- Dodecatheon (plant)
shooting star, in botany, any of several species of flowering plants formerly of the genus Dodecatheon and now placed in the genus Primula (family Primulaceae). The plants are mostly native to western North America, though one species is native to Asiatic Russia. Several species are
- dōdecatropos (Greek astrology)
astrology: Astrology in the Hellenistic period (3rd century bc to 3rd century ad): …genethlialogy each place in this dōdecatropos determines an aspect of the life of the native (one born under a particular sign); in other forms of astrology the place determines some appropriate aspect of the sublunar world.
- Dodeigne, Eugène (French sculptor)
Eugène Dodeigne was a Belgian-born French sculptor best known for his monumental stone figures, usually placed outdoors. Dodeigne was trained by his father, a stone mason, and attended the École des Beaux-Arts in Tourcoing and the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris. From the emaciated angularity of
- Dodekánisa (islands, Greece)
Dodecanese, group of islands in the Aegean Sea, off the southwestern coast of Turkey in southeastern Greece. The islands constituted a nomós (department) until 2011, when local government in Greece was reorganized and the islands were divided among four new perifereiakés enótites (regional units)
- Doderer, Heimito von (Austrian novelist)
Heimito von Doderer was an Austrian novelist who achieved international fame with his novel of post-World War I Vienna, Die Dämonen (1956; The Demons), on which he had worked since 1931. It explores the society and mood of Vienna in 1926–27 in a many-layered web of detail and complex
- dødes rige, De (work by Pontoppidan)
Henrik Pontoppidan: Pontoppidan’s great novel De dødes rige, 5 vol. (1912–16; “The Realm of the Dead”), shows his dissatisfaction with political developments after the liberal victory of 1901 and with the barrenness of the new era. His final novel, Mands Himmerig (1927; “Man’s Heaven”), describes neutral Denmark during World War…
- Dodeskaden (film by Kurosawa Akira [1970])
Kurosawa Akira: Later works of Kurosawa Akira: …of his films, Dodesukaden (1970; Dodeskaden). His first work in colour, a comedy of poor people living in slums, it recaptured much of the poignancy of his best works but failed financially. The period of personal despondency and artistic silence that followed ended in the mid-1970s when Kurosawa filmed Dersu…
- Dodesukaden (film by Kurosawa Akira [1970])
Kurosawa Akira: Later works of Kurosawa Akira: …of his films, Dodesukaden (1970; Dodeskaden). His first work in colour, a comedy of poor people living in slums, it recaptured much of the poignancy of his best works but failed financially. The period of personal despondency and artistic silence that followed ended in the mid-1970s when Kurosawa filmed Dersu…
- Dodge Brothers Company (American company)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge: The Dodge Brothers Company in 1910 established a large auto-parts plant in Hamtramck, Michigan. There the brothers made engines and other auto parts for the Ford Motor Company and for Olds Motor Works. In 1913 they began producing their own automobiles, and the first Dodge automobile…
- Dodge City (Kansas, United States)
Dodge City, city, seat (1873) of Ford county, southwestern Kansas, U.S., on the Arkansas River. Fort Dodge, 5 miles (8 km) east, was established in 1864 and named for Colonel Henry I. Dodge. Settled in 1872 with the arrival of the Santa Fe Railway, Dodge City attained notoriety as a frontier town
- Dodge Club; or, Italy in 1859, The (work by De Mille)
James De Mille: …novels of adventure, such as The Dodge Club; or, Italy in 1859 (1869); and historical romances, such as A Tale of Rome in the First Century (1867). Writings for young readers included the “B.O.W.C.” (“Brethren of the White Cross”) series, the first popular boys’ adventure stories produced in Canada. De…
- Dodge, Bernard Ogilvie (American botanist)
Bernard Ogilvie Dodge was an American botanist and pioneer researcher on heredity in fungi. After completing high school (1892), Dodge taught in district schools and eventually became a high school principal. At the age of 28 he resumed his formal education at the Milwaukee Normal School. He
- Dodge, Charles (American composer)
electronic music: Computer sound synthesis: Charles Dodge, a composer at Brooklyn College, has composed a number of scores that incorporate vocal sounds, including Cascando (1978), based on the radio play of Samuel Beckett, and Any Resemblance Is Purely Coincidental (1980), for computer-altered voice and tape. The classic musique concrète studio…
- Dodge, Grace Hoadley (American philanthropist)
Grace Hoadley Dodge was an American philanthropist who helped form organizations for the welfare of working women in the United States. Dodge was of a wealthy family long active in philanthropic work. A great-granddaughter of David L. Dodge, New York merchant and peace activist, and granddaughter
- Dodge, Grenville Mellen (American engineer)
Grenville Mellen Dodge was an American civil engineer who was responsible for much of the railroad construction in the western and southwestern United States during the 19th century. Educated at Durham (N.H.) Academy and Norwich (Vt.) University, Dodge graduated as a military and civil engineer in
- Dodge, Horace E. (American industrialist)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge: Horace Dodge was responsible for a number of manufacturing innovations, including an oven that could bake enamel onto steel auto bodies. By 1920, the year in which both brothers died, Dodge was one of the industry’s largest companies. The Dodge concern was purchased by Chrysler…
- Dodge, Horace E.; and Dodge, John F. (American industrialists)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge were American brothers and automobile manufacturers who invented one of the first all-steel cars in America. Bicycles were the first vehicles produced by the Dodge brothers. In 1901 they opened a machine shop in Detroit, making stove parts and, later, auto parts.
- Dodge, Horace Elgin (American industrialist)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge: Horace Dodge was responsible for a number of manufacturing innovations, including an oven that could bake enamel onto steel auto bodies. By 1920, the year in which both brothers died, Dodge was one of the industry’s largest companies. The Dodge concern was purchased by Chrysler…
- Dodge, John F. (American industrialist)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge: …first vehicles produced by the Dodge brothers. In 1901 they opened a machine shop in Detroit, making stove parts and, later, auto parts. The Dodge Brothers Company in 1910 established a large auto-parts plant in Hamtramck, Michigan. There the brothers made engines and other auto parts for the Ford Motor…
- Dodge, John Francis (American industrialist)
Horace E. Dodge and John F. Dodge: …first vehicles produced by the Dodge brothers. In 1901 they opened a machine shop in Detroit, making stove parts and, later, auto parts. The Dodge Brothers Company in 1910 established a large auto-parts plant in Hamtramck, Michigan. There the brothers made engines and other auto parts for the Ford Motor…
- Dodge, John V. (American editor)
John V. Dodge was an American editor and publishing executive of the Encyclopædia Britannica. A graduate of Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. (1930), Dodge also studied at the University of Bordeaux, France (1930–31). During World War II he served with U.S. Army Intelligence. He joined
- Dodge, John Vilas (American editor)
John V. Dodge was an American editor and publishing executive of the Encyclopædia Britannica. A graduate of Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. (1930), Dodge also studied at the University of Bordeaux, France (1930–31). During World War II he served with U.S. Army Intelligence. He joined
- Dodge, Joseph (American banker)
Ikeda Hayato: …strong deflationary policy recommended by Joseph Dodge, a Detroit banker sent by the U.S. government to study the economic difficulties of occupied Japan. Ikeda’s pursuit of “balanced financing” was helped along after 1950 by U.S. military contracts related to the Korean War. Under Prime Minister Yoshida, Ikeda played a leading…
- Dodge, Josephine Marshall Jewell (American educator)
Josephine Marshall Jewell Dodge was an American pioneer in the day nursery movement. Josephine Jewell was of a prominent family. She left Vassar College after three years in 1873 to accompany her father, who had just been appointed U.S. minister to Russia, to St. Petersburg. Returning to the United
- Dodge, Mary Abigail (American author and editor)
Mary Abigail Dodge was an American essayist and editor whose writings included works both of homely wit and in ardent support of women’s independence from men. In 1850 Dodge graduated from the Ipswich (Massachusetts) Female Seminary, and she remained there as a teacher until 1854. She taught
- Dodge, Mary Elizabeth Mapes (American author)
Mary Mapes Dodge was an American author of children’s books and the first editor of St. Nicholas magazine. As the daughter of an inventor and scientist, Mapes grew up in an environment where such prominent men as William Cullen Bryant and Horace Greeley were entertained. At 20 she married William
- Dodge, Mary Mapes (American author)
Mary Mapes Dodge was an American author of children’s books and the first editor of St. Nicholas magazine. As the daughter of an inventor and scientist, Mapes grew up in an environment where such prominent men as William Cullen Bryant and Horace Greeley were entertained. At 20 she married William
- Dodge, William E. (American industrialist)
William E. Dodge was an American merchant, cofounder of Phelps, Dodge & Company, which was one of the largest mining companies in the United States for more than a century. Descended from early New England settlers, Dodge began his career in the dry-goods business. In 1833 he and his father-in-law,
- Dodge, William Earl (American industrialist)
William E. Dodge was an American merchant, cofounder of Phelps, Dodge & Company, which was one of the largest mining companies in the United States for more than a century. Descended from early New England settlers, Dodge began his career in the dry-goods business. In 1833 he and his father-in-law,
- dodgeball (game)
dodgeball, children’s game that requires a large, soft rubber ball, the size of a volleyball or beachball, and several players. Ten or more makes a good game. Dodgeball has three basic forms: one team against another team; one player against all the other players; or every man for himself. A
- Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (film by Thurber [2004])
Jason Bateman: Later life and career: …host of film roles, including Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004), Starsky & Hutch (2004), The Break-Up (2006), Smokin’ Aces (2006), Juno (2007), Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008), Hancock (2008), Couples Retreat (2009),
- Dodger (book by Pratchett)
Terry Pratchett: Dodger (2012) relays the adventures of a young man in Victorian London, where he encounters a Dickensian array of characters—among them Charles Dickens himself. The Long Earth (2012; with Stephen Baxter) and The Long War (2013; also with Baxter) concern the ramifications of the discovery…
- Dodger Stadium (stadium, Los Angeles, California, United States)
Los Angeles: Planning and housing: …as the home of baseball’s Dodger Stadium. To ameliorate the housing problem, the city later adopted a rent-control law and enforced building codes against indifferent slumlords, but the supply of low-income units has continued to lag far behind the demand.
- Dodgers (American baseball team)
Los Angeles Dodgers, American professional baseball team based in Los Angeles that plays in the National League (NL). The team has won seven World Series titles and 24 NL pennants. Founded in 1883, the Dodgers were originally based in Brooklyn, New York, and were known as the Atlantics. The team
- Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (British author)
Lewis Carroll was an English logician, mathematician, photographer, and novelist, especially remembered for Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass (1871). His poem The Hunting of the Snark (1876) is nonsense literature of the highest order. Dodgson was the
- Dodik, Milorad (Bosnian politician)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Postwar Bosnia and Herzegovina: …president of the Republika Srpska, Milorad Dodik, was reelected, the Bosniak presidency passed to Bakir Izetbegović, the son of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s first president, Alija Izetbegović. Attracting younger voters to his campaign for reconciliation, he joined Bosnian Croat Pres. Željko Komšić as a moderating figure.
- Dodington, George Bubb, Baron Melcombe of Melcombe-Regis (British politician)
George Bubb Dodington, Baron Melcombe of Melcombe-Regis was an English politician, a career office seeker who was the subject of a satirical engraving by William Hogarth, “Chairing the Members” (1758), and kept a diary (published 1784) that remains one of the best sources on British politics of his
- dodo (extinct bird)
dodo, (Raphus cucullatus), extinct flightless bird of Mauritius (an island of the Indian Ocean), one of the three species that constituted the family Raphidae, usually placed with pigeons in the order Columbiformes but sometimes separated as an order (Raphiformes). The other two species, also found
- Dodoens, Rembert (Flemish physician and botanist)
Rembert Dodoens was a Flemish physician and botanist whose Stirpium historiae pemptades sex sive libri XXX (1583) is considered one of the foremost botanical works of the late 16th century. Dodoens received a medical degree from the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain) in 1535 and composed works
- dodoitsu (Japanese literature)
literature: Broad and narrow conceptions of poetry: …the sedōka has 38; the dodoitsu, imitating folk song, has 26. From the 17th century and onward, the most popular poetic form was the haiku, which has only 17 syllables.
- Dodoma (national capital, Tanzania)
Dodoma, city, designated national capital of Tanzania since 1974 (pending complete transfer of official functions from Dar es Salaam), eastern Africa, about 300 miles (480 km) inland (west) from the Indian Ocean. Situated at an elevation of 3,720 feet (1,135 metres) in a sparsely populated
- Dodona (ancient site, Greece)
Dodona, ancient sanctuary of the chief Greek god, Zeus, in Epirus, Greece; the ceremonies held there had many remarkable and abnormal features. The earliest mention of Dodona is in the Iliad (Book XVI, line 234), where its priests are called the Selloi (or Helloi) and are described as “of unwashen
- Dodonaea viscosa (plant)
Sapindales: Sapindaceae: Dodonaea viscosa (hopbush), a widespread tropical shrub, is cultivated in warmer areas for its colourful foliage. Akee is grown not only for its fruits but also as a shade tree.
- Dodonaeus, Rembertus (Flemish physician and botanist)
Rembert Dodoens was a Flemish physician and botanist whose Stirpium historiae pemptades sex sive libri XXX (1583) is considered one of the foremost botanical works of the late 16th century. Dodoens received a medical degree from the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain) in 1535 and composed works
- Dodsley, Robert (English author and publisher)
Robert Dodsley was a British author, London bookseller, publisher, playwright, and editor who was influential in mid-18th-century literary England and is associated with the publication of works by Samuel Johnson, Alexander Pope, Thomas Gray, and Oliver Goldsmith. Apprenticed to a stocking weaver,
- Dodson, Michael James (Australian activist and scholar)
Mick Dodson is an Australian Aboriginal political activist and scholar who was named the 2009 Australian of the Year in recognition of his work to help better the lives of the country’s Indigenous peoples and to promote reconciliation between Australia’s Indigenous and non-Indigenous residents.
- Dodson, Mick (Australian activist and scholar)
Mick Dodson is an Australian Aboriginal political activist and scholar who was named the 2009 Australian of the Year in recognition of his work to help better the lives of the country’s Indigenous peoples and to promote reconciliation between Australia’s Indigenous and non-Indigenous residents.
- Dodson, Owen (American author and educator)
Owen Dodson was an African-American poet, teacher, director, and playwright and a leading figure in black theatre. The son of a journalist, Dodson began writing poetry and directing plays while attending Bates College (B.A., 1936) and Yale University (M.F.A., 1939). As a U.S. Navy enlistee during
- Dodson, Owen Vincent (American author and educator)
Owen Dodson was an African-American poet, teacher, director, and playwright and a leading figure in black theatre. The son of a journalist, Dodson began writing poetry and directing plays while attending Bates College (B.A., 1936) and Yale University (M.F.A., 1939). As a U.S. Navy enlistee during
- Dodson, Patrick (Australian activist and politician)
Patrick Dodson is an Australian activist and politician who became one of Australia’s most influential Indigenous leaders and who is known as the “Father of Reconciliation.” A member of the Yawuru people, Dodson was the son of an Irish-Australian father and an Aboriginal mother. When Dodson was age
- Dodson, Patrick Lionel Djargun (Australian activist and politician)
Patrick Dodson is an Australian activist and politician who became one of Australia’s most influential Indigenous leaders and who is known as the “Father of Reconciliation.” A member of the Yawuru people, Dodson was the son of an Irish-Australian father and an Aboriginal mother. When Dodson was age
- Dodsworth (novel by Lewis)
Dodsworth, novel by Sinclair Lewis, published in 1929. The book’s protagonist, Sam Dodsworth, is an American automobile manufacturer who sells his company and takes an extended European vacation with his wife, Fran. Dodsworth recounts their reactions to Europeans and European values, their various
- Dodsworth (film by Wyler [1936])
Rudolph Maté: His other notable credits included Dodsworth (1936), Stella Dallas (1937), Love Affair (1939), My Favorite Wife (1940), and Gilda (1946).
- dodu (African art)
African art: Luba cultural area: …and have what is called dodu—that is, a stylistic tendency toward plumpness.
- Dodwell, C. R. (British editor)
Theophilus: Dodwell edited the definitive Latin text with an English translation in 1961.
- DOE (United States government)
U.S. Department of Energy, executive division of the U.S. federal government responsible for administering national energy policy. Established in 1977, it promotes energy efficiency and the use of renewable energy. Its national security programs serve to develop and oversee nuclear-energy
- doe (female goat)
goat: Females are called does or nannys, and immature goats are called kids. Wild goats include the ibex and markhor.
- Doe v. Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Richmond (law case)
Bowers v. Hardwick: Background: …(without comment) affirmance (1976) of Doe v. Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Richmond (1975), in which a district court in Virginia had upheld a state law prohibiting sodomy. The Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit reversed the Georgia district court’s decision, holding that the antisodomy statute violated Hardwick’s…
- Doe v. Purdue University (law case)
Amy Coney Barrett: In Doe v. Purdue University (2019), she held for the court that a male student who had been accused of sexual violence could sue his former university for allegedly denying him due process and discriminating against him on the basis of sex in violation of Title…
- Doe v. Unocal (law case)
Alien Tort Claims Act: Doe v. Unocal was settled in 2005 for an undisclosed sum.
- Doe, John (Panama Papers)
Panama Papers: Aftermath: …individual calling him- or herself John Doe published an 1,800-word statement explaining the reasoning behind the decision to release the documents. The writer said he or she was motivated by “massive, pervasive corruption” and the failure of governments worldwide to tackle the problem: “For fifty years, executive, legislative, and judicial…
- Doe, John (American musician)
X: ), bassist and singer John Doe (original name John Nommensen Duchac; b. February 25, 1953, Decatur, Illinois), guitarist Billy Zoom (original name Ty Kindell; b. February 20, 1948, Savanna, Illinois), and drummer D.J. Bonebrake (b. December 8, 1955, North Hollywood, California). Later members included Dave Alvin (b. November 11,…
- Doe, Samuel K. (president of Liberia)
Samuel K. Doe was a soldier and Liberian head of state from 1980 to 1990. Doe, a member of the Krahn (Wee) tribe, enlisted in the army at age 18. He rose through the ranks to become a master sergeant in 1979. Like other indigenous Liberians, Doe resented the privilege and power granted the
- Doe, Samuel Kanyon (president of Liberia)
Samuel K. Doe was a soldier and Liberian head of state from 1980 to 1990. Doe, a member of the Krahn (Wee) tribe, enlisted in the army at age 18. He rose through the ranks to become a master sergeant in 1979. Like other indigenous Liberians, Doe resented the privilege and power granted the
- Does the Tiger Wear a Necktie? (play by Petersen)
Al Pacino: Early career: …his performance in the play Does the Tiger Wear a Necktie? Pacino’s first leading role in a film came with The Panic in Needle Park (1971), a grim tale of heroin addiction that became something of a cult classic.
- Does Your House Have Lions? (poetry by Sanchez)
Sonia Sanchez: …Under a Soprano Sky (1986); Does Your House Have Lions? (1997); Shake Loose My Skin (1999); and Morning Haiku (2010). In 2018 Sanchez received the Academy of American Poets’ Wallace Stevens Award.
- Does, Johan van der (Dutch statesman)
Johan van der Does was a Dutch statesman, jonkheer (squire) of Noordwijk, poet, and historian who commanded the citizens’ resistance movement during the Spanish siege of Leiden (1573–74); he was also the first curator of the Leiden University. In recognition of his leadership during the siege, as
- Does, The (film by Chabrol [1968])
Claude Chabrol: … (1962; Bluebeard), Les Biches (1968; The Does), and Le Boucher (1969; The Butcher).
- Doesburg, Theo van (Dutch artist)
Theo van Doesburg was a Dutch painter, decorator, poet, and art theorist who was the leader of the De Stijl movement. Originally van Doesburg intended to pursue a career in the theatre, but he turned to painting about 1900. He worked in Post-Impressionist and Fauvist styles until 1915, when he
- DOF (technology)
petroleum production: Safety and the environment: This approach, commonly termed “digital oil field (DOF),” essentially allows remote operations by using automated surveillance and control. From a central control room, DOF engineers and operators monitor, evaluate, and respond in advance of issues. This work includes remotely testing or adjusting wells and stopping or starting wells, component…
- Döffingen, Battle of (German history)
Germany: Wenceslas: …of the Swabian League at Döffingen, near Stuttgart. The stipendiaries of the Rhenish League were put to flight by the count palatine Rupert II near Worms on November 6.
- dog (mammal)
dog, (Canis lupus familiaris), domestic mammal of the family Canidae (order Carnivora). It is a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus) and is related to foxes and jackals. The dog is one of the two most ubiquitous and most popular domestic animals in the world (the cat is the other). For more
- Dog (film by Tatum and Carolin [2022])
Channing Tatum: The Lego movies and Logan Lucky: …Carolin, his first feature film, Dog; he also starred in the heartfelt dramedy as a former soldier who takes a road trip with his military service dog. The movie was a success at the box office.
- dog (carpentry)
hand tool: Workbench and vise: …what are variously known as bench stops, holdfasts, or dogs. The stems of these T-shaped iron fittings were set into holes in the workbench, and a sharp end of the horizontal part of the T was turned to engage the wood.
- Dog Barking at the Moon (painting by Miró)
Joan Miró: Paris and early work: In paintings such as Dog Barking at the Moon (1926), he rendered figures of animals and humans as indeterminate forms. Miró signed the manifesto of the Surrealist movement in 1924, and the members of the group respected him for the way he portrayed the realm of unconscious experience. The…
- dog collar (jewelry)
choker: …that was soon dubbed the “dog collar.”
- Dog Day Afternoon (film by Lumet [1975])
Sidney Lumet: The 1970s: Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, and Network: …on another highly acclaimed drama, Dog Day Afternoon (1975), which was also based on a true event. Pacino starred as a man who tries to rob a bank in order to finance a gender-reassignment operation for his boyfriend (Chris Sarandon). A critical and commercial success, the drama received six Academy…
- dog days (meteorology)
dog days, periods of exceptionally hot and humid weather that often occur in July, August, and early September in the northern temperate latitudes. The name originated with the ancient Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians; they believed that Sirius, the dog star, which rises simultaneously with the Sun
- Dog Eat Dog (album by Mitchell)
Joni Mitchell: Later albums: …music, from the Thomas Dolby-produced Dog Eat Dog (1985) to the more reflective Night Ride Home (1991) and the Grammy Award-winning Turbulent Indigo (1994). Having dealt with international political and social issues such as Ethiopian famine on Dog Eat Dog, she returned by the early 1990s to more personal subject…
- dog field trial (dog sport)
field trial, any of the competitions among individual sporting dogs, under conditions that approximate or simulate those found in the hunting field. Competing dogs need not necessarily be of the same breed. In the United States many of the field trials in the bird-dog (pointing dog) category are
- dog flea (insect)
flea: Importance: …human flea (Pulex irritans), the dog flea (Ctenocephalides canis), the sticktight flea (Echidnophaga gallinacea), and the jigger, or chigoe, flea (Tunga penetrans). Poultry may be parasitized by the European chicken flea (Ceratophyllus gallinae) and, in the United States, by the western chicken flea (Ceratophyllus niger
- dog food (animal food)
beluga: as food for humans and dogs. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, it was taken commercially for its oil, flesh, and hides, which provided industrial leather, belts, and shoelaces. The beluga population in the Gulf of St. Lawrence was nearly exterminated for its hides, and some other beluga populations…
- Dog Fox Field (poetry by Murray)
Australian literature: Literature from 1970 to 2000: …volume of his work is Dog Fox Field [1990]), and Bruce Dawe, who evinced the Australian voice in his contemporary, journalistic poetry appearing in, for example, Sometimes Gladness (1978). Robert Gray continued the tradition of spare, almost Imagistic lyric verse in such volumes of his as Piano (1988) and Certain…
- Dog Husband (Native American myth)
Native American literature: Northwest Coast: …of myth are Bungling Host, Dog Husband, and Star Husband. In Bungling Host, Trickster, after seeing his host produce food in various ways (e.g., letting oil drip from his hands), fails to imitate the magic methods to procure food and barely escapes death. In Dog Husband, a girl has a…
- Dog King, The (novel by Ransmayr)
German literature: The turn of the 21st century: …Ransmayr’s powerful Morbus Kitahara (1995; The Dog King) is set in a dystopian landscape that resembles Mauthausen concentration camp and in an imagined alternative history in which Germany has not been permitted to redevelop its industrial capabilities following World War II. W.G. Sebald’s haunting novel Austerlitz (2001; Eng. trans. Austerlitz)—the…
- dog lichen (biology)
dog lichen, (species Peltigera canina), foliose (leafy) lichen usually found in patches 5 to 10 cm (2 to 4 inches) in diameter on heaths, sand dunes, walls, or grassy ground. The dull brown thallus with rounded lobes is soft when moist and papery when dry. Because its reproductive bodies resemble
- Dog Man (work by Pilkey)
Dav Pilkey: The graphic novels include Dog Man (2016), Dog Man and Cat Kid (2017), Lord of the Fleas (2018), Grime and Punishment (2020), and Mothering Heights (2021). Pilkey gave Cat Kid and a few other characters from Dog Man their own series of graphic novels. The titles include Cat Kid…
- Dog of Flanders, A (story by Ouida)
Ouida: …of animal stories, of which A Dog of Flanders (1872) was long a children’s favourite. Extravagance and the loss of her copyrights (reprints of her early novels continued to sell well but earned her nothing) reduced her to poverty in later life.
- Dog of Fo (Chinese art)
Lion of Fo, in Chinese art, stylized figure of a snarling lion. Its original significance was as a guardian presence in a Buddhist temple. Lions of Fo are often created in pairs, with the male playing with a ball and the female with a cub. They occur in many types of Chinese pottery and in Western
- Dog of the South, The (novel by Portis)
Charles Portis: …to the literary scene with The Dog of the South (1979). The picaresque novel follows a bookish man’s meandering journey from Arkansas to Belize in search of his estranged wife and his car. In the similarly episodic Masters of Atlantis (1985), Portis humorously skewered secret societies and cults with his…
- Dog Problem, The (play by Rabe)
David Rabe: …A Question of Mercy (1998); The Dog Problem (2002); The Black Monk (2004), based on a Chekhov short story; An Early History of Fire (first performed 2012); and Visiting Edna (2016).
- dog racing (sport)
dog racing, the racing of greyhounds around an enclosed track in pursuit of an electrically controlled and propelled mechanical hare (rabbit). Dog racing is a 20th-century outgrowth of the older sport of coursing, in which dogs hunted by sight rather than scent. O.P. Smith demonstrated dog racing
- dog salmon (fish)
chum salmon, (Oncorhynchus keta), lightly speckled North Pacific fish, family Salmonidae, weighing up to 15 kg (33 pounds). During the spawning season in autumn, it may swim more than 3,200 km (2,000 miles) up the Yukon River. (See also
- dog show
dog show, competition in which purebred dogs are judged on the basis of their physical perfection as determined by breed standards or on performance criteria such as agility, tracking, obedience, or herding. In some performance shows, “companion dogs” of mixed breeds are allowed to compete. Dog
- dog snapper (fish)
snapper: Some, however, such as the dog snapper (Lutjanus jocu) of the Atlantic, may contain a toxic substance and cause ciguatera, a form of poisoning. The better known species of snapper include the emperor snapper (L. sebae), a red and white Indo-Pacific fish; the gray, or mangrove, snapper (L. griseus), a…
- Dog Soldiers (Cheyenne military society)
Cheyenne: …and 7 military societies; the Dog Soldiers were the most powerful and aggressive of the military groups. There were also social, dance, medicine, and shamanistic societies; a given society was generally open to either male or female members but not to both.
- Dog Soldiers (novel by Stone)
Robert Stone: His second novel, Dog Soldiers (1974), concerns the legacy of corruption of the Vietnam War. It won the 1975 National Book Award, and Stone cowrote the screenplay for the film adaptation, Who’ll Stop the Rain (1978).
- dog sports
Dog sports are organized contests that provide physical exercise and mental stimulation for the animals, fun opportunities that allow dog owners to bond with their pets, and entertainment for spectators. There are numerous types of dog sports, as highlighted below. While some are better suited for
- Dog Star (star)
Sirius, brightest star in the night sky, with apparent visual magnitude −1.46. It is a binary star in the constellation Canis Major. The bright component of the binary is a blue-white star 25.4 times as luminous as the Sun. It has a radius 1.71 times that of the Sun and a surface temperature of
- dog team
American Subarctic peoples: Production and technology: Because dog teams require large quantities of meat, they were not kept to pull toboggans until the fur trade period, when people began to supplement their diets with European staples; after that point, dog teams became increasingly important in transporting furs to market. An idea of…