- Cárdenas, Bartolomé de (Spanish painter)
Bartolomé Bermejo was a painter, a cultivator of the Flemish style, who was considered the finest painter in Spain before El Greco. Bermejo helped introduce Renaissance style to Spain, and his work was emulated by many painters of his era. Little is known of Bermejo’s early activity. By the late
- Cárdenas, Cuauhtémoc (Mexican politician)
Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas is a Mexican politician and engineer who was the first elected mayor of Mexico City (1997–99). Cárdenas was born the year that his father, Gen. Lázaro Cárdenas, became president of Mexico, and he was raised within the confines of Los Pinos, the presidential palace. He earned a
- Cárdenas, Lázaro (president of Mexico)
Lázaro Cárdenas was the president of Mexico (1934–40), noted for his efforts to carry out the social and economic aims of the Mexican Revolution. He distributed land, made loans available to peasants, organized workers’ and peasants’ confederations, and expropriated and nationalized foreign-owned
- Cardenas, Victor Hugo (Bolivian politician)
Bolivia: Ethnic groups: (Victor Hugo Cardenas, an Aymara from the shores of Lake Titicaca, served as vice president of Bolivia in 1993–97, and in 2006 Evo Morales, also an Aymara, became the country’s first Indian president.)
- Cardenio (play attributed to Fletcher and Shakespeare)
Lewis Theobald: …Shakespearean play of 1613 called Cardenio, of which Theobald asserted that he possessed three copies. Those copies have disappeared, leaving scholars today to wonder if Double Falsehood can give some impression of that lost Shakespearean tragicomedy. Probably Shakespeare wrote Cardenio in collaboration with John Fletcher, his successor as chief playwright…
- Cardenio (play by Greenblatt and Mee)
Stephen Greenblatt: …with playwright Charles Mee on Cardenio, a play that reimagined a lost work by Shakespeare with that name (known only from historical references). The play then became the basis of a project whereby translated versions were interpretively staged and performed by theatre companies worldwide. The original version was staged in…
- Cardenio und Celinde (work by Gryphius)
Andreas Gryphius: von Georgien, Carolus Stuardus, and Cardenio und Celinde (all printed 1657), and Papinianus (1659). These plays deal with the themes of stoicism and religious constancy unto martyrdom, of the Christian ruler and the Machiavellian tyrant, and of illusion and reality, a theme that is used with telling effect in the…
- cardenolide (chemistry)
caterpillar: …plants produce compounds known as cardenolides, which are normally toxic to animals. Monarch larvae, however, are unaffected by the poison, and they are able to sequester the compound in their tissues. Because the poison stays with the insects as they mature through subsequent stages of development, they are toxic to…
- Cardew, Michael (English potter)
pottery: The artist-potter: One of Leach’s pupils, Michael Cardew, made excellent stoneware, which he often decorated with vigorous patterns drawn with a pleasing economy of outline. William Staite Murray, at one time the head of the ceramic department of the Royal College of Art, made some important and interesting stoneware and influenced…
- Cardi B (American rapper)
Cardi B is an American rapper who vaulted onto the music scene in the late 2010s with the release of the hit single “Bodak Yellow” (2017). With her spirited and unapologetic personality and empowering lyrics, she was especially popular among young women. In 2019 she became the first solo female
- cardia (anatomy)
human digestive system: Anatomy: …primarily as a reservoir for ingested food and liquids. The antrum, the lowermost part of the stomach, is somewhat funnel-shaped, with its wide end joining the lower part of the body and its narrow end connecting with the pyloric canal, which empties into the duodenum (the upper division of the…
- cardiac angiosarcoma (pathology)
Virgil Abloh: Louis Vuitton and later work: …he had been privately battling cardiac angiosarcoma, a rare cancer, for two years. In subsequent months, Off-White announced that Ibrahim Kamara, editor-in-chief of British fashion magazine Dazed, would become its new art and image director, and in 2023 Louis Vuitton chose American musician Pharrell Williams to replace Abloh as creative…
- cardiac arrest (pathology)
cardiac arrest, sudden loss of heart function, in which the regular contraction of the heart muscle unexpectedly stops, resulting in a loss of blood flow to vital organs. Cardiac arrest is a medical emergency. It is fatal in the vast majority of cases and is a significant cause of death worldwide.
- cardiac arrhythmia (pathology)
arrhythmia, variation from the normal rate or regularity of the heartbeat, usually resulting from irregularities within the conduction system of the heart. Arrhythmias occur in both normal and diseased hearts and have no medical significance in and of themselves, although they may endanger heart
- cardiac catheterization (medical procedure)
cardiac catheterization, medical procedure by which a flexible plastic tube (catheter) is inserted into an artery or vein. It is used for injecting drugs for therapy or diagnosis, for measuring blood flow and pressure in the heart and central blood vessels, in performing procedures such as
- cardiac cycle (physiology)
heart: This process is called the cardiac cycle. The period of relaxation is called diastole. The period of contraction is called systole. Diastole is the longer of the two phases so that the heart can rest between contractions. In general, the rate of heartbeat varies inversely with the size of the…
- cardiac disease (pathology)
heart disease, any disorder of the heart. Examples include coronary heart disease, congenital heart disease, and pulmonary heart disease, as well as rheumatic heart disease (see rheumatic fever), hypertension, inflammation of the heart muscle (myocarditis) or of its inner or outer membrane
- cardiac gastric gland (anatomy)
gastric gland: The cardiac gastric glands are located at the very beginning of the stomach; the intermediate, or true, gastric glands in the central stomach areas; and the pyloric glands in the terminal stomach portion. Both the cardiac and pyloric glands secrete mucus, which coats the stomach and…
- cardiac glycoside (pharmacology)
cardiovascular drug: Contractions: The cardiac glycosides, substances that occur in the leaves of the foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) and other plants, are the most important group of inotropic agents. Although they have been used for many purposes throughout history, the effectiveness of cardiac glycosides in heart disease was established in…
- cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (medicine)
cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR), three-dimensional diagnostic imaging technique used to visualize the heart and its blood vessels without the need for X-rays or other forms of radiation. Cardiac MRI employs a steady magnetic field, a radio-frequency transmission system, and computer
- cardiac MRI (medicine)
cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR), three-dimensional diagnostic imaging technique used to visualize the heart and its blood vessels without the need for X-rays or other forms of radiation. Cardiac MRI employs a steady magnetic field, a radio-frequency transmission system, and computer
- cardiac murmur (medical condition)
heart murmur, condition characterized by prolonged noises made by blood circulating through the heart. A heart murmur is often described as a swishing or hissing sound that occurs after the normal heartbeat sound and is audible through a stethoscope. Heart murmurs are classified into two types:
- cardiac muscle (anatomy)
cardiac muscle, in vertebrates, one of three major muscle types, found only in the heart. Cardiac muscle is similar to skeletal muscle, another major muscle type, in that it possesses contractile units known as sarcomeres; this feature, however, also distinguishes it from smooth muscle, the third
- cardiac output (physiology)
cardiac output, in human physiology, volume of blood expelled by either ventricle of the heart. It is customarily expressed as minute volume, or litres of blood per minute, calculated as the product of stroke volume (output of either ventricle per heartbeat) and the number of beats per minute.
- cardiac stomach (zoology)
malacostracan: Digestion and nutrition: The large anterior foregut, or cardiac stomach, occupies much of the posterior aspect of the head and the anterior thoracic body cavity. A constriction separates it from the smaller, more ventral, pyloric stomach that lies in the posterior part of the thorax. Lining the inside of the greatly folded and…
- cardiac tamponade (pathology)
pericarditis: …increase of pericardial fluid, called cardiac tamponade, may cause circulatory failure.
- cardiac vein (anatomy)
circulatory system: The blood vessels: Coronary veins generally run beside corresponding arteries but diverge from them to enter the main venous supply to the right atrium, or to the sinus venosus in fishes.
- Cardiff (Wales, United Kingdom)
Cardiff, city and capital of Wales. Cardiff exists as both a city and a county within the Welsh unitary authority system of local government. It is located within the historic county of Glamorgan (Morgannwg) on the Bristol Channel at the mouth of the River Taff, about 150 miles (240 km) west of
- Cardiff Castle (castle, Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom)
Western architecture: From the 19th to the early 20th century: In 1865, at Cardiff Castle in Wales, he began to interpret medieval architecture with merry and decorative freedom. The interiors of this building and of Castell Coch, built 10 years later, are a riot of decoration. His friend Edward Godwin, on the other hand, was more restrained; he…
- Cardiff Giant (hoax, United States)
Cardiff Giant, famous hoax perpetrated by George Hall (or Hull) of Binghamton, New York, U.S. A block of gypsum was quarried near Fort Dodge, Iowa, and shipped to Chicago, Illinois. There it was carved (1868) in the shape of a human figure and then buried on a farm near Cardiff, New York.
- Cardigan (Wales, United Kingdom)
Cardigan, town, Ceredigion county (historic county of Cardiganshire), southwestern Wales. It lies on the River Teifi, a short distance from its mouth on Cardigan Bay. The town grew up adjacent to a 12th-century Norman castle overlooking the Teifi. An arched bridge across the river is said to date
- Cardigan Bay (inlet, Irish Sea)
Cardigan Bay, scenic inlet of the Irish Sea indenting the west coast of Wales. It is about 65 miles (105 km) long from south-southwest to north-northeast. Two national parks, Snowdonia and Pembrokeshire Coast, incorporate substantial stretches of beach and cliff along the shoreline. Coastal resort
- Cardigan Welsh corgi (breed of dog)
Welsh corgi: The Cardigan Welsh corgi (see photograph), named for Cardiganshire, can be traced back to dogs brought to Wales by the Celts about 1200 bc. The original type was known as the Bronant and was related to the progenitors of the dachshund. The Pembroke Welsh corgi (see…
- Cardigan, James Thomas Brudenell, 7th Earl of, Baron Brudenell of Stonton (British general)
James Thomas Brudenell, 7th earl of Cardigan was a British general who led the charge of the Light Brigade of British cavalry against the Russians in the Battle of Balaklava, Oct. 25, 1854, during the Crimean War—an incident immortalized in Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem “The Charge of the Light
- Cardigan, James Thomas Brudenell, 7th Earl of, Baron Brudenell of Stonton (British general)
James Thomas Brudenell, 7th earl of Cardigan was a British general who led the charge of the Light Brigade of British cavalry against the Russians in the Battle of Balaklava, Oct. 25, 1854, during the Crimean War—an incident immortalized in Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem “The Charge of the Light
- Cardiidae (mollusk)
cockle, any of the approximately 250 species of marine bivalve mollusks, or clams, of the family Cardiidae. Distributed worldwide, they range from about one centimetre (0.4 inch) in diameter to about 15 centimetres (about 6 inches)—the size of the smooth giant cockle (Laevicardium elatum) of
- Cardijn, Joseph (Belgian cardinal)
Catholic Action: …workers by Father (later Cardinal) Joseph Cardijn.
- Cardillac (work by Hindemith)
Paul Hindemith: …of Mary”); and the opera Cardillac (1926), based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s Das Fräulein von Scuderi (“The Girl from Scuderi”). By the late 1920s Hindemith was regarded as the foremost German composer of his generation.
- Cardin, Ben (United States senator)
Ben Cardin is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Maryland the following year. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1987–2007). Cardin was born into a political family. His father, Meyer Cardin, was a lawyer
- Cardin, Benjamin Louis (United States senator)
Ben Cardin is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2006 and began representing Maryland the following year. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1987–2007). Cardin was born into a political family. His father, Meyer Cardin, was a lawyer
- Cardin, Pierre (French designer)
Pierre Cardin was a French designer of clothes for women and also a pioneer in the design of high fashion for men. Cardin’s father, a wealthy French wine merchant, wished him to study architecture, but from childhood he was interested in dressmaking. At 17 he went to Vichy, Fr., to become a tailor
- cardinal (common name for various bird species)
cardinal, any of various medium-size thick-billed species of songbirds of the New World, many with crested heads. The males all sport at least some bright red plumage. All species are nonmigratory and give clear whistled songs. One of the most popular, widespread, and abundant of the North American
- cardinal (bird)
northern cardinal, (Cardinalis cardinalis), common North American songbird species best known for its bright-red plumage, which occurs in the male, and classified in the family Cardinalidae (order Passeriformes). It can be found in a wide variety of habitats, including tall brush, vines, urban
- cardinal (Roman Catholicism)
cardinal, a member of the Sacred College of Cardinals, whose duties include electing the pope, acting as his principal counselors, and aiding in the government of the Roman Catholic Church throughout the world. Cardinals serve as chief officials of the Roman Curia (the papal bureaucracy), as
- cardinal bishop (Roman Catholic clergy)
cardinal: The cardinal bishops are the successors of the bishops of the sees just outside Rome. There were seven of these sees in the 8th century, but the number was later reduced to six. Prior to 1962 each of the cardinal bishops had full jurisdiction in his…
- cardinal camerlengo (Roman Catholicism)
cardinal camerlengo, in Roman Catholicism, one of the cardinals and key prelates of the Vatican who is appointed by the pope and is tasked with a specific series of functions in the crucial time of transition from one pope to his successor, including verifying the vacating pope’s death. The role of
- cardinal deacon (Roman Catholic clergy)
cardinal: The cardinal deacons are the successors of the seven regional deacons. By the 10th–11th century there were 18 deaconries in the city, and the reform of Urban II assigned a cardinal deacon to each of them. Originally, the order was limited to those who had advanced…
- cardinal des bouteilles, le (French cardinal)
Louis I de Lorraine, cardinal de Guise was the brother of François, 2nd duc de Guise. Named bishop of Troyes (1545) and of Albi (1550), he became in 1553 “cardinal de Guise”—to distinguish him from his brother, the eminent Charles, cardinal de Lorraine (q.v.). Unlike his brothers, he preferred the
- Cardinal Don Fernando Niño de Guevara (painting by El Greco)
El Greco: Later life and works of El Greco: …Felix Hortensio Paravicino (1609) and Cardinal Don Fernando Niño de Guevara (c. 1600). Both are seated, as was customary after the time of Raphael in portraits presenting important ecclesiastics. Paravicino, a Trinitarian monk and a famous orator and poet, is depicted as a sensitive, intelligent man. The pose is essentially…
- cardinal fish (fish)
cardinal fish, any fish of the family Apogonidae (order Perciformes), a group including about 200 species of small, typically nocturnal fishes found in tropical and subtropical waters. The majority of cardinal fishes are marine and live among reefs in shallow water. Some, such as Astrapogon (or
- cardinal flower (plant)
cardinal flower, (Lobelia cardinalis), perennial flowering plant of the genus Lobelia (family Campanulaceae) native to North and Central America. The plant bears spikes of scarlet, white, or pink lipped flowers on leafy stems up to 1.5 metres (5 feet) tall. Cardinal flowers are cultivated as
- cardinal number
continuum hypothesis: …of its elements, or its cardinality. (See set theory: Cardinality and transfinite numbers.) In these terms, the continuum hypothesis can be stated as follows: The cardinality of the continuum is the smallest uncountable cardinal number.
- cardinal priest (Roman Catholic clergy)
cardinal: …Cardinals is that of the cardinal priests, the successors of the early body of priests serving the title churches of Rome. Since the 11th century this order has been more conspicuously international than the orders of cardinal bishops and deacons, including the bishops of important sees from throughout the world.
- Cardinal Richelieu (film by Lee [1935])
Rowland V. Lee: Cardinal Richelieu (1935) was a well-mounted historical drama, with George Arliss as the crafty Richelieu and Edward Arnold as the manipulatable Louis XIII. Lee’s version of The Three Musketeers (1935)—which he also cowrote—suffered from a middling cast, but Love from a Stranger (1937; also known…
- cardinal rouge (bird)
northern cardinal, (Cardinalis cardinalis), common North American songbird species best known for its bright-red plumage, which occurs in the male, and classified in the family Cardinalidae (order Passeriformes). It can be found in a wide variety of habitats, including tall brush, vines, urban
- cardinal sin (theology)
mortal sin, in Roman Catholic theology, the gravest of sins, representing a deliberate turning away from God and destroying charity (love) in the heart of the sinner. A mortal sin is defined as a grave action that is committed in full knowledge of its gravity and with the full consent of the
- Cardinal Stritch University (university, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States)
Milwaukee: The contemporary city: University (1881), Alverno College (1887), Cardinal Stritch University (1937), the Medical College of Wisconsin (1893), Mount Mary University (1913), Milwaukee School of Engineering (1903), Milwaukee Area Technical College (1912), and the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (1885). Milwaukee has a symphony orchestra and ballet and opera companies, as well as other theatre…
- Cardinal system (navigation)
lighthouse: Buoyage systems: …systems divide buoys into Lateral, Cardinal, and associated classes. Lateral buoys are used to mark channels. In region A a can-profile (i.e., cylindrical) red buoy with a red light indicates the port (left) side of the channel when proceeding in the direction of buoyage, while a conical green buoy indicates…
- cardinal temperature (agriculture)
agricultural technology: Temperature: …three temperature points are the cardinal temperatures for a given plant; the cardinal temperatures are known for most plant species, at least approximately. Cool-season crops (oats, rye, wheat, and barley) have low cardinal temperatures: minimum 32° to 41° F (0° to 5° C), optimum 77° to 88° F (25° το…
- cardinal tetra (fish)
tetra: The cardinal tetra (Cheirodon axelrodi) of Brazil is similar but with more red on its body.
- cardinal vein (anatomy)
animal development: Circulatory organs: …heart through a system of cardinal veins. These latter veins start their development in the form of an irregular sinus around the pronephros, connected by the common cardinal veins (ducts of Cuvier), on either side, to the sinus venosus. Extensions anteriorly and posteriorly give rise to the precardinal and postcardinal…
- cardinal vowel (phonetics)
phonetics: Vowels: …eight vowels known as the cardinal vowels has been devised to act as reference points. This set of vowels is defined partly in articulatory and partly in auditory terms. Cardinal vowel number one is defined as the highest and farthest front tongue position that can be made without producing a…
- Cardinal’s College (college, Oxford, England, United Kingdom)
John Fell: …including his own college of Christ Church, where he built the bell tower and hung the celebrated Great Tom bell, which continues to toll nightly at 9 o’clock. He began the construction of the Sheldonian Theatre, installed the university press in it, set up a type foundry, and encouraged the…
- Cardinal, André (French composer)
André Cardinal Destouches was a French opera and ballet composer of the period between Jean-Baptiste Lully and Jean-Philippe Rameau. André Cardinal was the son of a wealthy Parisian merchant, Etienne Cardinal, Seigneur des Touches et de Guilleville, but he did not take any form of the patronym
- Cardinal, Marie (French author)
French literature: Feminist writers: La Bâtarde) and Marie Cardinal in Les Mots pour le dire (1975; The Words to Say It). Creative writers in the realist mode addressed a widening popular readership with accounts of the lives of women trapped in slum housing and dead-end jobs. Notable works in this mode include…
- Cardinal, The (film by Preminger [1963])
Otto Preminger: Later films: …Advise &Consent did for politics, The Cardinal (1963) tried to do for religion. The film followed a young Roman Catholic priest (Tom Tryon) over several decades as he endures a number of challenges to his religious convictions before he is elevated to cardinal. Dorothy Gish, John Huston, and Ossie Davis…
- Cardinale, Claudia (Tunisian actress)
Once upon a Time in the West: Jill (played by Claudia Cardinale) is a mail-order bride who arrives in the fictional town of Flagstone, Arizona, to find her new husband and his children murdered by a gunman named Frank (Fonda). Frank is in the employ of a railroad baron named Morton (Gabriele Ferzetti), who wants…
- Cardinalis cardinalis (bird)
northern cardinal, (Cardinalis cardinalis), common North American songbird species best known for its bright-red plumage, which occurs in the male, and classified in the family Cardinalidae (order Passeriformes). It can be found in a wide variety of habitats, including tall brush, vines, urban
- Cardinalis sinuatus (bird)
cardinal: The desert cardinal (C. sinuatus) is common to the thorn scrub of the American Southwest. Less showy than the northern cardinal, this gray bird with a red mask is also called pyrrhuloxia (formerly part of the bird’s scientific name, combining the Latin name for the bullfinch…
- cardinality
continuum hypothesis: …of its elements, or its cardinality. (See set theory: Cardinality and transfinite numbers.) In these terms, the continuum hypothesis can be stated as follows: The cardinality of the continuum is the smallest uncountable cardinal number.
- Cardinals (American baseball team)
St. Louis Cardinals, American professional baseball team established in 1882 that plays in the National League (NL). Based in St. Louis, Missouri, the Cardinals have won 11 World Series titles and 23 league pennants. Second only to the New York Yankees in World Series championships, St. Louis is
- Cardinals, Sacred College of (Roman Catholic Church)
Sacred College of Cardinals, the group of bishops and archbishops in the Roman Catholic Church who have been created cardinals by the pope. Its members serve as the pope’s key advisers and assistants in his administration of the church. According to the Code of Canon Law, the two most important
- carding (textile production)
carding, in textile production, a process of separating individual fibres, using a series of dividing and redividing steps, that causes many of the fibres to lie parallel to one another while also removing most of the remaining impurities. Carding may be done by hand, using hand carders (pinned
- carding machine (textile manufacturing)
carding machine, Machine for carding textile fibres. In the 18th century, hand carding was laborious and constituted a bottleneck in the newly mechanized production of textiles. Several inventors worked to develop machines to perform the task, notably John Kay, Oliver Evans, Lewis Paul, R.
- Cardini, Cesare (Italian-born restaurateur)
Caesar salad: …(1920–33), an Italian-born restaurateur named Cesare Cardini (1896–1956) moved his restaurant from San Diego, California, to Tijuana, Mexico, so that he could consume and serve alcohol without fear of legal retribution. His restaurant, known as Caesar’s, lay just across the U.S.-Mexican border and was popular with bibulous Americans as well…
- Cardioceras (fossil cephalopod genus)
Cardioceras, genus of ammonite cephalopods, extinct animals related to the modern pearly nautilus and characteristic as fossils in rocks of the Late Jurassic Period (about 161 million to 146 million years ago). The several species known are excellent index, or guide, fossils for Jurassic rocks,
- cardiogenic shock (pathology)
diagnosis: Emergency: …caused by inadequate blood volume, cardiogenic shock is caused by reduced heart function, and neurogenic shock and septic shock are caused by malfunction of the vascular system. This malfunction, which can be caused by severe allergic reaction such as anaphylaxis or by drug overdose, results in severely reduced peripheral vascular…
- cardioid microphone (electroacoustic device)
electromechanical transducer: Linearity and directivity: …common directional microphone is the cardioid microphone, so called because, when the intensity response as a function of angle is plotted on a polar graph, the curve is heart-shaped. A cardioid microphone is useful for recording live performances, where it is desirable to eliminate audience noise. A shotgun microphone has…
- cardiology (medicine)
cardiology, medical specialty dealing with the diagnosis and treatment of diseases and abnormalities involving the heart and blood vessels. Cardiology is a medical, not surgical, discipline. Cardiologists provide the continuing care of patients with cardiovascular disease, performing basic studies
- cardiomyopathy (pathology)
cardiomyopathy, any cardiac disease process that results in heart failure due to a decrease in the pumping power of the heart or due to an impairment in the filling of the cardiac chambers. Persons with cardiomyopathy frequently retain excess fluid, resulting in congestion of the lungs, and have
- cardiopulmonary bypass (medicine)
cardiovascular disease: Cardiopulmonary bypass: Cardiopulmonary bypass serves as a temporary substitute for a patient’s heart and lungs during the course of open-heartsurgery. The patient’s blood is pumped through a heart-lung machine for
- cardiopulmonary resuscitation (medicine)
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), emergency procedure for providing artificial respiration and blood circulation when normal breathing and circulation have stopped, usually as a result of trauma such as heart attack or near drowning. CPR buys time for the trauma victim by supplying
- cardiospasm (pathology)
esophagus: …gastric juices in the esophagus; achalasia, an inability to swallow or to pass food from the esophagus to the stomach, caused by destruction of the nerve endings in the walls of the esophagus; scleroderma, a collagen disease; and spasms of the esophageal muscles.
- Cardiospermum halicacabum (plant)
balloon vine, (species Cardiospermum halicacabum), woody perennial vine in the soapberry family (Sapindaceae) that is native to subtropical and tropical America. It is naturalized and cultivated widely as an ornamental for its white flowers and its nearly globular inflated fruits, which are about
- cardiotonic steroid (chemistry)
steroid: Cardiotonic steroids: ) Preparations in which cardiotonic steroids of both vegetable and animal origin are the active principles have been used as emetics, diuretics, and arrow poisons for centuries. The use of digitalis, ouabain, and strophanthin glycosides to slow the rate and strengthen the contractility of…
- cardiovascular disease
cardiovascular disease, any of the diseases, whether congenital or acquired, of the heart and blood vessels. Among the most important are atherosclerosis, rheumatic heart disease, and vascular inflammation. Cardiovascular diseases are a major cause of health problems and death. (Read Britannica’s
- cardiovascular drug
cardiovascular drug, any agent that affects the function of the heart and blood vessels. Drugs that act on the cardiovascular system are among the most widely used in medicine. Examples of disorders in which such drugs may be useful include hypertension (high blood pressure), angina pectoris (chest
- cardiovascular system disease
cardiovascular disease, any of the diseases, whether congenital or acquired, of the heart and blood vessels. Among the most important are atherosclerosis, rheumatic heart disease, and vascular inflammation. Cardiovascular diseases are a major cause of health problems and death. (Read Britannica’s
- Cardis, Treaty of (Sweden-Russia [1661])
Treaty of Cardis, (1661), peace settlement between Russia and Sweden, ending the war begun in 1656 and maintaining the territorial accords of the earlier Treaty of Stolbovo. See Stolbovo, Treaty
- Cardisoma guanhumi (crustacean)
land crab: Cardisoma guanhumi, a land crab of Bermuda, the West Indies, and the southern United States, lives in fields, swamps, and mangrove thickets. Some penetrate inland as far as 8 km (about 5 miles). Adults weigh about 0.5 kg (18 ounces) and measure about 11 cm…
- Cardlis (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
- cardoon (plant)
cardoon, (Cynara cardunculus), thistlelike perennial herb of the family Asteraceae, native to southern Europe and North Africa, where it is used as a vegetable. Its blanched inner leaves and stalk (called the chard, though not to be confused with Swiss chard, or leaf beet) and thick main roots are
- Cardoso, Fernando Henrique (president of Brazil)
Fernando Henrique Cardoso is a Brazilian sociologist, teacher, and politician who was president of Brazil from 1995 to 2003. Cardoso became a professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo in 1958, but the military government that took power in 1964 blacklisted him from teaching in the
- Cardoso, Lúcio (Brazilian novelist)
Brazilian literature: The novel: …with mid-20th-century novelists such as Lúcio Cardoso, whose Crônica da casa assassinada (1959; “Chronicle of the Assassinated House”) offered new introspective and psychological insights into the many dimensions of reality. Osman Lins, who began writing in the 1950s, built an oeuvre around the self-conscious process of writing in the context…
- Cardozo, Benjamin Nathan (United States jurist)
Benjamin Nathan Cardozo was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1932 to 1938. Cardozo was a creative common-law judge and legal essayist who influenced a trend in American appellate judging toward greater involvement with public policy and a consequent modernization of
- Cards of Identity (work by Dennis)
Nigel Dennis: …most notably in his novel Cards of Identity (1955).
- Carducci, Bartolommeo (Italian architect and sculptor)
Bartolommeo Carducci was an Italian-born painter, architect, and sculptor who was active in Spain. Carducci studied architecture and sculpture under Bartolommeo Ammannati and painting under Federico Zuccari. He accompanied Zuccari to Madrid, where he painted the ceiling of the Escorial library,
- Carducci, Giosuè (Italian poet)
Giosuè Carducci was an Italian poet, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1906, and one of the most influential literary figures of his age. The son of a republican country doctor, Carducci spent his childhood in the wild Maremma region of southern Tuscany. He studied at the University of
- Carducci, Vincenzo (Italian painter)
Vincenzo Carducci was an Italian-born painter. Carducci was the brother of artist Bartolommeo Carducci, whom he accompanied to Spain in 1585. Vincenzo succeeded his brother in 1609 as court painter to Philip III. Trained by his brother in the style of Italian Mannerism, he was one of the leading
- Carducho, Bartolomé (Italian architect and sculptor)
Bartolommeo Carducci was an Italian-born painter, architect, and sculptor who was active in Spain. Carducci studied architecture and sculpture under Bartolommeo Ammannati and painting under Federico Zuccari. He accompanied Zuccari to Madrid, where he painted the ceiling of the Escorial library,