- Declaration of Independence (United States history)
Declaration of Independence, in U.S. history, document that was approved by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, and that announced the separation of 13 North American British colonies from Great Britain. It explained why the Congress on July 2 “unanimously” by the votes of 12 colonies (with
- Declaration of Independence in Congress, at the Independence Hall, Philadelphia, July 4th, 1776 (painting by Trumbull)
John Trumbull: …and, best known of all, Declaration of Independence. This series, which he completed in 1824, was based on the small and superior originals of these scenes that he had painted in the 1780s and ’90s. In 1831 Benjamin Silliman, a professor at Yale, established the Trumbull Gallery at Yale, the…
- Declaration of Independence, The (work by Becker)
Carl Becker: …of the Revolution (1918) and The Declaration of Independence (1922), he further probed the relationship between 18th-century natural-rights philosophy and the American Revolution.
- Declaration of Independence, The (painting by Trumbull)
John Trumbull: …and, best known of all, Declaration of Independence. This series, which he completed in 1824, was based on the small and superior originals of these scenes that he had painted in the 1780s and ’90s. In 1831 Benjamin Silliman, a professor at Yale, established the Trumbull Gallery at Yale, the…
- Declaration of Pillnitz (European history)
Declaration of Pillnitz, joint declaration issued on August 27, 1791, by Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II and King Frederick William II of Prussia, urging European powers to unite to restore the monarchy in France; French King Louis XVI had been reduced to a constitutional monarch during the French
- Declaration of Sentiments (1848)
Declaration of Sentiments, document, outlining the rights that American women should be entitled to as citizens, that emerged from the Seneca Falls Convention in New York in July 1848. Three days before the convention, feminists Lucretia Mott, Martha C. Wright, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Mary Ann
- Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens, The (work by Jellinek)
Georg Jellinek: …probably his best-known work is The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens (1895; originally in German), in which he hypothesized that the French Revolutionary declaration (approved by the National Constituent Assembly on August 26, 1789) was derived not so much from the writings of the French Enlightenment…
- Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (France [1789])
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, one of the basic charters of human liberties, containing the principles that inspired the French Revolution. Its 17 articles, adopted between August 20 and August 26, 1789, by France’s National Assembly, served as the preamble to the Constitution
- Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the [Female] Citizen (work by de Gouges)
Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the [Female] Citizen, pamphlet by Olympe de Gouges published in France in 1791. Modeled on the 1789 document known as the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the [Male] Citizen (Déclaration des droits de l’homme et du citoyen), Gouges’s manifesto
- declarative language (computer language)
computer programming language: Declarative languages: Declarative languages, also called nonprocedural or very high level, are programming languages in which (ideally) a program specifies what is to be done rather than how to do it. In such languages there is less difference between the specification of a program and…
- declarative memory (psychology)
memory: Long-term memory: …be classified as either “declarative” or “nondeclarative,” depending on whether their content is such that it can be expressed by a declarative sentence. Thus, declarative memories, like declarative sentences, contain information about facts and events. Nondeclarative memory, also known as procedural memory, is the repository of information about basic…
- Declaratory Act (Great Britain [1766])
Declaratory Act, (1766), declaration by the British Parliament that accompanied the repeal of the Stamp Act. It stated that the British Parliament’s taxing authority was the same in America as in Great Britain. Parliament had directly taxed the colonies for revenue in the Sugar Act (1764) and the
- Declaratory Act (Great Britain [1720])
Ireland: The 18th century: …trade, and in 1720 the Declaratory Act affirmed the right of the British Parliament to legislate for Ireland and transferred to the British House of Lords the powers of a supreme court in Irish law cases. By the end of the first quarter of the 18th century, resentment at this…
- declaratory judgment (law)
declaratory judgment, in law, a judicial judgment intended to fix or elucidate litigants’ rights that were previously uncertain or doubtful. A declaratory judgment is binding but is distinguished from other judgments or court opinions in that it lacks an executory process. It simply declares or
- declaratory theory of recognition (international law)
international law: Recognition: According to the “declaratory” theory of recognition, which is supported by international practice, the act of recognition signifies no more than the acceptance of an already-existing factual situation—i.e., conformity with the criteria of statehood. The “constitutive” theory, in contrast, contends that the act of recognition itself actually creates…
- declension (grammar)
Greek language: Morphology: …the vocative case, the Greek declension in the Mycenaean period still contained five cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, dative-locative, and instrumental. Between the Mycenaean period and the 8th century the instrumental ceased to exist as a distinct case, its role having been taken over by the dative.
- Déclin de l’empire américain, Le (film by Arcand [1986])
Denys Arcand: …Déclin de l’empire américain (The Decline of the American Empire). The movie, which was nominated for an Academy Award for best foreign-language film, centres on a gourmet dinner with a group of intellectuals—the same friends who would be featured in The Barbarian Invasions and starring many of the same…
- declination (compass)
navigation: The lodestone and the compass card: …but is now called the variation or declination. For a time, compass makers in northern countries mounted the needle askew on the card so that the fleur-de-lis indicated true north when the needle pointed to magnetic north. This practice died out about 1700 because it succeeded only for short voyages…
- declination (astronomy)
declination, in astronomy, the angular distance of a body north or south of the celestial equator. Declination and right ascension, an east-west coordinate, together define the position of an object in the sky. North declination is considered positive and south, negative. Thus, +90° declination
- declination axis (astronomy)
telescope: Light gathering and resolution: The polar axis supports the declination axis of the instrument. Declination is measured on the celestial sky north or south from the celestial equator. The declination axis makes it possible for the telescope to be pointed at various declination angles as the instrument is rotated about the polar axis with…
- Decline and Fall (novel by Waugh)
Decline and Fall, first novel of Evelyn Waugh, published in 1928, a social satire based on his own experiences as a teacher. The protagonist, Paul Pennyfeather, accepts passively all that befalls him. Expelled for indecent behaviour from Scone College, Oxford, he becomes a teacher. When taken up by
- Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, The (work by Gibbon)
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, historical work by Edward Gibbon, published in six volumes between 1776 and 1788. A continuous narrative from the 2nd century ce to the fall of Constantinople in 1453, it is distinguished by its rigorous scholarship, its historical perspective, and its
- Decline of the American Empire, The (film by Arcand [1986])
Denys Arcand: …Déclin de l’empire américain (The Decline of the American Empire). The movie, which was nominated for an Academy Award for best foreign-language film, centres on a gourmet dinner with a group of intellectuals—the same friends who would be featured in The Barbarian Invasions and starring many of the same…
- decline of the Ottoman Empire
decline of the Ottoman Empire, period of Ottoman history that followed the empire’s zenith in the 16th century until its dissolution in the 20th century. The Ottoman Empire saw a remarkable expansion in the 14th and 15th centuries. It reached its peak after the momentous capture of Constantinople—a
- Decline of the West, The (work by Spengler)
20th-century international relations: The search for a new stability: Oswald Spengler’s 1918–22 best-seller The Decline of the West mourned the engulfing of Kultur by the cosmopolitan anthill of Zivilisation and argued that only a dictatorship could arrest the decline. Sociologist Max Weber hoped for charismatic leadership to overcome bureaucracy. Much painting, music, and film of the 1920s illustrated…
- Decline of Western Civilization, The (film by Spheeris [1981])
X: …scene chronicled in the documentary The Decline of Western Civilization (1981). Capable of matching the fury of other punk bands, X excelled at melancholy ballads and flirted with pop music throughout its career, though its efforts to reach a broader audience on a major label were largely unsuccessful.
- decline phase (bacteria)
food preservation: Bacteria: …growth, the population enters the decline phase.
- Decliniidae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Decliniidae 1 genus (Declinia); found in eastern Russia and Japan. Family Eucinetidae About 25 widely distributed species; in rotten wood; example Eucinetus. Family Scirtidae, or Helodidae (marsh beetles)
- declining-charge depreciation (accounting)
accounting: Depreciation: …is recognized each year, and declining-charge depreciation, in which more depreciation is recognized during the early years of life than during the later years, on the assumption that the value of the asset’s service declines as it gets older. It is the responsibility of an independent accountant (the auditor) to…
- decoction mashing (beverage production)
beer: Mixing the mash: …programming, which is achieved by decoction mashing. After grist is mashed in at 35 to 40 °C (95 to 105 °F), a proportion is removed, boiled, and added back. Mashing with two or three of these decoctions raises the temperature in stages to 65 °C (149 °F). The decoction process,…
- decoder (telecommunications)
telecommunication: Channel encoding: …can be used by the decoder to determine where the errors have occurred and how to correct them. The second method of error control is called automatic repeat request (ARQ). In this method redundant bits are added to the transmitted information and are used by the receiver to detect errors.…
- Decoding the Sharpe ratio: A measure of risk vs. reward
Is your portfolio manager using risk appropriately?William F. Sharpe’s main contribution to finance was the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), which says that investment portfolios should be optimized to market risk, which he called beta. His later work built on that framework and was almost as
- Decodon verticillatus (plant)
loosestrife: Swamp loosestrife, water willow, or wild oleander (Decodon verticillatus) is a perennial herb native to swamps and ponds of eastern North America.
- decoherence (physics)
quantum computer: …interactions with the environment (decoherence), practical methods of detecting and correcting errors need to be devised; and, finally, since measuring a quantum system disturbs its state, reliable methods of extracting information must be developed.
- decoking (chemical engineering)
petroleum refining: Visbreaking, thermal cracking, and coking: Decoking is a routine daily occurrence accomplished by a high-pressure water jet. First the top and bottom heads of the coke drum are removed. Next a hole is drilled in the coke from the top to the bottom of the vessel. Then a rotating stem…
- decolonization
decolonization, process by which colonies become independent of the colonizing country. Decolonization was gradual and peaceful for some British colonies largely settled by expatriates but violent for others, where native rebellions were energized by nationalism. After World War II, European
- decolorization (chemistry)
sugar: Clarification and decolorization: Melt syrup is clarified either by phosphatation, in which phosphoric acid and lime are added to form calcium phosphates, which are removed by surface scraping in a flotation clarifier, or by carbonatation, in which carbon dioxide gas and lime form calcium carbonate, which is…
- decomposer (biology)
carbon cycle: …as CO2 by decay, or decomposer, organisms (chiefly bacteria and fungi) in a series of microbial transformations.
- decomposition (biology)
soap and detergent: Raw materials: …and, because the foam retards biological degradation of organic material in sewage, it caused problems in sewage-water regeneration systems. In countries where sewage water is used for irrigation, the foam was also a problem. Intensive research in the 1960s led to changes in the alkylbenzene sulfonate molecules. The tetrapropylene, which…
- decomposition reaction (chemistry)
chemical reaction: Decomposition reactions: Decomposition reactions are processes in which chemical species break up into simpler parts. Usually, decomposition reactions require energy input. For example, a common method of producing oxygen gas in the laboratory is the decomposition of potassium chlorate (KClO3) by heat
- decompression chamber
hyperbaric chamber, sealed chamber in which a high-pressure environment is used primarily to treat decompression sickness, gas embolism, carbon monoxide poisoning, gas gangrene resulting from infection by anaerobic bacteria, tissue injury arising from radiation therapy for cancer (see cancer:
- decompression sickness
decompression sickness, physiological effects of the formation of gas bubbles in the body because of rapid transition from a high-pressure environment to one of lower pressure. Pilots of unpressurized aircraft, underwater divers, and caisson workers are highly susceptible to the sickness because
- deconcentration (government)
local government: …the distinction sometimes drawn between deconcentration and decentralization. Local government is often, but not necessarily, related to the former; local self-government to the latter. These distinctions are important, even if they are blurred. Deconcentration broadly means that, for the sake of convenience, some functions have been devolved from a central…
- decongestant (drug)
decongestant, any drug used to relieve swelling of the nasal mucosa accompanying such conditions as the common cold and hay fever. When administered in nasal sprays or drops or in devices for inhalation, decongestants shrink the mucous membranes lining the nasal cavity by contracting the muscles of
- decongestive therapy (medicine)
lymphedema: …treatment for lymphedema is complete decongestive therapy (CDT), which has a two-phase course The first phase lasts several weeks and consists of a combination of skin care, compressive bandaging, exercise, and a form of massage called manual lymph drainage. The second phase of CDT favours self-treatment and the use of…
- DeConnick, Kelly Sue (American comic-book writer)
Captain Marvel: From Ms. Marvel to Captain Marvel and back: …crossover events, and, when writer Kelly Sue DeConnick and artist Dexter Soy relaunched Captain Marvel in July 2012, it was with Danvers in the title role. DeConnick did much to flesh out Danvers’s backstory, and Captain Marvel soon became the most prominent female hero in the Marvel Universe. In addition…
- Deconstructing Harry (film by Allen [1997])
Woody Allen: The 1990s and sexual-abuse allegations: In the darkly comic Deconstructing Harry (1997), Allen played a writer who has used his own life as the basis for his art, much to the displeasure of his friends and family. Celebrity (1998) followed. Shot in black-and-white by Nykvist—with a cast that included Kenneth Branagh, Leonardo DiCaprio, Winona…
- deconstruction (criticism)
deconstruction, form of philosophical and literary analysis, derived mainly from work begun in the 1960s by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida, that questions the fundamental conceptual distinctions, or “oppositions,” in Western philosophy through a close examination of the language and logic
- Deconstruction and Criticism (essays)
American literature: Theory: …publish a group of essays, Deconstruction and Criticism (1979). Two of the contributors, Paul de Man and J. Hillis Miller, became leading exponents of deconstruction in the United States. The other two, Harold Bloom and
- decontamination (medicine)
chemical weapon: On the battlefield: …have been found useful in decontaminating areas and people covered with chemical agents, including spraying with super tropical bleach (chlorinated lime) or washing contaminated surfaces or garments with warm soapy water. The challenge is finding and using a decontamination solution that is strong enough to neutralize the chemical agent without…
- décor bois (pottery)
décor bois, (French: “wood decoration”), in decorative arts, trompe l’oeil decoration of porcelain and faience to simulate grained and knotted wood with the likeness of an engraving “nailed” to it. This device appeared in the mid-18th century on cups, plates, and jars from the French factories of
- décor simultané (stage design)
multiple setting, staging technique used in medieval drama, in which all the scenes were simultaneously in view, the various locales being represented by small booths known as mansions, or houses, arranged around an unlocalized acting area, or platea. To change scenes, actors simply moved from one
- Decorated Gothic style (architecture)
Gothic art: High Gothic: …the Continent and as the Decorated Gothic (1300–75) style in England. This style was characterized by the application of increasingly elaborate geometrical decoration to the structural forms that had been established during the preceding century.
- Decoration Day (American holiday)
Memorial Day, in the United States, holiday (last Monday in May) honouring those who have died in the nation’s wars. It originated during the American Civil War when citizens placed flowers on the graves of those who had been killed in battle. More than a half dozen places have claimed to be the
- Decorations in Verse and Prose (work by Dowson)
Ernest Dowson: …of the Minute (1897), and Decorations in Verse and Prose (1899). His lyrics, much influenced by French poet Paul Verlaine and marked by meticulous attention to melody and cadence, turn the conventional world-weariness of the 1890s into a deeper sense of the sadness of things. Yeats acknowledged that much of…
- decorative art
decorative art, any of those arts that are concerned with the design and decoration of objects that are chiefly prized for their utility, rather than for their purely aesthetic qualities. Ceramics, glassware, basketry, jewelry, metalware, furniture, textiles, clothing, and other such goods are the
- Decorative Arts, Museum of (museum, Prague, Czech Republic)
Czech Republic: Cultural institutions: …in several locations), and the Museum of Decorative Arts (1885), the latter housing one of the world’s largest collections of glass. The Prague Zoological Garden is known for Przewalski’s horse, the last of a wild horse subspecies.
- Decorative Arts, Museum of (museum, Paris, France)
Albert Carrier-Belleuse: …of what later became the Museum of Decorative Arts, an institution that elevated the status of the applied arts in France. For his role in this he was made an officer of the Legion of Honour in 1855 and further elevated in 1867. His celebrated pupil, Auguste Rodin, assisted him…
- Decorative Figure on an Ornamental Background (painting by Henri Matisse)
Henri Matisse: Riviera years of Henri Matisse: …Odalisque with Magnolias (1923–24) and Decorative Figure on an Ornamental Background (1925–26), however, are masterpieces that deserve their popularity.
- decorum (literary style)
decorum, in literary style, the appropriate rendering of a character, action, speech, or scene. The concept of literary propriety, in its simplest stage of development, was outlined by Aristotle. In later classical criticism, the Roman poet Horace maintained that to retain its unity, a work of art
- DecoTurf (court surface)
U.S. Open: …clay; and since 1978, on DecoTurf, a fast hard-court surface comprising an acrylic layer over an asphalt or concrete base.
- decoupage (art)
decoupage, (French: “cutting out”), the art of cutting and pasting cutouts to simulate painting on a wood, metal, or glass surface. There are many variations in technique, but the four basic steps of decoupage generally are cutting out the pictures, arranging them to depict a scene or tell a story,
- Decoux, Jean (French governor-general of Indochina)
Jean Decoux was the governor-general of French Indochina for the provisional (Vichy) French government during World War II (1940–45). His reforms, which were designed to undermine Japanese influence in the area, unwittingly helped lay the groundwork for Vietnamese nationalist resistance to French
- decoy (military science)
decoy, deceptive device used to draw an enemy away from a more important target. Active decoys are the principal method of self-defense for military aircraft and intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). Passive decoys, or dummies, are used to deceive visual intelligence such as photo
- decreasing marginal utility (mathematics)
probability and statistics: Probability as the logic of uncertainty: …(a concept now known as decreasing marginal utility; see utility and value: Theories of utility).
- decree nisi (law)
interlocutory decree: …the United States or a decree nisi in England, for example, is a judicial decree pronouncing the divorce of the parties provisionally but not terminating the marriage until the expiration of a certain period. The purpose of requiring such a period of time is to discourage quick and easy divorce,…
- Decree on the Adapted Renovation of the Life of Religious (Roman Catholicism)
secular institute: …second Vatican Council, in its “Decree on the Adapted Renovation of the Life of Religious” (1965), called for secular institutes to remain constantly in touch with their original inspiration and yet adapt to the changing times.
- decree, interlocutory (law)
interlocutory decree, generally, a judicial decision that is not final or that deals with a point other than the principal subject matter of the controversy at hand. An interlocutory decree of divorce in the United States or a decree nisi in England, for example, is a judicial decree pronouncing
- decreolization (linguistics)
African American English: (Decreolization, or debasilectalization, is the process by which a vernacular loses its basilectal, or “creole,” features under the influence of the language from which it inherited most of its vocabulary. The basilect is the variety that is the most divergent from the local standard speech.)…
- decreta (Roman law)
constitutiones principum: …point of law, and (4) decreta, or decisions of the emperor sitting as a judge.
- decretal (Roman Catholicism)
decretal, a reply in writing by the pope to a particular question of church discipline that has been referred to him. In modern usage, such a document is referred to as a rescript (reply). Decretals issued in response to particular questions were authentic decisions for the case in question only
- Decretum (work by Ivo)
Saint Ivo of Chartres: …is displayed in his influential Decretum and his Panormia (17 and 8 books, respectively). His 288 letters reveal contemporary political, religious, and liturgical questions.
- Decretum Gelasianum (medieval document)
biblical literature: The Christian canon: The Decretum Gelasianum, a Latin document of uncertain authorship but recognized as reflecting the views of the Roman church at the beginning of the 6th century, includes Tobit, Judith, the Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, and I and II Maccabees as biblical.
- Decretum Gratiani (canon law)
Gratian’s Decretum, collection of nearly 3,800 texts touching on all areas of church discipline and regulation compiled by the Benedictine monk Gratian about 1140. It soon became the basic text on which the masters of canon law lectured and commented in the universities. The work is not just a
- Decroly method (education)
education: Child-centred education: The Decroly method was essentially a program of work based on centres of interest and educative games. Its basic feature was the workshop-classroom, in which children freely went about their own occupations. Behind the complex of individual activities was a carefully organized scheme of work based…
- Decroly, Ovide (Belgian educator)
Ovide Decroly was a Belgian pioneer in the education of children, including those with physical disabilities. Through his work as a physician, Decroly became involved in a school for disabled children and consequently became interested in education. One outcome of this interest was his
- Decroux, Étienne-Marcel (French mime)
Michael Meschke: …(1953–54), studying with the mime Étienne Decroux, and became a close friend of the mime Marcel Marceau.
- decryption (communications)
data encryption: Conversely, decryption, or decipherment, is the process of converting ciphertext back into its original format. Manual encryption has been used since Roman times, but the term has become associated with the disguising of information via electronic computers. Encryption is a process basic to cryptology.
- DECT system
telephone: Personal communication systems: …(Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications, formerly Digital European Cordless Telephone). The DECT system was designed initially to provide cordless telephone service for office environments, but its scope soon broadened to include campus-wide communications and telepoint services. By 1999 DECT had reached 50 percent of the European cordless market.
- decubitus ulcer (ulceration)
bedsore, an ulceration of skin and underlying tissue caused by pressure that limits the blood supply to the affected area. As the name indicates, bedsores are a particular affliction for persons who have been bedridden for a long time. The interference with normal blood flow is caused by the
- decurio (ancient Roman official)
decurio, in ancient Rome, the head of a group of 10. The title had two applications, one civil, the other military. In the first usage decurio was applied to a member of the local council or senate of a colonia (a community established by Roman citizens and having full citizenship rights) or a
- decuriones (ancient Roman official)
decurio, in ancient Rome, the head of a group of 10. The title had two applications, one civil, the other military. In the first usage decurio was applied to a member of the local council or senate of a colonia (a community established by Roman citizens and having full citizenship rights) or a
- Dedalus, Stephen (fictional character)
Stephen Dedalus, fictional character, the protagonist of James Joyce’s autobiographical novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) and a central character in his novel Ulysses (1922). The name Stephen intentionally recalls St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr. Joyce gave his hero the
- Dedān (Saudi Arabia)
history of Arabia: Prehistory and archaeology: …the northern Hejaz, such as Dedān (now Al-ʿUlā), Al-Ḥijr (now Madāʾin Ṣāliḥ, barely six miles north of Dedān), and Taymāʾ to the northeast of the other two, have long been known but not fully explored. In south-central Arabia, near Al-Sulayyil, a town site at Qaryat Dhāt Kāhil (now Qaryat al-Fāw)…
- Dede Korkut (literary character)
Islamic arts: Popular literature: …the traditional Turkish tale of Dede Korkut, were preserved by storytellers who improvised certain parts of their tales (which were written down only afterward). Also, the role of the Sufi orders and of the artisans’ lodges in preserving and transmitting such semihistorical popular epics seems to have been considerable. Apart…
- Dedeagac (Greece)
Alexandroúpoli, seaport and dímos (municipality), East Macedonia and Thrace (Modern Greek: Anatolikí Makedonía kai Thráki) periféreia (region), northeastern Greece. It is situated in the Greek portion of the ancient and modern region of Thrace northwest of the Maritsa (Évros) River estuary on the
- Dededo (Guam)
Guam: Major settlements are Dededo, in the north-central part of the island, Machanao, in the north, and Apotgan, on the west coast.
- Dedekind cut (mathematics)
Dedekind cut, in mathematics, concept advanced in 1872 by the German mathematician Richard Dedekind that combines an arithmetic formulation of the idea of continuity with a rigorous distinction between rational and irrational numbers. Dedekind reasoned that the real numbers form an ordered
- Dedekind, Julius Wilhelm Richard (German mathematician)
Richard Dedekind was a German mathematician who developed a major redefinition of irrational numbers in terms of arithmetic concepts. Although not fully recognized in his lifetime, his treatment of the ideas of the infinite and of what constitutes a real number continues to influence modern
- Dedekind, Richard (German mathematician)
Richard Dedekind was a German mathematician who developed a major redefinition of irrational numbers in terms of arithmetic concepts. Although not fully recognized in his lifetime, his treatment of the ideas of the infinite and of what constitutes a real number continues to influence modern
- Dedford (Rhode Island, United States)
East Greenwich, town (township), Kent county, central Rhode Island, U.S., on Greenwich Bay, south of Providence city. It was settled and incorporated as a town in 1677, following King Philip’s (Indian) War. Called Dedford in 1686–89, it was renamed for Greenwich in London. Farming, fishing, pottery
- Dedham (Massachusetts, United States)
Dedham, town (township), Norfolk county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S., on the Charles River, just southwest of Boston. One of the oldest inland settlements of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, it was founded in 1635 and named for Dedham, Essex, England, and incorporated in 1636. Its Fairbanks House
- Dedham Vale: Morning (painting by Constable)
John Constable: Early maturity: …painting of the period was Dedham Vale: Morning (1811), which married closely observed naturalistic effect to a scene composed according to the academic criteria established by 17th-century French painter Claude Lorrain.
- Dedicated Follower of Fashion (song by Davies)
Ray Davies: Life as a Kink: …in the 1960s were “Dedicated Follower of Fashion” (1966), which skewered blind obedience to the Carnaby Street-dictated fashion trends in “Swinging London,” and the melancholy view-from-a-window paean “Waterloo Sunset” (1967), which esteemed rock critic Robert Christgau called “the most beautiful song in the English language.” Veering from the group’s…
- Dedicated to the One I Love (song by Pauling and Bass)
the Shirelles: “Dedicated to the One I Love,” “Mama Said,” and “Baby It’s You” were all Top Ten hits. Following their most successful song, “Soldier Boy” (1962), cowritten by their principal collaborator, producer Luther Dixon, the Shirelles’ popularity waned—partly because of Dixon’s departure and partly because of…
- Dedication or the Stuff of Dreams (play by McNally)
Nathan Lane: (2003), Butley (2003, 2006–07), and Dedication or the Stuff of Dreams (2005). From 2005 to 2006 he appeared in a remake of Simon’s The Odd Couple, and in 2008 he starred in David Mamet’s November, portraying a president on the eve of an election. The following year Lane played Estragon…
- Dedication, Feast of (Judaism)
Hanukkah, Jewish festival that begins on Kislev 25 (usually in December, according to the Gregorian calendar) and is celebrated for eight days. Hanukkah reaffirms the ideals of Judaism and commemorates in particular the rededication of the Second Temple of Jerusalem by the lighting of candles on
- dedifferentiation (biology)
prenatal development: Growth and differentiation: …reversal and apparent simplification (“dedifferentiation”), these cells retain their former histological specificity. Under suitable environmental conditions they can differentiate again but can only regain their previous definitive characteristics as cartilage cells.
- Dedlock, Lady (fictional character)
Lady Dedlock, fictional character in the novel Bleak House (1853) by Charles Dickens, a beautiful woman who harbours the secret that she bore a daughter before her marriage to Sir Leicester Dedlock, a wealthy baronet. Privilege and wealth have not fulfilled Lady Dedlock’s expectations of life. When
- deduction (reason)
deduction, in logic, a rigorous proof, or derivation, of one statement (the conclusion) from one or more statements (the premises)—i.e., a chain of statements, each of which is either a premise or a consequence of a statement occurring earlier in the proof. This usage is a generalization of what