- fröhliche Weinberg, Der (work by Zuckmayer)
Carl Zuckmayer: …success was the earthy comedy Der fröhliche Weinberg (1925; “The Happy Vineyard”), for which he received the Kleist Prize. Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (1931; The Captain of Köpenick), one of his most highly regarded works, is a satire on Prussian militarism. In 1933 political pressure forced him to immigrate to…
- Frohman, Charles (American theatrical manager)
Charles Frohman was the leading American theatrical manager of his time. Frohman became interested in theatrical activities through his older brothers, Daniel and Gustave. After several years of part-time positions with local newspapers and theatres, Frohman in 1883 managed the Wallack Theatre
- Frohna (Missouri, United States)
Tri-State Tornado of 1925: towns of Annapolis, Biehle, and Frohna and killing 11 people before crossing the Mississippi River into southern Illinois, where it virtually destroyed the towns of Gorham, De Soto, and Murphysboro, among others. Murphysboro was the hardest-hit area in the tornado’s path, with 234 fatalities. After killing more than 600 people…
- Frohschammer, Jakob (German priest and philosopher)
Jakob Frohschammer was a Roman Catholic priest, prolific writer, and philosopher who was excommunicated for claiming that philosophy and church authority are autonomous. Ordained in 1847, Frohschammer lectured in philosophy from 1850 at the University of Munich (professor from 1855), where he began
- Froines, John (American activist)
Chicago Seven: …War in Vietnam (MOBE); and John Froines and Lee Weiner, who were alleged to have made stink bombs—were tried on charges of criminal conspiracy and incitement to riot.
- Froissart, Jean (French poet and historian)
Jean Froissart was a medieval poet and court historian whose Chronicles of the 14th century remain the most important and detailed document of feudal times in Europe and the best contemporary exposition of chivalric and courtly ideals. (Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.) As
- Fröken Julie (play by Strindberg)
Miss Julie, full-length drama in one act by August Strindberg, published in Swedish as Fröken Julie in 1888 and performed in 1889. It was also translated into English as Countess Julie (1912) and Lady Julie (1950). The play substitutes such interludes as a peasant dance and a pantomime for the
- Frøken Smillas fornemmelse for sne (novel by Høeg)
Peter Høeg: title Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow), a thriller that concerns the investigation into the death of a young boy.
- Frolic and Detour (poetry by Muldoon)
Paul Muldoon: Poetry: …Things Worth Knowing (2015), and Frolic and Detour (2019). Moy Sand and Gravel (2002) reaped both the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the Griffin Poetry Prize for an international writer in 2003. In 2021 Muldoon published the collection Howdie-Skelp, which includes a series of sonnets addressing the COVID-19 pandemic and…
- Frolinat (Chadian military organization)
Chad: Civil war: The Front for the National Liberation of Chad (Frolinat) was established in 1966 and operated primarily in the north from its headquarters at the southern Libyan oasis of Al-Kufrah, while the smaller Chad National Front (FNT) operated in the east-central region. Both groups aimed at the…
- Frolov, Vadim (Russian author)
children’s literature: Russia/Soviet Union: …of the finest teenage novels, Vadim Frolov’s Chto k chemu (Eng. trans., What It’s All About, 1965), is quite untouched by dogma of any kind. Soviet children’s literature, and especially its vast body of popularized science and technology for the young, however, was in general governed by the ideals of…
- From a Crooked Rib (novel by Farah)
Nuruddin Farah: …wrote his first full-fledged novel, From a Crooked Rib (1970). It portrayed the determination of one woman to maintain her dignity in a society that believes “God created Woman from a crooked rib; and anyone who trieth to straighten it, breaketh it”; it was the first of Farah’s feminist works.
- From a Land Where Other People Live (poetry by Lorde)
Audre Lorde: Her next volumes, From a Land Where Other People Live (1973) and New York Head Shop and Museum (1974), were more rhetorical and political.
- From an Ethnographic Museum (work by Höch)
Hannah Höch: …1924 and 1930 she created From an Ethnographic Museum, a series of 18 to 20 composite figures that challenged both socially constructed gender roles and racial stereotypes. The provocative collages juxtapose representations of contemporary European women with “primitive” sculptures portrayed in a museum context. From 1926 to 1929 Höch lived…
- From Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Minds (work by Dennett)
Daniel C. Dennett: From Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Minds was published in 2017.
- From Bauhaus to Our House (work by Wolfe)
New Journalism: From muckraking to Wolfe, Talese, and Capote: …The Right Stuff (1979) and From Bauhaus to Our House (1981), a biting history of modern architecture.
- From Cuba with a Song (work by Sarduy)
Severo Sarduy: …donde son los cantantes (1967; From Cuba with a Song). The book includes three narratives that encompass the entire history of Cuba and aspire to give a global view of its culture. An even more experimental novel followed, Cobra (1972; Eng. trans. Cobra), where the setting is a transvestite theatre…
- From Day to Day (work by Goetel)
Ferdynand Goetel: Z dnia na dzień (1926; From Day to Day) is a novel interesting for its use of the diary form within the main narrative as a means of exploring character.
- From Doon with Death (work by Rendell)
Ruth Rendell: Her first novel, From Doon with Death (1964), introduced Wexford, the clever chief inspector of a town in southeastern England, and his more stodgy associate Mike Burden. The pair appear in more than 20 additional novels of police procedure, among them No More Dying Then (1971), An Unkindness…
- From Dusk Till Dawn (film by Rodriguez [1996])
Salma Hayek: …was in another Rodriguez film, From Dusk Till Dawn (1996), a gory vampire movie that also starred George Clooney and Quentin Tarantino. In 1997 she appeared opposite Matthew Perry in the romantic comedy Fools Rush In and two years later portrayed an exotic dancer and muse in the religious satire…
- From Germany to Germany: Diary 1990 (work by Grass)
Günter Grass: …nach Deutschland: Tagebuch 1990 (2009; From Germany to Germany: Diary 1990) was a diary of his experiences in East and West Germany during the period between the fall of the Berlin Wall and reunification. Grass wrote two more volumes of autobiography, Die Box (2008; The Box) and Grimms Wörter: eine…
- From Heaven Lake (work by Seth)
Vikram Seth: …publication of his humorous travelogue From Heaven Lake (1983), the story of his journey hitchhiking from Nanking to New Delhi via Tibet. The poetic craft of The Humble Administrator’s Garden (1985) foreshadows the polish of The Golden Gate, a novel of the popular culture of California’s Silicon Valley, written entirely…
- From Hell (graphic novel by Moore and Campbell)
Alan Moore: Moore’s From Hell (originally published 1991–96), an atmospheric commentary on the declining British Empire as seen through the Jack the Ripper killings, was turned into a straightforward action film (2001) with an unlikely happy ending. This less-than-satisfactory experience with Hollywood would be repeated with The League…
- From Hell to Texas (film by Hathaway [1958])
Henry Hathaway: Film noirs: …1950s were largely forgettable, although From Hell to Texas (1958) was a passable western, with Don Murray eluding a posse that included a young Dennis Hopper.
- From Here to Eternity (musical)
Tim Rice: …later credits included the musical From Here to Eternity (2013), which was adapted from the novel by James Jones. In 2018 Rice coproduced a live telecast of Jesus Christ Superstar, and he won a Creative Arts Emmy Award when it was named best live variety special. With the honour, Rice…
- From Here to Eternity (film by Zinnemann [1953])
From Here to Eternity, American dramatic film, released in 1953, about U.S. soldiers in Hawaii in the months before the 1941 Pearl Harbor attack. It was one of the most popular films of its time, and it won eight Academy Awards, including that for best picture. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica
- From Here to Eternity (novel by Jones)
American literature: Realism and metafiction: …in an ambitious trilogy (From Here to Eternity [1951], The Thin Red Line [1962], and Whistle [1978]) that centred on loners who resisted adapting to military discipline. Younger novelists, profoundly shaken by the bombing of Hiroshima and the real threat of human annihilation, found the conventions of realism inadequate…
- From Immigrant to Inventor (work by Pupin)
Mihajlo Pupin: …biography for his autobiographical work From Immigrant to Inventor (1923).
- From Italy (work by Strauss)
Richard Strauss: Life: …being his Aus Italien (1886; From Italy), a “symphonic fantasy” based on his impressions during his first visit to Italy. In Weimar in November 1889, he conducted the first performance of his symphonic poem Don Juan. The triumphant reception of this piece led to Strauss’s acclamation as Wagner’s heir and…
- From Man to Man (work by Schreiner)
Olive Schreiner: …African Farm (1883), and began From Man to Man (1926), at which she worked intermittently for 40 years but never finished.
- From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China (documentary)
Isaac Stern: …his 1979 tour of China, From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China, received an Academy Award in 1981. Stern’s autobiography, My First 79 Years (cowritten with Chaim Potok), was published in 1999.
- From Midshipman to Rear-Admiral (work by Fiske)
Bradley Allen Fiske: He wrote From Midshipman to Rear-Admiral (1919), an account of his experiences in the U.S. Navy.
- From My Life: Poetry and Truth (autobiography by Goethe)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Napoleonic period (1805–16) of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: …Leben: Dichtung und Wahrheit (1811–13; From My Life: Poetry and Truth).
- From OSS to Green Berets (work by Bank)
Aaron Bank: He authored From OSS to Green Berets (1986), which functions both as a memoir and as an evolutionary history of the Special Forces, and he cowrote Knight’s Cross (1995), a fictionalized account of his aborted mission to capture Hitler and senior German leaders. His numerous awards include…
- From Plan to Planet-Life Studies: The Need for Afrikan Minds and Institutions (work by Madhubuti)
Haki R. Madhubuti: …African American social issues, including From Plan to Planet—Life Studies: The Need for Afrikan Minds and Institutions (1973), Black Men: Obsolete, Single, Dangerous?: Afrikan American Families in Transition: Essays in Discovery, Solution, and Hope (1990), and Tough Notes: A Healing Call for Creating Exceptional Black Men: Affirmations, Meditations, Readings, and…
- From Russia with Love (film by Young [1963])
From Russia with Love, British spy film, released in 1963, that was the second in the James Bond franchise. With notable performances by Lotte Lenya and Robert Shaw, it is considered one of the best Bond movies, and it stays relatively faithful to Ian Fleming’s novel. Bond (played by Sean Connery)
- From Slavery to a Bishopric (book by Edwards)
fugitive slave: …fugitive slave Walter Hawkins in From Slavery to a Bishopric (1891), described the yearning as “an irrepressible desire for freedom which no danger or power could restrain, no hardship deter.” The danger and difficulty in escaping from slavery are hard to imagine. Most slaves were illiterate and had no money…
- From Slavery to Freedom (book by Franklin)
John Hope Franklin: …attention with the publication of From Slavery to Freedom (1947; 7th. ed., 1994). His other works treating aspects of the American Civil War include The Militant South, 1800–1861 (1956), Reconstruction: After the Civil War (1961), and The Emancipation Proclamation (1963). He also edited three books of the Civil War period,…
- From the Centre: A Writer’s Life (memoir by Grace)
Patricia Grace: …2021 Grace published the memoir From the Centre: A Writer’s Life.
- From the Danube to the Yalu (work by Clark)
Mark Clark: …of World War II, and From the Danube to the Yalu (1954), his perspective on the Korean War.
- From the Earth to the Moon (film by Haskin [1958])
Byron Haskin: …(1958) of Jules Verne’s novel From the Earth to the Moon, starring Joseph Cotten and George Sanders, and Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964), a leisurely, almost contemplative update of Daniel Defoe’s tale. Haskins’s last film was The Power (1968), a chilling tale about a killer with telekinetic powers that boasted…
- From the Earth to the Moon (novel by Verne)
From the Earth to the Moon, novel by Jules Verne, published as De la Terre à la Lune (1865) and also published as The Baltimore Gun Club and The American Gun Club. Although the novel was subtitled Trajet direct en 97 heures 20 minutes (“Direct Passage in Ninety-seven Hours and Twenty Minutes”), the
- From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (work by Konigsburg)
children’s literature: Contemporary times: Her 1968 Newbery Medal winner, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, was original in its tone and humour.
- From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah (album by Nirvana)
Nirvana: …in New York (1994) and From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah (1996), only added to Nirvana’s legend.
- From the New World: Poems 1976–2014 (poetry by Graham)
Jorie Graham: …Selected Poems 1997–2008 (2013) and From the New World: Poems 1976–2014 (2015) are additional surveys of her work. The poems in Fast (2017) center on loss and mourning. In Runaway (2020), Graham continued to explore topical issues, notably climate change and mass migrations.
- From the Nifty Fifty to the Magnificent Seven: How all-star stocks are picked
Growth, glitz, and guts.All-stars, MVPs, dream teams—whatever you call them, everyone seems enamored by the “best of the best” (of something). As you might guess, the financial markets aren’t immune to such fixations. Groupings like the Nifty Fifty (whatever happened to them?), the FANG family
- From the Other Shore (work by Herzen)
Aleksandr Ivanovich Herzen: Life in exile.: …and S togo berega (From the Other Shore). His disillusionment was vastly increased by his wife’s infidelity with the radical German poet Georg Herwegh and by her death in 1852.
- From the Terrace (film by Robson [1960])
Mark Robson: Later films: In 1960 Robson directed From the Terrace, an adaptation of John O’Hara’s novel about an businessman (Paul Newman) whose career ambitions wreak havoc on his personal life; Joanne Woodward and Myrna Loy also starred in the film. Next was Nine Hours to Rama (1963), an ambitious drama about the…
- From the White Place (painting by O’Keefe)
Georgia O’Keeffe: New Mexico: In New Mexico O’Keeffe produced From the White Place (1940), Pelvis IV (1944), Black Place III (1944), and numerous other paintings of the area’s distinctive natural and architectural forms. Such paintings of what she saw allowed her to continue to explore the abstract language she had identified as her own…
- From Tradition to Gospel (work by Dibelius)
Martin Dibelius: , From Tradition to Gospel), presented an analysis of the Gospels in terms of oral traditions. The earliest form of the Gospels, he proposed, consisted of short sermons; the needs of the Christian community determined the development of written Gospels from these early preachings. His analysis…
- From Two to Five (work by Chukovsky)
children’s literature: Russia/Soviet Union: , From Two to Five, 1963), however, that the opposition of two familiar forces, entertainment and instruction, can be sensed most clearly. The tension is typically expressed in Chukovsky’s account of the Soviet war over the fairy tale, the opposition to which reached its high point…
- Frome, Ethan (fictional character)
Ethan Frome, fictional character, the protagonist of Edith Wharton’s novel Ethan Frome
- Frome, Lake (lake, South Australia, Australia)
Lake Frome, in northeastern South Australia, a large shallow depression, 60 miles (100 km) long by 30 miles wide, intermittently filled with water, 280 miles northeast of Adelaide. It is the southernmost of an arc of such salt lakes northeast of the Flinders Range, including Lakes Gregory, Blanche,
- Frome, River (river, England, United Kingdom)
Bristol: …of the Rivers Avon and Frome. Just west of the city, the Avon flows into the estuary of the River Severn, which itself empties into Bristol Channel of the Atlantic Ocean, about 8 miles to the northwest. Bristol is a historic seaport and commercial centre. Area 42 square miles (110…
- Froment, Nicolas (French painter)
Nicolas Froment was a French painter who shared the responsibility (with Enguerrand Charonton) for introducing Flemish naturalism into French art. During the 15th century, Italian art was so admired in France that the works of French artists were ignored or disdained. In response, Froment and
- Fromentin, Eugène (French painter and author)
Eugène Fromentin was a French painter and author best known for his depictions of the land and people of Algeria. Influenced successively by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot and Eugène Delacroix, Fromentin abandoned his early stiffness in design and execution and developed into a brilliant colourist.
- Fromm, Erich (American psychoanalyst and philosopher)
Erich Fromm was a German-born American psychoanalyst and social philosopher who explored the interaction between psychology and society. By applying psychoanalytic principles to the remedy of cultural ills, Fromm believed, mankind could develop a psychologically balanced “sane society.” After
- Fromm, Friedrich (German general)
July Plot: …at the Berlin headquarters, General Friedrich Fromm, who had known about and condoned the plot, sought to prove his allegiance by arresting a few of the chief conspirators, who were promptly shot (Stauffenberg, Olbricht, and two aides) or forced to commit suicide (Beck). In subsequent days, Hitler’s police rounded up…
- Frommel, Gaston (Swiss philosopher and theologian)
Gaston Frommel was a Swiss Protestant philosopher and theologian. Frommel attempted to base theism (the doctrine teaching the existence of a personal God), religious experience, and moral conscience on objective grounds, as opposed to the a priori categories and moral imperative posited by Immanuel
- Fromming, Hans (German jockey)
Hervé Filion: …won held by the German Hans Fromming (5,296), and by the early 1990s he had won more than 13,000 races. In 1995, however, Filion was arrested for race fixing, and he did not compete again until 2000, when the charges were dropped after he pled guilty to tax evasion. He…
- Fromont jeune et Risler aîné (novel by Daudet)
Alphonse Daudet: Life: His next novel, Fromont jeune et Risler aîné (1874; “Fromont the Younger and Risler the Elder”), which won an award from the French Academy, was a success, and for a few years he enjoyed prosperity and fame—though not without some hostile criticism.
- frond (leaf)
bracken: …and at intervals sends up fronds. Individual rhizomes have been documented as spreading up to about 400 metres (1,300 feet) in length, making bracken one of the largest plants in the world. The fronds may reach a height of 5 metres (16 feet) or more and, despite dying in autumn,…
- Fronde, the (civil wars, France [17th century])
the Fronde, series of civil wars in France between 1648 and 1653, during the minority of Louis XIV. The Fronde (the name for the “sling” of a children’s game played in the streets of Paris in defiance of civil authorities) was in part an attempt to check the growing power of royal government; its
- Fronsberg, Georg von (German military officer)
Georg von Frundsberg was a German soldier and devoted servant of the Habsburgs who fought on behalf of the Holy Roman emperors Maximilian I and Charles V. In 1499 Frundsberg took part in Maximilian’s struggle against the Swiss, and, in the same year, he was among the imperial troops sent to assist
- front (military)
tactics: The growing scale of battle: …dispersal took place, it caused fronts to grow much longer and less cohesive. From the middle of the 19th century, this tendency was reinforced by the larger number of troops produced by conscription. As battles took up more space, the number of men within a given area declined very sharply.…
- front (meteorology)
front, in meteorology, interface or transition zone between two air masses of different density and temperature; the sporadic flareups of weather along this zone, with occasional thunderstorms and electrical activity, was, to the Norwegian meteorologists who gave it its name during World War I,
- Front de Libération Nationale (political party, Algeria)
National Liberation Front, the only constitutionally legal party in Algeria from 1962 to 1989. The party was a continuation of the revolutionary body that directed the Algerian war of independence against France (1954–62). The FLN was created by the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action
- Front de Libération Nationale de la Corse (political organization, Corsica)
Corsican National Liberation Front, largest and most violent of a number of Corsican nationalist movements. It was formed in 1976 from two smaller groups that sought autonomy for Corsica through armed struggle. The main method of the FLNC was bomb attacks, and the main targets were the property of
- Front de Seine (section, Paris, France)
Paris: Modern business quarters: The Front de Seine is on the Left Bank, between the Eiffel Tower and the southern city limits. Here a neighbourhood of factories and substandard housing was replaced by a spread of high-rise buildings used for offices and apartments.
- Front for the Defense of Constitutional Institutions (Moroccan government)
Morocco: Independent Morocco: …to be known as the Front for the Defense of Constitutional Institutions. This included a new, predominantly Amazigh, rural group opposed to the Istiqlāl. The ensuing near deadlock caused the king to dissolve Parliament after only one year, and, with himself or his nominee as prime minister, a form of…
- Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen (political organization, Yemen [Aden])
Aden: …rival nationalist organizations, the Egyptian-supported Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen (FLOSY) and the Marxist-oriented National Liberation Front (NLF), for eventual control of the country. It was as a part of the NLF-ruled People’s Republic of Southern Yemen that Aden achieved its independence on November 30, 1967, and…
- Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (Angolan organization)
Cabinda: …of various factions of the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC) as well as other groups, which were fighting for Cabindan independence from Angola. In 2004 some of the groups formed an umbrella organization, Cabinda Forum for Dialogue (which also included civil and religious groups), and…
- Front for the National Liberation of Chad (Chadian military organization)
Chad: Civil war: The Front for the National Liberation of Chad (Frolinat) was established in 1966 and operated primarily in the north from its headquarters at the southern Libyan oasis of Al-Kufrah, while the smaller Chad National Front (FNT) operated in the east-central region. Both groups aimed at the…
- Front for Victory (political party, Argentina)
Argentina: The Fernández de Kirchner administration: …that month, Fernández de Kirchner’s Front for Victory (FPV) faction of the Peronist party and its allies won enough seats to capture an absolute majority in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.
- Front Islamique du Salut (political party, Algeria)
Islamic Salvation Front, Algerian Islamist political party. Known best by its French acronym, the organization was founded in 1989 by Ali Belhadj and Abbasi al-Madani. The party won a majority of the seats contested in local elections in 1990 and most of the seats in the National Assembly in the
- Front National (political party, France)
National Rally, far right French political party founded in 1972 by François Duprat and François Brigneau. It is most commonly associated with Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was its leader from 1972 to 2011, and his daughter Marine Le Pen, who succeeded her father in 2011 and led the party until 2022.
- Front National pour la Défense de la Révolution (Madagascan political organization)
Madagascar: The Second Republic: …the core of the broader National Front for the Defense of the Revolution (Front National pour la Défense de la Révolution; FNDR). Only parties admitted to this umbrella organization were allowed to participate in political activities.
- front of house (theater)
theatre design: The house and front of house: …as with the word backstage, front of house does not necessarily indicate an actual physical location within a theatre building). Ensuring that as many members of the audience as is practical can see the stage well seems always to have been a priority in the design of theatres. In the…
- Front of National Liberation (political party, Algeria)
National Liberation Front, the only constitutionally legal party in Algeria from 1962 to 1989. The party was a continuation of the revolutionary body that directed the Algerian war of independence against France (1954–62). The FLN was created by the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action
- Front Page, The (film by Wilder [1974])
Billy Wilder: Last films: …Lemmon and Matthau paired in The Front Page (1974), but few critics thought Wilder’s remake of the Ben Hecht–Charles MacArthur play was the equal of Lewis Milestone’s 1931 original or Howard Hawks’s version, His Girl Friday (1940). More interesting but little seen was the German-financed Fedora
- Front Page, The (film by Milestone [1931])
The Front Page, American screwball comedy, released in 1931, that is still widely regarded as one of Hollywood’s most accomplished farces. The film centres on star newspaper reporter Hildy Johnson (played by Pat O’Brien), who is quitting his job in Chicago to move to New York City with his fiancée
- Front Page, The (play by Hecht and MacArthur)
The Front Page: …was adapted from a hit play of the same name by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, with much of their witty rapid-fire dialogue kept intact. Menjou, who often played high-class debonair characters, was honoured with an Academy Award nomination (one of three the film received) for his against-type performance. The…
- Front Patriotique Rwandais–Inkotanyi (political party, Rwanda)
Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), political party in Rwanda rooted in a movement led by exiled Rwandans that launched the country’s civil war in 1990 and ended the Rwanda genocide of 1994. The party has dominated Rwandan politics since then. It has been led by Paul Kagame since 1998. Rwanda’s
- Front pour la Restauration de l’Unité et de la Démocratie (political party, Djibouti)
Djibouti: Multiparty politics and civil war: …and in late 1991 the Afar Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy (Front pour la Restauration de l’Unité et de la Démocratie; FRUD) took up arms against the Issa-dominated government; the conflict quickly developed into civil war. By mid-1992 FRUD forces occupied some two-thirds of the country, although…
- Front Range (mountains, Colorado, United States)
Front Range, easternmost section of the Southern Rocky Mountains in the west-central United States. It extends about 300 miles (500 km) south-southeastward from near Casper in southeastern Wyoming to Fremont county in south-central Colorado. The Front Range is 40 to 50 miles (65 to 80 km) wide and
- Front Range (mountains, Lesotho)
Maloti Mountains: …Maloti Mountains is properly the Front Range of the Maloti, sometimes called the Blue Mountains. It is a broad southwesterly spur from the Drakensberg Range near the northern tip of Lesotho and a few miles from its highest point, Mont aux-Sources. The Front Range is extended almost to Lesotho’s southwestern…
- Front Runner, The (film by Reitman [2018])
Hugh Jackman: He then starred in The Front Runner (2018), the true story of former U.S. senator Gary Hart, whose 1988 presidential bid ended amid news reports alleging that he was having an extramarital affair. In 2019 Jackman voiced a British adventurer in the stop-motion animated film Missing Link and starred…
- front tooth
tooth: Tooth form and function: …thus made up of four incisors, two canines, four premolars, and six molars in each jaw.
- front vowel (linguistics)
vowel: A front vowel is pronounced with the highest part of the tongue pushed forward in the mouth and somewhat arched. The a in “had,” the e in “bed,” and the i in “fit” are front vowels. A back vowel—e.g., the u in “rule” and the o…
- Front, The (film by Ritt [1976])
Woody Allen: The 1970s: …performance as the protagonist in The Front (1976), Martin Ritt’s fine drama about Hollywood blacklisting, Allen made Annie Hall (1977), a breakthrough work that dramatically elevated his status as a filmmaker. An elliptical account of the rise and fall of a romance between the quirky title character (played by Keaton)…
- front-loading (American politics)
front-loading, in U.S. politics, the moving up of presidential primaries and caucuses by states, thereby increasing their influence in the selection of a party’s candidate. As a result, presidential nominees are often determined early in the election year. The Iowa caucuses are traditionally held
- front-wheel drive (engineering)
automobile: European postwar designs: Front-wheel-drive had largely been abandoned after the 1930s, although the French had great success with the “Traction Avant” Citroën. Swedish aircraft manufacturer Saab AB used it too, for its entry into the automobile market in 1950. It was the British Mini, designed by Sir Alec…
- frontal bone (anatomy)
skull: …of the cranium, and the frontal bone forms the forehead; the cranial floor consists of the sphenoid and ethmoid bones. The facial area includes the zygomatic, or malar, bones (cheekbones), which join with the temporal and maxillary bones to form the zygomatic arch below the eye socket; the palatine bone;…
- frontal cortex (anatomy)
human nervous system: Executive functions of the frontal lobes: The frontal lobes are the part of the brain most remote from sensory input and whose functions are the most difficult to capture. They can be thought of as the executive that controls and directs the operation of brain systems dealing with cognitive…
- frontal fog (meteorology)
fog: Frontal fog forms near a front when raindrops, falling from relatively warm air above a frontal surface, evaporate into cooler air close to the Earth’s surface and cause it to become saturated.
- frontal inversion (meteorology)
temperature inversion: A frontal inversion occurs when a cold air mass undercuts a warm air mass and lifts it aloft; the front between the two air masses then has warm air above and cold air below. This kind of inversion has a considerable slope, whereas other inversions are…
- frontal lobe (anatomy)
human nervous system: Executive functions of the frontal lobes: The frontal lobes are the part of the brain most remote from sensory input and whose functions are the most difficult to capture. They can be thought of as the executive that controls and directs the operation of brain systems dealing with cognitive…
- frontal lobotomy (surgery)
lobotomy, surgical procedure in which the nerve pathways in a lobe or lobes of the brain are severed from those in other areas. The procedure was formerly used as a radical therapeutic measure to help grossly disturbed patients with schizophrenia, manic depression and mania (bipolar disorder), and
- frontal nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Ophthalmic nerve: …the nose, and (3) the frontal nerve, serving the skin on the upper eyelid, the forehead, and the scalp above the eyes up to the vertex of the head.
- frontal sinus (anatomy)
human respiratory system: The nose: …is the largest cavity; the frontal sinus; the ethmoid sinuses; and the sphenoid sinus, which is located in the upper posterior wall of the nasal cavity. The sinuses have two principal functions: because they are filled with air, they help keep the weight of the skull within reasonable limits, and…