- Fefferman, Charles (American mathematician)
Charles Fefferman is an American mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1978 for his work in classical analysis. Fefferman attended the University of Maryland (B.S., 1966) and Princeton University. After receiving a Ph.D. in 1969, he remained at Princeton for a year, then moved to the
- Fefferman, Charles Louis (American mathematician)
Charles Fefferman is an American mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1978 for his work in classical analysis. Fefferman attended the University of Maryland (B.S., 1966) and Princeton University. After receiving a Ph.D. in 1969, he remained at Princeton for a year, then moved to the
- Fefu and Her Friends (play by Fornés)
American literature: The Off-Broadway ascendancy: Maria Irene Fornés’s Fefu and Her Friends (1977) proved remarkable in its exploration of women’s relationships. A clear indication of Off-Broadway’s ascendancy in American drama came in 1979 when Sam Shepard, a prolific and experimental playwright, won the Pulitzer Prize for Buried Child. Shepard’s earlier work, such as…
- Feggar a ferg (work by Bru)
Hedin Brú: …work, Fedgar á ferd (1940; The Old Man and His Sons). Brú played a central role in cultural life as coeditor of the literary periodical Vardin and as a member of the Faroese Scientific Society and began to acquire an international reputation. He also produced Faroese translations of Hamlet and…
- fehmic court (medieval tribunal)
fehmic court, medieval law tribunal properly belonging to Westphalia, though extending jurisdiction throughout the German kingdom. After 1180, when ducal rights in Westphalia passed to the archbishop of Cologne, Westphalian jurisdiction still retained Carolingian features: in every county, or
- Fehn, Sverre (Norwegian architect)
Sverre Fehn was a Norwegian architect known for his designs of private houses and museums that integrated modernism with traditional vernacular architecture. He considered the process of building “an attack by our culture on nature” and stated that it was his goal “to make a building that will make
- Fehrenbach, Konstantin (German chancellor)
Konstantin Fehrenbach was a German statesman who was chancellor of the Weimar Republic (1920–21). A noted criminal lawyer, Fehrenbach was elected to the Baden Landtag (provincial diet) in 1885 as a member of the Catholic Centre Party, but differences with the party leadership obliged him to resign
- FEI (sports organization)
horse show: The Fédération Équestre Internationale and such member national organizations as the American Horse Shows Association regulate and promote the shows.
- Fei Hsiao-T’ung (Chinese social anthropologist)
Fei Xiaotong was one of the foremost Chinese social anthropologists, noted for his studies of village life in China. Fei graduated in 1933 from Yanjing University in Beijing and did graduate work at Qinghua University (also in Beijing) and the London School of Economics. In 1945 he became professor
- Fei Xiaotong (Chinese social anthropologist)
Fei Xiaotong was one of the foremost Chinese social anthropologists, noted for his studies of village life in China. Fei graduated in 1933 from Yanjing University in Beijing and did graduate work at Qinghua University (also in Beijing) and the London School of Economics. In 1945 he became professor
- Feichtmayr, Michael (German sculptor)
Western sculpture: Central Europe: …provided the models from which Johann Michael Feichtmayr created the superb series of larger than life-size saints and angels that are the glory of these Rococo interiors. Feichtmayr was a member of the group of families from Wessobrunn in southern Bavaria that specialized in stucco work and produced a long…
- Feiffer (comic strip by Feiffer)
comic strip: The United States: …major strip of political satire, Feiffer by Jules Feiffer (first appearing weekly in The Village Voice, 1956), was run in the more liberal or left-wing papers; as a mainstream newspaper strip, it was consigned to the editorial rather than comics pages. In Feiffer the dialogue was more important than the…
- Feiffer, Jules (American cartoonist and writer)
Jules Feiffer is an American cartoonist and writer who became famous for his Feiffer, a satirical comic strip notable for its emphasis on very literate captions. The verbal elements usually took the form of monologues in which the speaker (sometimes pathetic, sometimes pompous) exposed his own
- Feig, Paul (American actor and filmmaker)
Freaks and Geeks: Created by Paul Feig with Judd Apatow serving as its executive producer, the show is notable for its realistic portrayal of adolescence and period-specific soundtrack, including music by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, Rush, Van Halen, and Styx, as well as for launching the careers of many…
- Feigenbaum, Edward Albert (American computer scientist)
Edward Albert Feigenbaum is an American systems analyst and the most important pioneer in the development of expert systems in artificial intelligence (AI). The son of an accountant, Feigenbaum was especially fascinated with how his father’s adding machine could reproduce human calculations. Given
- Feigl, Herbert (American philosopher)
Western philosophy: Logical positivism: of logical positivism—Rudolf Carnap, Herbert Feigl, Philipp Frank, and Gustav Bergmann—all emigrated from Germany and Austria to the United States to escape Nazism. Their influence on American philosophy was profound, and, with various modifications, logical positivism was still a vital force on the American scene at the beginning of…
- Feijó, Diogo António (Brazilian politician)
Brazil: Pedro I and the regency: The priest Diogo Antônio Feijó, who was chosen as regent in 1835, struggled for two years to hold the nation together, but he was forced to resign. Pedro de Araújo Lima succeeded him. Many Brazilians were impatient with the regency and believed that the entire nation would…
- feijoa (plant species)
feijoa, (Acca sellowiana), small evergreen tree of the myrtle family (Myrtaceae), related to the guava. It is native to southern Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and parts of Argentina and is cultivated in mild dry climates for its sweet fruit. The feijoa was introduced into southern Europe in 1890 and
- Feijoa sellowiana (plant species)
feijoa, (Acca sellowiana), small evergreen tree of the myrtle family (Myrtaceae), related to the guava. It is native to southern Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and parts of Argentina and is cultivated in mild dry climates for its sweet fruit. The feijoa was introduced into southern Europe in 1890 and
- feijoada completa (food)
feijoada completa, the national dish of Brazil, consisting of black beans cooked with fresh and smoked meats and accompanied by traditional side dishes. The origin of feijoada completa is uncertain; one idea is that it originated with the cultivation of black beans. It is associated in particular
- Feijóo y Montenegro, Benito Jerónimo (Spanish author)
Benito Jerónimo Feijóo y Montenegro was a teacher and essayist, a leading 18th-century Spanish stylist. A member of the Benedictine order, he taught philosophy and theology at the University of Oviedo. His essays publicized and encouraged the spread of the new scientific knowledge and exalted
- féile-breacan (Scottish dress)
kilt: …in 17th-century Scotland from the féile-breacan, a long piece of woolen cloth whose pleated first half was wrapped around the wearer’s waist, while the (unpleated) second half was then wrapped around the upper body, with a loose end thrown over the left shoulder. Subsequently in the 17th century two lengths…
- Feilner, Simon (German potter)
pottery: Porcelain: … and for the work of Simon Feilner.
- Feinberg Certificate (test oath)
Keyishian v. Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York: Facts of the case: …required to sign the “Feinberg Certificate,” disavowing any association with the Communist Party and declaring their loyalty to state and federal governments. When Keyishian and his colleagues refused to sign on principle, his one-year contract was not renewed. SUNY officials also announced that the contracts of Keyishian’s colleagues would…
- Feinberg, Bea (American author)
Cynthia Freeman was an American author who rocketed to the top of the best-seller list with such romance novels as A World Full of Strangers (1975), Fairytales (1977), Days of Winter (1978), Come Pour the Wine (1980), No Time for Tears (1981), and The Last Princess (1988), all penned under the
- Feinberg, Joel (American philosopher)
paternalism: Moral considerations of paternalism: Joel Feinberg delineated principles for reconciling opposing views regarding permissible grounds for interference with someone’s actions for the sake of preventing harm. First, he established distinctions: self-inflicted harm is still harm; intended self-harm is different from unintended self-harm as a consequence of another intended action;…
- Feinberg, Kenneth (American attorney)
Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Charges, settlements, and penalties: Previously managed by lawyer Kenneth Feinberg—who had also overseen the compensation fund for victims of the September 11 attacks—the fund was transferred to court control as part of the accord. In addition to covering economic losses sustained in the wake of the spill, the settlement mandated the payment of…
- Feinberg, Louis (American actor)
the Three Stooges: May 4, 1975, Los Angeles), Larry Fine (original name Louis Feinberg; b. October 5, 1902, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—d. January 24, 1975, Woodland Hills, California), Curly Howard (original name Jerome Horwitz; b. October 22, 1903, New York City—d. January 18, 1952, San Gabriel, California), Joe Besser (b. August 12, 1907, St. Louis,…
- Feinberg, Samuel (American composer)
Sammy Fain was a prolific American composer of popular songs, including many for Broadway musicals and Hollywood motion pictures. Numbered among his best-known tunes are “Let a Smile Be Your Umbrella,” “Tender is the Night,” and “I’ll Be Seeing You,” all of which became standards. Fain was a
- Feinechus (ancient Irish laws)
Brehon laws, ancient laws of Ireland. The text of these laws, written in the most archaic form of the Gaelic language, dates back to the 7th and 8th centuries and is so difficult to translate that the official renderings are to some extent conjectural. The ancient Irish judge, or Brehon, was an
- Feingold, Russ (United States senator)
John McCain: Political career: …with the liberal Democratic senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, and, after a seven-year battle, the pair saw the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act signed into law in 2002. The legislation, which restricted the political parties’ use of funds not subject to federal limits, was McCain’s signal achievement on Capitol Hill.
- Feininger, Andreas (American photographer)
Andreas Feininger was an American photographer and writer on photographic technique, noted for his photos of nature and cityscapes. The eldest son of the painter Lyonel Feininger, he studied cabinetmaking and architecture at the Bauhaus, the innovative design school in Weimar, Germany. During this
- Feininger, Andreas Bernhard Lyonel (American photographer)
Andreas Feininger was an American photographer and writer on photographic technique, noted for his photos of nature and cityscapes. The eldest son of the painter Lyonel Feininger, he studied cabinetmaking and architecture at the Bauhaus, the innovative design school in Weimar, Germany. During this
- Feininger, Lyonel (American artist)
Lyonel Feininger was an American artist whose paintings and teaching activities at the Bauhaus brought a new compositional discipline and lyrical use of colour into the predominantly Expressionistic art of Germany. Feininger left the United States for Germany in 1887 to study music but decided to
- Feininger, Lyonel Charles Adrian (American artist)
Lyonel Feininger was an American artist whose paintings and teaching activities at the Bauhaus brought a new compositional discipline and lyrical use of colour into the predominantly Expressionistic art of Germany. Feininger left the United States for Germany in 1887 to study music but decided to
- Feinstein, Dianne (United States senator)
Dianne Feinstein was an American Democratic politician who represented California in the U.S. Senate from 1992 to 2023. She was the first woman to serve as senator from that state. Feinstein had previously served as the first female mayor of San Francisco (1978–88). Goldman grew up in San
- Feinstein, Elaine (British writer and translator)
Elaine Feinstein was a British writer and translator who examined her own eastern European heritage in a number of novels and collections of poetry. Feinstein attended the University of Cambridge (B.A., 1952; M.A., 1955). Her first published work was a collection of poetry, In a Green Eye (1966).
- Feinstein, Isidor (American journalist)
I. F. Stone was a spirited and unconventional American journalist whose newsletter, I.F. Stone’s Weekly (later I.F. Stone’s Bi-Weekly), captivated readers by the author’s unique blend of wit, erudition, humanitarianism, and pointed political commentary. Feinstein worked on newspapers while still in
- feiqian (Chinese history)
China: The Shiguo (Ten Kingdoms): …drafts for transmitting funds called feiqian (“flying money”). Somewhat later the private assay shops in Sichuan began to issue certificates of deposit to merchants who had left valuables at the shops for safekeeping. These instruments, which began to circulate, were the direct ancestors of the paper money that emerged in…
- Feira de Sant’ Anna (Brazil)
Feira de Santana, city, northeastern Bahia estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It lies between the Jacuípe and Pojuca rivers, at 820 feet (250 metres) above sea level. Formerly spelled Feira de Sant’ Anna, it was given city status in 1873 and was known for its cattle fairs (hence its name, meaning
- Feira de Santana (Brazil)
Feira de Santana, city, northeastern Bahia estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It lies between the Jacuípe and Pojuca rivers, at 820 feet (250 metres) above sea level. Formerly spelled Feira de Sant’ Anna, it was given city status in 1873 and was known for its cattle fairs (hence its name, meaning
- Feira de Santana, Cathedral of (cathedral, Feira de Santana, Brazil)
Feira de Santana: It has a cathedral dating to 1732 and other historic churches and is also home to a football (soccer) stadium. Highways fan out from Feira de Santana to Rio de Janeiro, Salvador (the state capital), and other urban centres, and the city has an airport as well. Pop.…
- Feiṣal I (king of Iraq)
Faisal I was an Arab statesman and king of Iraq (1921–33) who was a leader in advancing Arab nationalism during and after World War I. Faisal was the son of Hussein ibn Ali, emir and grand sharif of Mecca who ruled the Hejaz from 1916 to 1924. When World War I provided an opportunity for rebellion
- Feisal I (king of Iraq)
Faisal I was an Arab statesman and king of Iraq (1921–33) who was a leader in advancing Arab nationalism during and after World War I. Faisal was the son of Hussein ibn Ali, emir and grand sharif of Mecca who ruled the Hejaz from 1916 to 1924. When World War I provided an opportunity for rebellion
- Feisal ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān as-Saʿūd (king of Saudi Arabia)
Faisal of Saudi Arabia was the king of Saudi Arabia from 1964 to 1975, an influential figure of the Arab world known for his statecraft at home and his assertiveness abroad. Faisal was a son of King Ibn Saud and a brother of King Saud. He was appointed foreign minister and viceroy of Hejaz in 1926
- Feiṣal II (king of Iraq)
Faisal II was the last king of Iraq, who reigned from 1939 to 1958. Faisal II, grandson of Faisal I and great-grandson of Hussein ibn Ali, former sharif of Mecca and king of the Hejaz, became king of Iraq following the untimely death of his father, King Ghazi. Because Faisal was only four years
- Feistel, Horst (German-American cryptographer)
Data Encryption Standard: …one of the company’s researchers, Horst Feistel, a few years earlier. The Lucifer algorithm was evaluated in secret consultations between the NBS and the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). After some modifications to the internal functions and a shortening of the code key size from 112 bits to 56 bits,…
- Feit, Walter (American mathematician)
modern algebra: Group theory: …paper by the American mathematicians Walter Feit and John Thompson showed that if a finite simple group is not merely the group of rotations of a regular polygon, then it must have an even number of elements. This result was immensely important because it showed that such groups had to…
- Feith, Douglas (United States government official)
September 11 attacks: The aftermath: Undersecretary of Defense Douglas J. Feith later explained,
- Fejér (county, Hungary)
Fejér, megye (county), central Hungary, occupying an area in the eastern portion of Transdanubia. It is bordered by the counties of Komárom-Esztergom to the north, Pest and Bács-Kiskun to the east, Tolna to the south, and Veszprém and Somogy to the west. Székesfehérvár is the county seat. Other
- Feke, Robert (American painter)
Robert Feke was a British-American painter whose portraits depict the emerging colonial aristocracy. The facts of Feke’s life are uncertain: stories differ over his employment as a mariner, his supposed travels, and his artistic training. The record of his work, however—created in Boston,
- fekete város, A (work by Mikszáth)
Kálmán Mikszáth: Mikszáth’s last work, A fekete város (1910; “The Black City”), is the finest of his historical novels.
- Fela! (work by Jones)
Bill T. Jones: …choreographed, and directed the musical Fela! (2008), about the life of Nigerian musician and activist Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. For his exuberant choreography, he won a second Tony Award. Jones’s later work included Fondly Do We Hope…Fervently Do We Pray(2009), a commission for the Ravinia Festival, Highland Park, Illinois, commemorating the bicentennial…
- felafel (food)
falafel, a staple Middle Eastern dish—and a popular street food around the world—that consists of fried spiced balls or patties of ground chickpeas or fava beans (or a mixture of both) stuffed into a pita or wrapped in laffa bread with hot sauce, tahini sauce, and generally some saladlike
- Felapton (syllogistic)
history of logic: Syllogisms: Darapti, Disamis, Datisi, Felapton,
- Felasha (people)
Beta Israel, Jews of Ethiopian origin. Their beginnings are obscure and possibly polygenetic. The Beta Israel (meaning House of Israel) themselves claim descent from Menilek I, traditionally the son of the Queen of Sheba (Makeda) and King Solomon. At least some of their ancestors, however, were
- Feld Entertainment, Inc. (American entertainment company)
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus: Animal rights criticism and the end of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in 2017: In 1995 Feld Entertainment, Inc., established the Center for Elephant Conservation in Florida, but, as the understanding of the complex intellectual and emotional lives of elephants spread and protests of the circus’s treatment of elephants increased, more and more people began to view elephant performances negatively.
- Feld, Eliot (American dancer)
Eliot Feld is an American dancer, choreographer, and director. He choreographed a number of successful dances while in the corps of American Ballet Theatre, New York, and later cofounded Ballet Tech, a thriving institution providing dance instruction to New York City public school students. Feld
- Feld, Irvin (American circus manager)
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus: The Feld family circus: …an agreement with concert promoter Irvin Feld, under which the circus continued performing—not under the big-top tent but in indoor facilities which Feld contracted. Without the need to put up and take down the tent, the circus was able to reduce costs and cut its workforce from about 1,400 to…
- Feld, Mount (mountain, Germany)
Black Forest: …Kinzig valley, its highest summits—Feldberg (4,897 feet [1,493 metres]), Herzogenhorn, and Blössling—are to the south. Its northern half has an average height of 2,000 feet.
- Feld, Steven (American anthropologist)
Oceanic music and dance: Musical style and cultural context: …New Guinea, the American anthropologist Steven Feld has demonstrated the integration of diverse musical structures and natural sounds under one aesthetic ideology. The concept of “lift-up-over sounding,” which calls for a continuity of overlapping sound qualities and the avoidance of unison, governs all Kaluli musical expression, including recently acquired Christian…
- Feldberg (mountain, Germany)
Black Forest: …Kinzig valley, its highest summits—Feldberg (4,897 feet [1,493 metres]), Herzogenhorn, and Blössling—are to the south. Its northern half has an average height of 2,000 feet.
- Felder, Don (American musician)
the Eagles: Later members included Don Felder (b. September 21, 1947, Topanga, California), Joe Walsh (b. November 20, 1947, Wichita, Kansas), and Timothy B. Schmit (b. October 30, 1947, Sacramento, California).
- Felder, Jerome (American songwriter)
Doc Pomus was an American songwriter who teamed with Mort Shuman to write some of the most memorable rock and pop songs in the Brill Building style of the early 1960s. Pomus, who began singing in jazz and blues clubs as a teenager, met pianist Shuman during a recording session. Together (Shuman
- Feldkirch (Austria)
Feldkirch, town, western Austria. It lies along the Ill River, near the Liechtenstein border, about 48 miles (77 km) east-southeast of Zürich, Switzerland. First mentioned as Veldkirichae (Veldkirichum) in 830, the settlement belonged to the counts of Montfort from 1190 until it was sold to Austria
- Feldman, David Henry (American psychologist)
prodigy: The American psychologists David Henry Feldman and Martha Morelock summarized late 20th-century research on prodigies to identify those inherent traits and environmental influences that contribute to the development of a prodigy. In general, they observed that most prodigies do not appear spontaneously; instead, they emerge when several important…
- Feldman, Eugene (American artist)
lithography: Commercial lithography: …increasing number of artists, including Eugene Feldman, Hanne Darboven, Joseph Beuys, Gerhard Richter, Dieter Roth, and Kara Walker, had used the offset process to noncommercial ends.
- Feldman, Lew (American boxer)
Kid Chocolate: …his 12th-round knockout of American Lew Feldman on Oct. 13, 1932, it was a disputed title. Chocolate fought his last five bouts in Havana before retiring in 1938—having contested about 150 professional fights, with only 10 losses. He then opened a gym in Havana and chose to remain in Cuba…
- Feldman, Morton (American composer)
Morton Feldman was an American avant-garde composer associated with John Cage. Feldman studied composition with Wallingford Riegger and Stefan Wolpe. In the 1950s, much more influenced by Abstract Expressionist painters than by other composers, he began using a method of graphic notation that
- Feldman, Sylvia Field (American economist and journalist)
Sylvia Field Porter was an American economist and journalist whose financial advice—in newspaper columns, books, and magazines—garnered a wide audience in a field dominated by men. Porter graduated from Hunter College in New York City in 1932. She worked as an assistant in a Wall Street investment
- Feldmuehle Nobel AG (German company)
Flick Group, former diversified industrial and manufacturing company founded in Germany in the early 1920s by Friedrich Flick, who rapidly gained control of a massive empire in both steel and coal. The end of World War II, however, found three-fourths of the Flick operations inside the Soviet zone
- feldsher (medical title)
medicine: Russia: …may be seen first by feldshers (auxiliary health workers), nurses, or midwives who work under the supervision of a polyclinic or hospital physician. The feldsher was once a lower-grade physician in the army or peasant communities, but feldshers are now regarded as paramedical workers.
- feldspar (mineral)
feldspar, any of a group of aluminosilicate minerals that contain calcium, sodium, or potassium. Feldspars make up more than half of Earth’s crust, and professional literature about them constitutes a large percentage of the literature of mineralogy. Of the more than 3,000 known mineral species,
- feldspathic glaze (pottery)
pottery: Decorative glazing: …four principal kinds of glazes: feldspathic, lead, tin, and salt. (Modern technology has produced new glazes that fall into none of these categories while remaining a type of glass.) Feldspathic, lead, and salt glazes are transparent; tin glaze is an opaque white. Hard porcelain takes a feldspathic glaze, soft porcelain…
- feldspathoid (mineral)
feldspathoid, any of a group of alkali aluminosilicate minerals similar to the feldspars in chemical composition but either having a lower silica-alkali ratio or containing chloride, sulfide, sulfate, or carbonate. They are considered to be the specific minerals of igneous rocks usually termed
- Feldstein, Jonah Hill (American actor)
Jonah Hill is an American actor, director, and comedian who became known for locating a core of humanity inside clownish characters and later proved to be equally adept in serious roles. Hill grew up in an upper-middle-class neighbourhood of Los Angeles. His mother was a costume designer, and his
- Félibien, André (French critic)
art criticism: Art criticism in the 17th century: Programmatic theory: …in the 17th century with André Félibien’s 10-volume Entretiens sur les vies et sur les ouvrages des plus excellens peintres anciens et modernes (1666–88; “Conversations on the Most Excellent Painters, Ancient and Modern”). Like Vasari, Félibien presents what he regards as the proper principles of art, as well as an…
- Félibrige (Provençal literary society)
Félibrige, association organized in the 19th century for the maintenance of the Provençal customs and language that stimulated the renaissance of the literature, language, and customs of the whole of southern France. The Félibrige was founded in 1854 by seven poets—Joseph Roumanille, Frédéric
- Felicia’s Journey (novel by Trevor)
William Trevor: In addition, Felicia’s Journey (1994) was named the Whitbread Book of the Year. Reading Turgenev (1991) and The Story of Lucy Gault (2002) were both short-listed for the Booker Prize. His last novel, Love and Summer, was published in 2009.
- Felicia’s Journey (film by Egoyan [1999])
Atom Egoyan: …book for the screen with Felicia’s Last Journey (1999), based on a novel by William Trevor.
- Feliciano de Castilho, António (Portuguese poet and translator)
António Feliciano de Castilho was a poet and translator, a central figure in the Portuguese Romantic movement. Although blind from childhood, he became a classical scholar and at the age of 16 published a series of poems, translations, and pedagogical works. Castilho’s literary life may be divided
- Feliciano, Felice (calligrapher)
calligraphy: The scripts of humanism (14th to 16th century): …enthusiasts as Cyriacus of Ancona, Felice Feliciano and Giovanni Giocondo of Verona, and Giovanni Marcanova, Bartolomeo Sanvito, and Andrea Mantegna from Padua; Mantegna, an engraver and painter, became one of the first Renaissance artists to incorporate classical lettering into his artwork. These men compiled their researches into sillogi (anthologies of…
- Feliciano, José (Puerto Rican singer and guitarist)
José Feliciano is a Hispanic American singer and guitarist known for his expressive tenor voice and acoustic instrumentals. He recorded in both English and Spanish. Feliciano was born in Lares, Puerto Rico, and, when he was five years old, his parents moved the family to the Spanish Harlem section
- Felicitas (Roman deity)
Felicitas, Roman goddess of good luck to whom a temple was first built in the mid-2nd century bc. She became the special protector of successful commanders. Caesar planned to erect another temple to her, and it was built by the triumvir M. Aemilius Lepidus. The emperors made her prominent as
- Felicitas Julia (national capital, Portugal)
Lisbon, city, port, capital of Portugal, and the centre of the Lisbon metropolitan area. Located in western Portugal on the estuary of the Tagus (Tejo) River, it is the westernmost capital city in continental Europe and serves as the country’s chief port, largest city, and commercial, political,
- Felicity (American television series)
J.J. Abrams: …television and cocreated the series Felicity (1998–2002), which followed the trials and tribulations of a college student in New York City. Even though it lasted only 4 seasons, Felicity was a hit, and Abrams’s newfound clout allowed him to get the go-ahead for another series creation: Alias (2001–06), a fast-paced…
- Felidae (mammal family)
feline, (family Felidae), any of 37 cat species that among others include the cheetah, puma, jaguar, leopard, lion, lynx, tiger, and domestic cat. Cats are native to almost every region on Earth, with the exception of Australia and Antarctica. They are carnivorous mammals that live in a wide
- Felinae (mammal subfamily)
feline: Evolution and classification: Cats of the subfamily Felinae appeared in western Eurasia about 10 million years ago and have continued almost unchanged into modern times. Genetic studies examining living and fossil pantherines—cats of the subfamily Pantherinae—suggest that the pantherine lineage emerged in central Asia some 16 million years ago and subsequently spread…
- feline (mammal family)
feline, (family Felidae), any of 37 cat species that among others include the cheetah, puma, jaguar, leopard, lion, lynx, tiger, and domestic cat. Cats are native to almost every region on Earth, with the exception of Australia and Antarctica. They are carnivorous mammals that live in a wide
- feline calicivirus (virus)
calicivirus: Feline calicivirus (FCV) is an agent that causes upper respiratory disease in cats.
- feline distemper (viral disease)
feline distemper, viral disease of cats, kittens two to six months old being most susceptible. Highly contagious, it is caused by a parvovirus that is closely related to canine parvovirus type 2. About 3 to 10 days after exposure to the disease, infected kittens cough and sneeze, have running eyes
- feline leukemia (disease)
feline leukemia, viral disease of cats, one of the most serious diseases affecting domestic cats and a few other Felidae. The disease occurs worldwide. Signs include enlargement of the lymph nodes, depression, emaciation, and, frequently, diarrhea; there is no known treatment, and the outcome is
- feline lymphosarcoma (disease)
feline leukemia, viral disease of cats, one of the most serious diseases affecting domestic cats and a few other Felidae. The disease occurs worldwide. Signs include enlargement of the lymph nodes, depression, emaciation, and, frequently, diarrhea; there is no known treatment, and the outcome is
- feline respiratory disease
feline respiratory disease, a complex of viral contagions of cats (including rhinotracheitis, pneumonitis, and influenza), marked by fever, sneezing, and running eyes and nose. Rhinotracheitis and pneumonitis are the most common and have identical symptoms. Mortality is low, but recovery from
- Felipe el Hermoso (king of Castile)
Philip I was the king of Castile for less than a month before his death and the founder of the Habsburg dynasty in Spain. Philip was the son of the future Holy Roman emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg and Mary of Burgundy. At his mother’s death (1482) he succeeded to her Netherlands dominions, with
- Felipe VI (king of Spain)
Felipe VI is the king of Spain from 2014. Felipe was born in the latter years of the Francisco Franco regime, as the dictator’s health was declining and the government was taking halting steps in the direction of greater political and economic liberalization. On November 22, 1975, two days after
- Felipe, León (Spanish poet)
León Felipe was a Spanish poet known chiefly as a poet of the Spanish Civil War. After performing across Spain with a traveling theatre company, Felipe published his first book, Versos y oraciones de caminante (1919; “Verses and Prayers of a Traveler”), in Madrid. He worked for an extended period
- Felis (genus of mammals)
feline: Evolution and classification: Genus Felis (small cats) 6 Old World species, including the wildcat and domestic cat. Genus Lynx (lynxes) 4 species, including the bobcat. Genus Prionailurus
- Felis aurata (mammal)
golden cat: …of the family Felidae: the African golden cat (Profelis aurata), or the Asian golden cat (Catopuma temminckii), also known as Temminck’s cat.
- Felis bengalensis (mammal)
leopard cat, (Prionailurus bengalensis), forest-dwelling cat, of the family Felidae, found across India, Southeast Asia, and nearby islands. The leopard cat is noted for its leopard-like colouring. The species is generally divided into one mainland subspecies, P. bengalensis bengalensis, and