- flehmen (animal behavior)
chemoreception: Terrestrial vertebrates: This is called flehmen and is seen during courtship, when it is used by males to assess the estrus state of females, and during the investigation of new odours, when it is used by both males and females to explore their surroundings. Changes in the internal volume of…
- Fleischer brothers (American animators)
Fleischer brothers, American brothers, producers of animated cartoons featuring such characters as Betty Boop and Popeye. Producer Max Fleischer (b. July 19, 1883, Vienna, Austria—d. Sept. 11, 1972, Woodland Hills, Calif., U.S.) and director Dave Fleischer (b. July 14, 1894, New York, N.Y., U.S.—d.
- Fleischer, Ari (American press secretary)
White House press secretary: Press secretaries in the 21st century: Ari Fleischer, who served George W. Bush, was remembered for his performance following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Though already televised, the daily briefing gained new audiences, and the press secretary gained new stature. When President Bush’s approval ratings dropped in his second…
- Fleischer, Dave (American animator)
Fleischer brothers: Brother Dave’s on-camera performance in a clown suit was rotoscoped into the character Ko-Ko the Clown, who starred in the Out of the Inkwell series (1919–29), produced and distributed by the Bray Studio in New York City. The basic premise for the series is a live-action…
- Fleischer, Max (American animator)
Fleischer brothers: The mechanically inclined Max invented the rotoscope, a time- and labour-saving device in which live-action film frames are traced as a guide for animated action. Brother Dave’s on-camera performance in a clown suit was rotoscoped into the character Ko-Ko the Clown, who starred in the Out of the…
- Fleischer, Nat (American sports journalist)
Nat Fleischer was an American sports journalist who was an outstanding authority on boxing. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Fleischer, a sportswriter for the New York Press, was encouraged by the promoter Tex Rickard to found the authoritative monthly magazine The Ring, the
- Fleischer, Nathaniel Stanley (American sports journalist)
Nat Fleischer was an American sports journalist who was an outstanding authority on boxing. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Fleischer, a sportswriter for the New York Press, was encouraged by the promoter Tex Rickard to found the authoritative monthly magazine The Ring, the
- Fleischer, Richard (American director)
Richard Fleischer was an American filmmaker who directed a number of popular movies, notably the science-fiction classics 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), Fantastic Voyage (1966), and Soylent Green (1973). Fleischer, the son of animation pioneer Max Fleischer, attended Brown University before
- Fleischmann, Annelise Elsa Frieda (German-born textile designer)
Anni Albers was a German-born textile designer who was one of the most influential figures in textile arts in the 20th century. In addition to creating striking designs for utilitarian woven objects, she helped to reestablish work in textiles as an art form. She was married to the innovative
- Fleisher, Leon (American pianist and conductor)
Leon Fleisher was an American pianist and conductor who overcame a debilitating neurological condition to resume playing his full concert repertoire. A child prodigy, Fleisher began studying the piano at age four, gave his first public recital at eight, and at nine was taken under the wing of the
- Fleishman Is in Trouble (American television miniseries)
Claire Danes: TV success: Temple Grandin and Homeland: …appeared in another TV adaptation, Fleishman Is in Trouble. The miniseries, based on a novel by Taffy Brodesser-Akner, centers on the breakdown of a couple’s marriage, as viewed from different perspectives.
- Flemael, Bertholot (Flemish painter)
Bertholet Flémalle was a Franco-Flemish painter, a pioneer of the classicist movement in his country. Flémalle studied under Henri Trippet and Gérard Douffet. He went to Italy in 1638, returning via Paris, where he decorated the churches of the Grands Augustines and the Carmes Déchaussés. He
- Flemal, Bertholot (Flemish painter)
Bertholet Flémalle was a Franco-Flemish painter, a pioneer of the classicist movement in his country. Flémalle studied under Henri Trippet and Gérard Douffet. He went to Italy in 1638, returning via Paris, where he decorated the churches of the Grands Augustines and the Carmes Déchaussés. He
- Flémalle, Bertholet (Flemish painter)
Bertholet Flémalle was a Franco-Flemish painter, a pioneer of the classicist movement in his country. Flémalle studied under Henri Trippet and Gérard Douffet. He went to Italy in 1638, returning via Paris, where he decorated the churches of the Grands Augustines and the Carmes Déchaussés. He
- Flémalle, Master of (Flemish painter)
Master of Flémalle was a leading artist of the northern Renaissance, whose work is characterized by naturalistic and sculptural conceptions that signalize the replacement of the decorative International Style of the late Middle Ages. By the late 20th century, after several decades of controversy, a
- Fleming and Walloon (people)
Fleming and Walloon, members of the two predominant cultural and linguistic groups of modern Belgium. The Flemings, who constitute more than half of the Belgian population, speak Dutch (sometimes called Netherlandic), or Belgian Dutch (also called Flemish by English-speakers), and live mainly in
- Fleming Mill (windmill, La Salle, Montreal, Quebec, Canada)
La Salle: Fleming Mill, a four-story conical windmill built in 1816, is a local landmark.
- Fleming Survey (Canadian history)
railroad: Canadian railroads: A Canadian Pacific Railway survey was begun under the direction of Sandford Fleming, former chief engineer of the Intercolonial Railway in the Maritime Provinces. There was some question as to the best route across the Canadian Shield from Callender in eastern Ontario (then the head of steel production in…
- Fleming valve (electronics)
electronics: The vacuum tube era: Coolidge and Fleming’s thermionic valve (a two-electrode vacuum tube) for use in radio receivers. The detection of a radio signal, which is a very high-frequency alternating current (AC), requires that the signal be rectified; i.e., the alternating current must be converted into a direct current (DC) by a…
- Fleming’s rule (electromagnetism)
electromagnetism: Experimental and theoretical studies of electromagnetic phenomena: …was able to express the right-hand rule for the direction of the force on a current in a magnetic field. He also established experimentally and quantitatively the laws of magnetic force between electric currents. He suggested that internal electric currents are responsible for permanent magnets and for highly magnetizable materials…
- Fleming, Alexander (Scottish bacteriologist)
Alexander Fleming was a Scottish bacteriologist best known for his discovery of penicillin. Fleming had a genius for technical ingenuity and original observation. His work on wound infection and lysozyme, an antibacterial enzyme found in tears and saliva, guaranteed him a place in the history of
- Fleming, Art (American actor and television game-show host)
Jeopardy!: Jeopardy! hosts: …first Jeopardy! episode, hosted by Art Fleming, aired on March 30, 1964, during the day on NBC, with Don Pardo as announcer, and eventually went into syndication; it aired in various formats until 1979. The show relaunched in 1984 (considered the first season of the modern version of the show)…
- Fleming, Ian (British author)
Ian Fleming was a suspense-fiction novelist whose character James Bond, the stylish, high-living British secret service agent 007, became one of the most successful and widely imitated heroes of 20th-century popular fiction. The son of a Conservative MP and the grandson of a Scottish banker,
- Fleming, Ian Lancaster (British author)
Ian Fleming was a suspense-fiction novelist whose character James Bond, the stylish, high-living British secret service agent 007, became one of the most successful and widely imitated heroes of 20th-century popular fiction. The son of a Conservative MP and the grandson of a Scottish banker,
- Fleming, Paul (German poet)
Paul Fleming was an outstanding lyrical poet of 17th-century Germany. He brought a new immediacy and sincerity to the innovations of metre and stanza introduced by his teacher, Martin Opitz. The son of a Lutheran pastor, Fleming was studying medicine and composing Latin verse at Leipzig when he met
- Fleming, Peggy (American figure skater)
Peggy Fleming is an American figure skater who dominated world-level women’s competition from 1964 through 1968. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on figure skating.) Fleming began skating at age nine. She worked with many coaches, including Carlo Fassi, who would eventually guide her to an
- Fleming, Peggy Gale (American figure skater)
Peggy Fleming is an American figure skater who dominated world-level women’s competition from 1964 through 1968. (Read Scott Hamilton’s Britannica entry on figure skating.) Fleming began skating at age nine. She worked with many coaches, including Carlo Fassi, who would eventually guide her to an
- Fleming, Peter (American tennis player)
John McEnroe: With partner Peter Fleming, McEnroe won several doubles titles at the U.S. Open and Wimbledon, as well as Championship Tennis tournaments. From 1983 to 1985 he won 75 matches on indoor carpet, setting a record for most consecutive victories on one surface; his record was broken in…
- Fleming, Renée (American singer)
Renée Fleming is an American soprano noted for the beauty and richness of her voice and for the thought and sensitivity she brought to the texts. Fleming’s repertoire is extraordinarily broad, spanning three centuries and ranging from Handel and Mozart through 19th-century bel canto to the works of
- Fleming, Richard H. (American oceanographer)
Richard H. Fleming was a Canadian-born American oceanographer who conducted wide-ranging studies in the areas of chemical and biochemical oceanography, ocean currents (particularly those off the Pacific coast of Central America), and naval uses of oceanography. Fleming joined the Scripps
- Fleming, Richard Howell (American oceanographer)
Richard H. Fleming was a Canadian-born American oceanographer who conducted wide-ranging studies in the areas of chemical and biochemical oceanography, ocean currents (particularly those off the Pacific coast of Central America), and naval uses of oceanography. Fleming joined the Scripps
- Fleming, Sir Alexander (Scottish bacteriologist)
Alexander Fleming was a Scottish bacteriologist best known for his discovery of penicillin. Fleming had a genius for technical ingenuity and original observation. His work on wound infection and lysozyme, an antibacterial enzyme found in tears and saliva, guaranteed him a place in the history of
- Fleming, Sir Arthur Percy Morris (British engineer)
Sir Arthur Percy Morris Fleming was an English engineer who was a major figure in developing techniques for manufacturing radar components. In 1900 Fleming went to the United States to undergo training at the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, East Pittsburgh, Pa. Upon returning to
- Fleming, Sir John Ambrose (British engineer)
Sir John Ambrose Fleming was an English engineer who made numerous contributions to electronics, photometry, electric measurements, and wireless telegraphy. After studying at University College, London, and at Cambridge University under James Clerk Maxwell, Fleming became a consultant to the Edison
- Fleming, Sir Sandford (Canadian engineer and scientist)
Sir Sandford Fleming was a civil engineer and scientist who was the foremost railway engineer of Canada in the 19th century. Fleming emigrated in 1845 from Scotland to Canada, where he was trained as an engineer. By 1857 he had become chief engineer for the Ontario, Simcoe, and Huron Railway (now
- Fleming, Victor (American director)
Victor Fleming was an American filmmaker who was one of Hollywood’s most popular directors during the 1930s. He was best known for his work on the 1939 classics Gone with the Wind and The Wizard of Oz. Fleming started in the film industry as a stunt car driver in 1910. A year later he began working
- Fleming, Williamina Paton Stevens (American astronomer)
Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming was an American astronomer who pioneered in the classification of stellar spectra. Mina Stevens was educated in public schools and from age 14 was a teacher as well as student. In May 1877 she married James O. Fleming, with whom she immigrated to the United States
- Flemington Racecourse (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
Melbourne: Recreation: …Rules football, and at the Flemington Racecourse, where the valuable Melbourne Cup race is held every November. Melbourne hosted the 1956 Summer Olympic Games. New sports facilities, including a large tennis stadium near the Melbourne Cricket Ground, have been added since the Olympics. Sailing and fishing on Port Phillip Bay…
- Flemish (people)
Fleming and Walloon, members of the two predominant cultural and linguistic groups of modern Belgium. The Flemings, who constitute more than half of the Belgian population, speak Dutch (sometimes called Netherlandic), or Belgian Dutch (also called Flemish by English-speakers), and live mainly in
- Flemish art
Flemish art, art of the 15th, 16th, and early 17th centuries in Flanders and in the surrounding regions including Brabant, Hainaut, Picardy, and Artois, known for its vibrant materialism and unsurpassed technical skill. From Hubert and Jan van Eyck through Pieter Bruegel the Elder to Peter Paul
- Flemish bond (masonry)
Flemish bond, in masonry, method of bonding bricks or stones in courses. See
- Flemish Brabant (province, Belgium)
Belgium: >Flemish Brabant, Antwerp, and Limburg). Just north of the boundary between Walloon Brabant (Brabant Walloon) and Flemish (Vlaams) Brabant lies the officially bilingual but majority French-speaking Brussels-Capital Region, with approximately one-tenth of the total population. (See also
- Flemish language
Dutch language, a West Germanic language that is the national language of the Netherlands and, with French and German, one of the three official languages of Belgium. Although speakers of English usually call the language of the Netherlands “Dutch” and the language of Belgium “Flemish,” they are
- Flemish Liberal Party (political party, Belgium)
Guy Verhofstadt: …of the PVV to the Liberal and Democratic Flemish Party (VLD) in hopes of attracting more centrist voters. In 1997 he was reelected as president of the VLD. In elections in 1999 the VLD defeated Prime Minister Jean-Luc Dehaene’s centre-left coalition, and Verhofstadt became the first liberal prime minister of…
- Flemish literature
Flemish literature, the body of written works in the Flemish- (Dutch-) language produced by Belgians. The other literatures of Belgium are discussed in Belgian literature. Any consideration of the Dutch-language literature of Belgium must take into account that the Belgian territories were broadly
- Flemish movement (Belgian political movement)
Flemish movement, the 19th- and 20th-century nationalist movement of Flemish-speaking people in Belgium. It has sought political and cultural equality with, or separation from, the less numerous but long-dominant French-speaking Walloons. The movement had its origins in the 1830s; at first, under
- Flemish Region (region, Belgium)
Flanders, region that constitutes the northern half of Belgium. Along with the Walloon Region and the Brussels-Capital Region, the self-governing Flemish Region was created during the federalization of Belgium, largely along ethnolinguistic lines, in the 1980s and ’90s. Its elected government has
- Flemish school
Flemish art, art of the 15th, 16th, and early 17th centuries in Flanders and in the surrounding regions including Brabant, Hainaut, Picardy, and Artois, known for its vibrant materialism and unsurpassed technical skill. From Hubert and Jan van Eyck through Pieter Bruegel the Elder to Peter Paul
- Flemish school (musical composition style)
Franco-Netherlandish school, designation for several generations of major northern composers, who from about 1440 to 1550 dominated the European musical scene by virtue of their craftsmanship and scope. Because of the difficulty of balancing matters of ethnicity, cultural heritage, places of
- Flemish School of Music (school, Antwerp, Belgium)
Peter Benoit: …School of Music (later the Royal Flemish Conservatory), which he directed until his death.
- Flemish strapwork (architecture)
Western architecture: England: …corner towers are decorated with Flemish strapwork (i.e., bands raised in relief assuming curvilinear forms suggestive of leather straps). Other examples of this style are Hardwick Hall (1590–97) in Derbyshire, probably by Smythson; Kirby Hall (about 1570–78) in Northamptonshire, perhaps by the mason Thomas Thorpe; and Montacute House (1588–1601) in…
- Flemish Vlaams
Dutch language, a West Germanic language that is the national language of the Netherlands and, with French and German, one of the three official languages of Belgium. Although speakers of English usually call the language of the Netherlands “Dutch” and the language of Belgium “Flemish,” they are
- Flemmi, Stephen (American criminal)
Whitey Bulger: A fellow FBI informant, Stephen Flemmi, became his top lieutenant. Establishing a racket by which he extorted money from bookmakers, loan sharks, drug dealers, and other local criminals, Bulger soon acquired a fearsome reputation both within and beyond the illicit underworld.
- Flemming, Walther (German biologist)
Walther Flemming was a German anatomist and a founder of the science of cytogenetics (the study of the cell’s hereditary material, the chromosomes). He was the first to observe and describe systematically the behaviour of chromosomes in the cell nucleus during normal cell division (mitosis). After
- Flensborg (Germany)
Flensburg, city, Schleswig-Holstein Land (state), Germany. A port at the head of Flensburg Fjord, it is Germany’s most northerly large city. First mentioned in 1240, it was chartered in 1284 and was frequently pillaged by the Swedes after 1643. It became the capital of Schleswig under Danish rule
- Flensburg (Germany)
Flensburg, city, Schleswig-Holstein Land (state), Germany. A port at the head of Flensburg Fjord, it is Germany’s most northerly large city. First mentioned in 1240, it was chartered in 1284 and was frequently pillaged by the Swedes after 1643. It became the capital of Schleswig under Danish rule
- Flerov, Georgy N. (Soviet scientist)
nuclear weapon: Atomic weapons: In early 1942 Soviet physicist Georgy N. Flerov noticed that articles on nuclear fission were no longer appearing in Western journals—an indication that research on the subject had become classified. In response, Flerov wrote to, among others, Premier Joseph Stalin, insisting that “we must build the uranium bomb without delay.”…
- flerovium (chemical element)
flerovium (Fl), artificially produced transuranium element of atomic number 114. In 1999 scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California, produced atoms of flerovium from colliding atoms of calcium-48
- Flesch Károly (Hungarian violinist and teacher)
Károly Flesch was a Hungarian violinist and teacher who was largely responsible for raising international awareness of Hungarian music. From 1886 to 1889 Flesch was the student of Jakob Grün at the conservatory in Vienna, and then from 1890 to 1894 he was taught by Martin Marsick and Eugene Sauzay
- Flesch, Károly (Hungarian violinist and teacher)
Károly Flesch was a Hungarian violinist and teacher who was largely responsible for raising international awareness of Hungarian music. From 1886 to 1889 Flesch was the student of Jakob Grün at the conservatory in Vienna, and then from 1890 to 1894 he was taught by Martin Marsick and Eugene Sauzay
- Flesche, Francis La (American ethnologist)
Francis La Flesche was a U.S. ethnologist and champion of the rights of American Indians who wrote a book of general literary interest about his experiences as a student in a mission school in the 1860s. This memoir, The Middle Five (1900, new edition 1963), is rare in providing an account from an
- Flesche, Susette La (American author and activist)
Susette La Flesche was a Native American writer, lecturer, and activist in the cause of Native peoples’ rights. La Flesche’s father was an Omaha chief who was the son of a French trader and an Omaha woman. He sent his children to a Presbyterian mission school to provide them with an
- Flesh and Blood (poetry by Williams)
C.K. Williams: Later works include Tar (1983), Flesh and Blood (1987), A Dream of Mind (1992), and The Vigil (1997). Following a series of brief interludes at various universities, Williams began teaching creative writing at Princeton University in 1996.
- Flesh and the Devil (film by Brown [1927])
Clarence Brown: Early life and work: …picture for the studio was Flesh and the Devil (1927), a melodrama starring a recent Swedish import named Greta Garbo (in her third American movie) alongside matinee idol John Gilbert. The film helped establish her as a top-ranking star, and it was the first of the seven pictures she would…
- flesh fly (insect)
flesh fly, (family Sarcophagidae), any member of a family of insects in the fly order, Diptera, that are similar in appearance to the house fly but are characterized by blackish stripes on the gray thorax (region behind the head) and a checkered pattern of light and dark gray on the abdomen. Most
- flesh-eating disease (pathology)
necrotizing fasciitis, rapidly spreading infection of the underlying skin and adipose (fat) layers caused by a variety of pathogenic bacteria, principally Streptococcus pyogenes, also known as the group A streptococcus. Popularly known as the flesh-eating disease, necrotizing fasciitis is an
- fleshing grease (lubricant)
grease: Fleshing grease is the fatty material trimmed from hides and pelts. Bone grease, hide grease, and garbage grease are named according to their origin. In some factories, food offal is used along with animal carcasses, butcher-shop scraps, and garbage from restaurants for recovery of fats.
- fleshless diet (human dietary practice)
vegetarianism, the theory or practice of living solely upon vegetables, fruits, grains, legumes, and nuts—with or without the addition of milk products and eggs—generally for ethical, ascetic, environmental, or nutritional reasons. All forms of flesh (meat, fowl, and seafood) are excluded from all
- fleshly school of poetry (English group)
fleshly school of poetry, a group of late 19th-century English poets associated with Dante Gabriel Rossetti. The term was invented by the Scottish author Robert Williams Buchanan (1841–1901) and appeared as the title of a pseudonymous article in the Contemporary Review (October 1871) in which he
- fleshy fruit (botany)
fruit: Types of fruits: …two broad categories of fruits: fleshy fruits, in which the pericarp and accessory parts develop into succulent tissues, as in eggplants, oranges, and strawberries; and dry fruits, in which the entire pericarp becomes dry at maturity. Fleshy fruits include (1) the berries, such as tomatoes, blueberries, and
- fleshy-finned fish (fish taxon)
vertebrate: Annotated classification: Subclass Sarcopterygii (lobe-finned fishes) Usually possess a choana; paired fins with a fleshy base over a bony skeleton; persisting notochord; 2 dorsal fins; nares are internal. Class Amphibia Cold-blooded; respire by lungs, gills, skin, or mouth lining; larval stage in water or in egg; skin is…
- Fletch (film by Ritchie [1985])
Michael Ritchie: The 1980s: …Ritchie found box-office success with Fletch (1985). Adapted from a humorous mystery novel by Gregory Mcdonald, it became a vehicle for comedian Chevy Chase, who starred as an investigative journalist. Less popular was Wildcats (1986), a formulaic but efficient comedy that had Goldie Hawn as a teacher who quits her…
- Fletch (novel by Mcdonald)
Michael Ritchie: The 1980s: Adapted from a humorous mystery novel by Gregory Mcdonald, it became a vehicle for comedian Chevy Chase, who starred as an investigative journalist. Less popular was Wildcats (1986), a formulaic but efficient comedy that had Goldie Hawn as a teacher who quits her job in the suburbs to coach football…
- Fletch Lives (film by Ritchie [1989])
Michael Ritchie: The 1980s: …Ritchie reteamed with Chase on Fletch Lives (1989), but it failed to match the success of the 1985 original.
- Fletcher (Colorado, United States)
Aurora, city, Adams, Arapahoe, and Douglas counties, north-central Colorado, U.S. An eastern suburb of Denver, Aurora was the third most populous city in Colorado at the start of the 21st century. It was founded during the silver boom of 1891 and named Fletcher after its Canadian-born founder,
- Fletcher v. Peck (law case)
judicial restraint: …Court decisions as early as Fletcher v. Peck (1810) state that judges should strike down laws only if they “feel a clear and strong conviction” of unconstitutionality. Early scholars also endorsed the idea; one notable example is Harvard law professor James Bradley Thayer (1831–1902), who observed that a legislator might…
- Fletcher’s Ice Island (ice station, Arctic Ocean)
Arctic Ocean: Oceanography: Fletcher’s Ice Island (T-3) made two orbits in this gyre over a 20-year period, which is some indication of the current speed. The northern extremity of the gyre bifurcates and jets out of the Greenland-Spitsbergen passage as the East Greenland Current, attaining speeds of 6 to 16 inches…
- Fletcher, Alice Cunningham (American anthropologist)
Alice Cunningham Fletcher was an American anthropologist whose stature as a social scientist, notably for her pioneer studies of Native American music, has overshadowed her influence on federal government Indian policies that later were considered to be unfortunate. Fletcher taught school for a
- Fletcher, Brian (English jockey)
Red Rum: In 1973, ridden by Brian Fletcher, Red Rum won his first Grand National by spurting ahead in the last 100 yards of the course to pass Crisp, who had held the lead during most of the race, and beating him by 3 4 of a length in the record…
- Fletcher, Frank J. (United States admiral)
Battle of the Coral Sea: Frank J. Fletcher struck the landing group, sinking one destroyer and some minesweepers and landing barges. Most of the naval units covering the main Japanese invasion force that left Rabaul, New Britain, for Port Moresby on May 4 took a circuitous route to the east,…
- Fletcher, Giles, the Elder (English author)
Giles Fletcher the Elder was an English poet and author, and father of the poets Phineas Fletcher and Giles Fletcher the Younger; his writings include an account of his visit to Russia. Educated at Eton and at King’s College, Cambridge, Fletcher was employed on diplomatic service in Scotland,
- Fletcher, Giles, the Younger (English poet)
Giles Fletcher the Younger was an English poet principally known for his great Baroque devotional poem Christs Victorie. He was the younger son of Giles Fletcher the Elder. He was educated at Westminster School and at Trinity College, Cambridge. After his ordination, he held a college position, and
- Fletcher, Harvey (American physicist)
Harvey Fletcher was a U.S. physicist, a leading authority in the fields of psychoacoustics and acoustical engineering. Fletcher graduated from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, in 1907 and received a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago in 1911. In 1916 he joined the staff of Bell
- Fletcher, John (English dramatist)
John Fletcher was an English Jacobean dramatist who collaborated with Francis Beaumont and other dramatists on comedies and tragedies between about 1606 and 1625. His father, Richard Fletcher, was minister of the parish in which John was born and became afterward queen’s chaplain, dean of
- Fletcher, Joseph F. (American theologian)
situation ethics: …developed by American Anglican theologian Joseph F. Fletcher, whose book Situation Ethics: The New Morality (1966) arose from his objections to both moral absolutism (the view that there are fixed universal moral principles that have binding authority in all circumstances) and moral relativism (the view that there are no fixed…
- Fletcher, Louise (American actress)
Louise Fletcher was an American actress who was perhaps best known for her skillfully underplayed portrayal of the rigidly authoritarian Nurse Ratched in One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975), which earned her the Academy Award for best actress. Fletcher’s father was an Episcopal priest, and both
- Fletcher, Lucille (American writer)
Sorry, Wrong Number: …1948, that was based on Lucille Fletcher’s hit 1943 radio play of the same name.
- Fletcher, Penelope (British author)
Penelope Mortimer was a British journalist and novelist whose writing, depicting a nightmarish world of neuroses and broken marriages, influenced feminist fiction of the 1960s. After her graduation from the University of London, she began to write poetry, book reviews, and short stories. She was
- Fletcher, Phineas (English poet)
Phineas Fletcher was an English poet best known for his religious and scientific poem The Purple Island; or, The Isle of Man (1633). The elder son of Giles Fletcher the Elder and brother of Giles Fletcher the Younger, he was educated at Eton and at King’s College, Cambridge. His pastoral drama
- Fletcher, Susannah Yolande (British actress)
Susannah York was a British actor who was initially cast as a blue-eyed blonde ingenue, but whose gamine beauty belied acting skills that came to the fore in such roles as the feisty Sophie Western, the object of the eponymous hero’s affections in Tom Jones (1963), and as Sir Thomas More’s
- Fletcher-Munson curve (measurement)
sound: Dynamic range of the ear: …of equal-loudness curves, sometimes called Fletcher-Munson curves after the investigators, the Americans Harvey Fletcher and W.A. Munson, who first measured them. The curves show the varying absolute intensities of a pure tone that has the same loudness to the ear at various frequencies. The determination of each curve, labeled by…
- Flettner Fl 282 (German helicopter)
military aircraft: Helicopters: …used a handful of Flettner Fl 282s, powered by two noncoaxial, contrarotating lifting rotors, for ship-based artillery spotting and visual reconnaissance.
- Flettner, Anton (German inventor)
Anton Flettner was a German inventor of the rotor ship, a vessel propelled by revolving cylinders mounted vertically on the deck. He also invented the Flettner trim-tab control for aircraft and the Flettner marine rudder. Flettner directed an aeronautical and hydrodynamic research institute in
- fleur-de-lis (emblem)
fleur-de-lis, stylized emblem or device much used in ornamentation and, particularly, in heraldry, long associated with the French crown. One legend identifies it as the lily given at his baptism to Clovis, king of the Franks (466–511), by the Virgin Mary. The lily was said to have sprung from the
- fleur-de-luce (emblem)
fleur-de-lis, stylized emblem or device much used in ornamentation and, particularly, in heraldry, long associated with the French crown. One legend identifies it as the lily given at his baptism to Clovis, king of the Franks (466–511), by the Virgin Mary. The lily was said to have sprung from the
- fleur-de-lys (emblem)
fleur-de-lis, stylized emblem or device much used in ornamentation and, particularly, in heraldry, long associated with the French crown. One legend identifies it as the lily given at his baptism to Clovis, king of the Franks (466–511), by the Virgin Mary. The lily was said to have sprung from the
- fleurdelisé flag (Canadian provincial flag)
Canadian provincial flag consisting of a blue field (background) divided into quarters by a central white cross; within each quarter is a white fleur-de-lis.The origin of the provincial flag can be traced to France, which controlled vast areas of North America during colonial times. Since at least
- Fleuron, The (English journal)
typography: Mechanical composition: …joined Oliver Simon in publishing The Fleuron, a journal of printing history and design in which he published a number of important articles on calligraphy and typography.
- Fleurs boréales, Les (poem by Fréchette)
Louis-Honoré Fréchette: Fréchette made literary history when Les Fleurs boréales (1879; “The Northern Flowers”) and Les Oiseaux de neige (1879; “The Snow Birds”) were awarded the Prix Montyon in 1880, the first time the work of a Canadian had been honoured by the French Academy. A controversial representative of liberal nationalism, Fréchette…
- Fleurs du mal, Les (poetry by Baudelaire)
Les Fleurs du mal, collection of poems published in 1857 by Charles Baudelaire. A second edition, published in 1861, was greatly enlarged and enhanced but omitted six poems that had been banned. (These were first republished in 1866 in Belgium in the collection Les Épaves, but they remained banned