a German mathematician of Greek origin who made important contributions to the theory of real functions, to the calculus of variations, and to the theory of point-set measure. After two years as an assistant engineer with the British Asyūṭ Dam project in Egypt,
- Carausius (insect)
insect: Reproduction: , the stick insect Carausius) rarely produce males, and the eggs develop without fertilization in a process known as parthenogenesis. During summer months in temperate latitudes, aphids occur only as parthenogenetic females in which embryos develop within the mother (viviparity). In certain gall midges (Diptera) oocytes start developing
- Carausius, Marcus Aurelius Mausaeus (Roman officer)
Marcus Aurelius Mausaeus Carausius was an officer in the Roman military service who created a short-lived independent state in Britain. Born in Menapia, a district between the Scheldt and Meuse rivers (now in Belgium), Carausius was a pilot by profession. He had won honour in the Roman war against
- Caravaca (Spain)
Caravaca, city in the provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Murcia, southeastern Spain, about 40 miles (65 km) west-northwest of Murcia city. The city’s churches include El Salvador (16th century), designed by Juan de Herrera, and La Santísima Cruz (1617), which once
- Caravaca de la Cruz (Spain)
Caravaca, city in the provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Murcia, southeastern Spain, about 40 miles (65 km) west-northwest of Murcia city. The city’s churches include El Salvador (16th century), designed by Juan de Herrera, and La Santísima Cruz (1617), which once
- Caravaggio (film by Jarman [1986])
Tilda Swinton: …her in her first film, Caravaggio (1986), an anachronistic biopic of the Renaissance painter. Owing to the improvisational, unstudied nature of her work during that period, she rejected being categorized as an actor. She appeared in eight of Jarman’s films, including The Last of England (1988), a commentary on the…
- Caravaggio (Italian painter)
Caravaggio was a leading Italian painter of the late 16th and early 17th centuries who became famous for the intense and unsettling realism of his large-scale religious works. While most other Italian artists of his time slavishly followed the elegant balletic conventions of late Mannerist
- Caravan (song by Tizol and Ellington)
Billy Eckstine: …among his recordings were “Caravan,” “Prisoner of Love,” “You Go to My Head,” and “That Old Black Magic.” Eckstine posthumously received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 2019.
- caravan (desert transport)
caravan, a group of merchants, pilgrims, or travelers journeying together, usually for mutual protection in deserts or other hostile regions. In the deserts of Asia and northern Africa, the animal most commonly used in caravans was the camel, because of its catholic appetite, its ability to go
- Caravan (American automobile)
automobile: From station wagons to vans and sport utility vehicles: …first example was the Dodge Caravan, which was quickly imitated by others and taken up overseas, where it was known as a multipurpose vehicle, or MPV. General Motors introduced a wholly new range of transverse-engine front-drive sedans in 1980, paving the way for this to become the dominant automotive architecture…
- Caravanche (mountains, Europe)
Karawanken, mountain range of the Eastern Alps, extending eastward along the Slovenian-Austrian border for 50 miles (80 km) from the town of Tarvisio in Italy. The range lies between the Drava River (north) and the upper Sava River (south) and rises to Hochstuhl (7,342 feet [2,238 m]) in the
- caravansary (building)
caravansary, in the Middle East and parts of North Africa and Central Asia, a public building used for sheltering caravans and other travelers. The caravansary is usually constructed outside the walls of a town or village. The structure is quadrangular in form and is enclosed by a massive wall that
- caravanserai (building)
caravansary, in the Middle East and parts of North Africa and Central Asia, a public building used for sheltering caravans and other travelers. The caravansary is usually constructed outside the walls of a town or village. The structure is quadrangular in form and is enclosed by a massive wall that
- Caravanserai (album by Santana)
Santana: With Caravanserai (1972) the group shifted toward jazz. Musicians began leaving the band—most notably Rolie and Schon, who formed Journey. Influenced in part by the philosophy of Sri Chinmoy, Carlos Santana continued excursions into jazz-rock with various musicians for several years before returning, on Amigos (1976),…
- caravel (ship)
caravel, a light sailing ship of the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries in Europe, much-used by the Spanish and Portuguese for long voyages. Apparently developed by the Portuguese for exploring the coast of Africa, the caravel’s chief excellence lay in its capacity for sailing to windward. It was also
- Caravelle (aircraft)
history of flight: The airlines reequip: …Sud-Est (later Aérospatiale) SE 210 Caravelle, a medium-range turbojet intended primarily for the continental European market. First flown on May 27, 1955, the Caravelle achieved sales of 282 aircraft, and a turbofan-powered variant was used for domestic routes by airlines in the United States—a marketing coup at the time. The…
- caraway (herb)
caraway, the dried fruit, commonly called seed, of Carum carvi, a biennial herb of the parsley family (Apiaceae, or Umbelliferae), native to Europe and western Asia and cultivated since ancient times. Caraway has a distinctive aroma reminiscent of anise and a warm, slightly sharp taste. It is used
- Caraway, Hattie (United States senator)
Hattie Caraway was an American Democratic politician who became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Hattie Wyatt grew up in her native Bakerville, Tennessee, and in nearby Hustburg. She graduated (1896) from Dickson Normal School and for a time thereafter taught school. In 1902 she married
- Caraway, Hattie Ophelia (United States senator)
Hattie Caraway was an American Democratic politician who became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Hattie Wyatt grew up in her native Bakerville, Tennessee, and in nearby Hustburg. She graduated (1896) from Dickson Normal School and for a time thereafter taught school. In 1902 she married
- Caraway, Thaddeus H. (United States senator)
Hattie Caraway: In 1902 she married Thaddeus H. Caraway, who subsequently became a congressman and then a U.S. senator for Arkansas.
- Carax, Léos (French director)
Juliette Binoche: …films with the French director Léos Carax, Mauvais sang (1986; Bad Blood) and Les Amants du Pont-Neuf (1991; Lovers on the Pont-Neuf), over the next few years. In 1988 she earned international acclaim as a woman married to a philanderer in The Unbearable Lightness of Being, her first English-language film.…
- Caray, Harry (American sportscaster)
Harry Caray was an American sportscaster who gained national prominence for his telecasts of Chicago Cubs baseball games on Chicago-based superstation WGN during the 1980s and ’90s. After failing to become a professional baseball player out of high school, Caray sold gym equipment before turning
- Carayol, Michel (French physicist)
nuclear weapon: France: Physicist Michel Carayol laid out what would be the fundamental idea of radiation implosion in an April 1967 paper, but neither he nor his colleagues were immediately convinced that it was the solution, and the search continued.
- Carazo Odio, Rodrigo (president of Costa Rica)
Rodrigo Carazo Odio was the president of Costa Rica (1978–82). A graduate in economics from the University of Costa Rica, Carazo entered politics as a member of the National Liberation Party (Partido de Liberación Nacional; PLN) and as a follower of then president, José Figueres Ferrer. He later
- carbaborane (chemical compound)
carborane, any member of a class of organometallic compounds containing carbon (C), boron (B), and hydrogen (H). The general formula of carboranes is represented by C2BnHn + 2, in which n is an integer; carboranes with n ranging from 3 to 10 have been characterized. The first carboranes were
- Carballo (town, Spain)
Carballo, town, A Coruña provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Galicia, northwestern Spain. It is located near the Atlantic coast, about 25 miles (40 km) southwest of A Coruña city. A market centre for cereals and dairy products, Carballo is known for the hot
- carbamate (chemical compound)
insecticide: Carbamates: The carbamates are a group of insecticides that includes such compounds as carbamyl, methomyl, and carbofuran. They are rapidly detoxified and eliminated from animal tissues. Their toxicity is thought to arise from a mechanism somewhat similar to that for the organophosphates.
- carbamazepine (drug)
mental disorder: Mood-stabilizing drugs: Carbamazepine, an anticonvulsant drug, has been shown to be effective in the treatment of mania and in the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder. It may be combined with lithium in patients with bipolar disorder who fail to respond to either drug alone. Divalproex, another anticonvulsant,…
- carbamide (chemical compound)
urea, the diamide of carbonic acid. Its formula is H2NCONH2. Urea has important uses as a fertilizer and feed supplement, as well as a starting material for the manufacture of plastics and drugs. It is a colourless, crystalline substance that melts at 132.7° C (271° F) and decomposes before
- carbamoyl phosphate (chemical compound)
metabolism: Disposal of nitrogen: …dioxide and ATP to form carbamoyl phosphate, ADP, and inorganic phosphate, as shown in reaction [30].
- carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (enzyme)
metabolism: Disposal of nitrogen: The reaction is catalyzed by carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. The carbamoyl moiety of carbamoyl phosphate (NH2CO―) is transferred to ornithine, an amino acid, in a reaction catalyzed by ornithine transcarbamoylase; the products are citrulline and inorganic phosphate [31]. Citrulline and aspartate formed from amino acids via step [26b] react to form…
- carbamoylaspartate (chemical compound)
metabolism: Pyrimidine ribonucleotides: …[30]) condense to form N-carbamoylaspartate (reaction [70]), which loses water in a reaction ([71]) catalyzed by dihydroorotase.
- carbanion (chemistry)
carbanion, any member of a class of organic compounds in which a negative electrical charge is located predominantly on a carbon atom. Carbanions are formally derived from neutral organic molecules by removal of positively charged atoms or groups of atoms, and they are important chiefly as chemical
- carbanion reactivity
organometallic compound: Carbanion character: …is frequently referred to as nucleophilic or carbanion character. Thus, organometallic compounds containing highly active (electropositive) metals, such as lithium, magnesium, aluminum, and zinc, react rapidly and completely with water, liberating a hydrocarbon in the process. For example, dimethylzinc liberates methane gas along with solid zinc hydroxide. Zn(CH3)2 + 2H2O…
- carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (bacterium)
Enterobacter: …to drug resistance, including against carbapenems, which were once highly effective against multidrug-resistant organisms. Newer approaches to Enterobacter infections have adopted combination-therapy regimens employing multiple antibiotics with different core structures, such as an aminoglycoside or a fluoroquinolone in combination with a beta-lactam agent. Despite the promise of this more diverse…
- carbaryl (chemical compound)
agricultural technology: Chemical control of insects: Malathion and carbaryl, for example, are used to control insects in areas where persistent materials might appear later in meat or milk and can also be applied in areas where fish and wildlife might be affected. Those two chemicals offer a broad range of toxicity to insect…
- carbene (chemistry)
carbene, any member of a class of highly reactive molecules containing divalent carbon atoms—that is, carbon atoms that utilize only two of the four bonds they are capable of forming with other atoms. Occurring usually as transient intermediates during chemical reactions, they are important chiefly
- Carbet Mountains (mountains, Martinique)
Carbet Mountains, volcanic mountain mass on the Caribbean island of Martinique, in the Lesser Antilles. The peaks are about 3.5 miles (6 km) from the west coast, standing between Saint-Pierre and Fort-de-France. They rise to 3,924 feet (1,196 metres) at Lacroix, 3,806 feet (1,160 metres) at Piquet,
- Carbet Peaks (mountains, Martinique)
Carbet Mountains, volcanic mountain mass on the Caribbean island of Martinique, in the Lesser Antilles. The peaks are about 3.5 miles (6 km) from the west coast, standing between Saint-Pierre and Fort-de-France. They rise to 3,924 feet (1,196 metres) at Lacroix, 3,806 feet (1,160 metres) at Piquet,
- carbide (chemical compound)
carbide, any of a class of chemical compounds in which carbon is combined with a metallic or semimetallic element. Calcium carbide is important chiefly as a source of acetylene and other chemicals, whereas the carbides of silicon, tungsten, and several other elements are valued for their physical
- carbide lamp
mining: History: …flint sparker made these so-called carbide lamps easy to light. In the 1930s battery-powered cap lamps began entering mines, and since then various improvements have been made in light intensity, battery life, and weight.
- carbidopa (drug)
dementia with Lewy bodies: Diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis: …that may be used include carbidopa and levodopa (commonly marketed as Sinemet), a dopamine precursor drug combination that addresses symptoms of parkinsonism, and cholinesterase inhibitors, which augment levels of acetylcholine. Other therapeutic approaches include physical therapy, speech therapy, and occupational therapy. Mental health counseling, support groups, and
- carbimazole (drug)
hyperthyroidism: Treatment of hyperthyroidism: …three widely used antithyroid drugs—methimazole, carbimazole (which is rapidly converted to methimazole in the body), and propylthiouracil. These drugs block the production of thyroid hormone but have no permanent effect on either the thyroid gland or the underlying cause of the hyperthyroidism. Patients with hyperthyroidism caused by Graves disease are…