- Floris, Cornelis II (Flemish artist)
Cornelis II Floris was a Flemish sculptor, engraver, and medalist whose Antwerp workshop contributed significantly to the Northern Renaissance by disseminating 16th-century Italian art styles. In the 1540s Floris, along with his brother Frans I Floris, studied in Rome, and he returned to Flanders
- Floris, Frans I (Flemish artist)
Frans I Floris was a Flemish painter, draftsman, and etcher who helped spread 16th-century Italian art styles and greatly influenced the Northern Renaissance. In the 1540s he studied in Rome along with his brother Cornelis II Floris, who became a successful sculptor, engraver, and medalist.
- Florissant (Missouri, United States)
Florissant, city, St. Louis county, east-central Missouri, U.S. A northern suburb of St. Louis, it lies in a valley near the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi rivers. Settled by the French in about 1785, it was called St. Ferdinand by the Spanish and was officially renamed Florissant (from
- Florissant Formation (geology)
Florissant Formation, division of middle and upper Oligocene rocks in central Colorado, U.S. (The Oligocene Epoch lasted from 33.7 to 23.8 million years ago.) It overlies the White River Group. Named for the nearby town of Florissant (French: “flowering”), which was so named by an early settler for
- Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument (monument, Colorado, United States)
Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, fossil-rich mountain valley in central Colorado, U.S. It is located in the Rocky Mountains west of Pikes Peak and Colorado Springs. The monument preserves the fossil beds of the Florissant Formation, which consist of light gray shales dating from the
- florist’s cyclamen (plant)
cyclamen: The florist’s cyclamen (Cyclamen persicum), the best-known species, is notable as an indoor plant cultivated for its attractive white to pink to deep red flowers. A number of other species, including ivy-leaved cyclamen (C. hederifolium), are grown outside.
- florist’s fern (plant)
asparagus: Other species: Florist’s fern (A. setaceus) is not a true fern and has feathery sprays of branchlets often used in corsages and in other plant arrangements. Sprenger’s fern (A. aethiopicus), African asparagus fern (or bridal creeper, A. asparagoides), and asparagus fern (A. densiflorus) are grown for their…
- florist’s geranium (plant)
Geraniales: The florist’s geranium (Pelargonium ×domesticum) is a favourite house plant and is available in many varieties. These cultivars (horticultural varieties) originated from plants native to South Africa. Geranium robertianum (herb Robert) is a well-known garden plant, as are some species of Erodium. Erodium cicutarium (pin-clover), a Mediterranean species…
- floristic kingdom (ecological area)
floristic region, any of six areas of the world recognized by plant geographers for their distinctive plant life. These regions, which coincide closely with the faunal regions as mapped by animal geographers, are often considered with them as biogeographic regions. The chief difference is the
- floristic region (ecological area)
floristic region, any of six areas of the world recognized by plant geographers for their distinctive plant life. These regions, which coincide closely with the faunal regions as mapped by animal geographers, are often considered with them as biogeographic regions. The chief difference is the
- florists cineraria (plant)
groundsel: Major species: mikanoides) and florist’s cineraria (S. cruentus) are popular houseplants.
- Florists Transworld Delivery (American company)
Meg Whitman: …offer to become CEO of Florists Transworld Delivery (FTD), a federation of commercial florists. There Whitman encountered opposition from staff members and member florists, who strongly objected to FTD’s transformation into a privately held firm. She resigned from FTD in 1997 and became general manager of the Playskool division of…
- Florizel (fictional character)
The Winter’s Tale: …been discovered by Polixenes’ son Florizel. Needless to say, her true status is eventually discovered once she and Florizel have arrived at Leontes’ court in Sicilia. In a climactic ending, Hermione is discovered to be alive after all. She had been sequestered by Paulina for some 16 years until the…
- Florus, Gessius (Roman procurator)
Herod Agrippa II: In 66 the procurator Gessius Florus permitted a massacre of Jews in Jerusalem, and the Zealots there rose in revolt. When Agrippa supported Florus, urging moderation, the Zealots gained the upper hand, and the case became hopeless.
- Florus, Publius Annius (Roman historian)
Publius Annius Florus was a historian of Rome and poet, important as the first of a number of African writers who exercised considerable influence on Latin literature in the 2nd century. He was also the first of the “new-fashioned” poets of Hadrian’s reign, whose special characteristic was the use
- Flory, Paul J. (American chemist)
Paul J. Flory was an American polymer chemist who was awarded the 1974 Nobel Prize for Chemistry “for his fundamental achievements, both theoretical and experimental, in the physical chemistry of macromolecules.” Flory was born of Huguenot-German parentage. His father, Ezra Flory, was a Brethren
- Flory, Paul John (American chemist)
Paul J. Flory was an American polymer chemist who was awarded the 1974 Nobel Prize for Chemistry “for his fundamental achievements, both theoretical and experimental, in the physical chemistry of macromolecules.” Flory was born of Huguenot-German parentage. His father, Ezra Flory, was a Brethren
- floss flower (plant)
ageratum: The common garden ageratum (A. houstonianum), also known as floss flower and blue mink, is frequently cultivated as an ornamental annual. Several dwarf varieties are commonly used as edging plants.
- Flosse, Gaston (president of French Polynesia)
French Polynesia: History of French Polynesia: …before losing to his predecessor, Gaston Flosse, who at that time was opposed to independence. Over the next decade, the presidency rotated among several politicians—including Temaru, Flosse, and Gaston Tong Sang, who served multiple times each—representing different visions of French Polynesia’s future in relation to France.
- Flossenbürg (concentration camp, Germany)
Flossenbürg, Nazi German concentration camp, established in 1937 in the market town of Flossenbürg, near the Czech border in Bavaria, Germany. It was originally used for political prisoners but, by World War II, had become an important forced-labor center, housing 30,000 to 40,000 worker-prisoners
- FLOSY (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…
- flota (Spanish fleet)
Cuba: Conquest and colonial life: …and strategically because of the flota (“fleet”) system of regularly scheduled maritime trade between Spain and its American colonies. In addition, ranching, smuggling, and tobacco farming occupied the colonists. The colony’s administrative costs depended, however, on irregular subsidies from New Spain until 1808.
- flotation (physics)
buoyancy, tendency of an object to float or to rise in a fluid when submerged. This fluid can be either a liquid or a gas. A popular story suggests that the concept of buoyancy was discovered by the Greek mathematician Archimedes while he was taking a bath. He knew that some materials floated in
- flotation (construction)
naval architecture: Achieving level attitude or trim: For the ship to float at the level attitude or zero trim desired, G and B must lie in the same vertical transverse plane. If their calculated positions are different, and the size, proportions, and shape of the underwater hull are satisfactory, it is customary to shift the weights…
- flotation (ore dressing)
flotation, in mineral processing, method used to separate and concentrate ores by altering their surfaces to a hydrophobic or hydrophilic condition—that is, the surfaces are either repelled or attracted by water. The flotation process was developed on a commercial scale early in the 20th century to
- Flöte (musical instrument)
flute, wind instrument in which the sound is produced by a stream of air directed against a sharp edge, upon which the air breaks up into eddies that alternate regularly above and below the edge, setting into vibration the air enclosed in the flute. In vertical, end-vibrated flutes—such as the
- flotilla (military unit)
military unit: …squadrons in turn form a flotilla, several of which in turn form a fleet. For operations, however, many navies organize their vessels into task units (3–5 ships), task or battle groups (4–10 ships), task forces (2–5 task groups), and fleets (several task forces).
- Flotow, Friedrich, Freiherr von (German composer)
Friedrich von Flotow was a German composer, active mainly in France, who was best known for his opera Martha (1847). Originally intended for a diplomatic career, from age 16 Flotow studied music in Paris with Anton Reicha. Forced to leave Paris during the July Revolution of 1830, he went home but
- flotsamfish (fish)
perciform: Annotated classification: Stromateidae, Centrolophidae, Nomeidae, Ariommidae, Amarsipidae, and Tetragonuridae Eocene to present; slender to ovate, deep-bodied fishes; dorsal fin continuous or spinous portion set off from soft portion by deep notch; in the most generalized species, which resemble Kyphosidae, the soft dorsal is preceded by about 6 low, stoutish…
- FLOTUS (United States title)
first lady, wife of the president of the United States. Although the first lady’s role has never been codified or officially defined, she figures prominently in the political and social life of the nation. Representative of her husband on official and ceremonial occasions both at home and abroad,
- Flötzgebirge (geology)
geochronology: Classification of stratified rocks: …an intermediate category, or the Secondary (Flötzgebirge), composed of layered or stratified rocks containing fossils, and (3) a final or successionally youngest sequence of alluvial and related unconsolidated sediments (Angeschwemmtgebirge) thought to represent the most recent record of the Earth’s history.
- flounder (fish)
flounder, any of numerous species of flatfishes belonging to the families Achiropsettidae, Pleuronectidae, Paralichthyidae, and Bothidae (order Pleuronectiformes). The flounder is morphogenetically unusual. When born it is bilaterally symmetrical, with an eye on each side, and it swims near the
- Flounder, The (work by Grass)
Günter Grass: …Vietnam War; Der Butt (1977; The Flounder), a ribald fable of the war between the sexes from the Stone Age to the present; Das Treffen in Telgte (1979; The Meeting at Telgte), a hypothetical “Gruppe 1647” meeting of authors at the close of the Thirty Years’ War; Kopfgeburten; oder, die…
- flour (food)
flour, finely ground cereal grains or other starchy portions of plants, used in various food products and as a basic ingredient of baked goods. Flour made from wheat grains is the most satisfactory type for baked products that require spongy structure. In modern usage, the word flour alone usually
- flour beetle (insect)
life: Temperature and desiccation: …kangaroo rat (a mammal) and Tribolium (the flour beetle) imbibe no water at all in the liquid state. They rely entirely on metabolic water—that is, on water released from chemical bonds through the metabolism of food. A variety of plants, including Spanish moss, live without contact with groundwater. They extract…
- flour corn (cereal)
corn: Types of corn: Flour corn, composed largely of soft starch, has soft, mealy, easily ground kernels and is an important source of corn flour. Sweet corn, commonly sold fresh, frozen, or canned as a vegetable, has wrinkled translucent seeds; the plant sugar is not converted to starch as…
- flour moth (insect)
flour moth, (Ephestia kuehniella), species of moth in the subfamily Phycitinae (family Pyralidae, order Lepidoptera) that is a cosmopolitan pest of cereal products and other stored foods. Sometimes also called Anagasta kuehniella, the flour moth requires vitamins A and B and the larvae cannot live
- Flourens, Gustave (French revolutionary)
Gustave Flourens was a French radical intellectual and a leader of the Paris Commune revolt of 1871. Flourens was the son of a famous physiologist, Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens, and was a promising young scientist. As an academic he wrote such distinguished works as Histoire de l’homme (1863;
- Flourens, Marie-Jean-Pierre (French physiologist)
Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens was a French physiologist who was the first to demonstrate experimentally the general functions of the major portions of the vertebrate brain. After receiving his medical degree from the University of Montpellier, Flourens went to Paris, where the renowned French
- Floury-2 (corn hybrid)
cereal processing: Corn: These corns, called Opaque-2 and Floury-2, possess certain drawbacks. They are generally lower in yield than dent hybrids, are subject to more kernel damage when combine-harvested, and may be more difficult to process. Nevertheless, these new hybrid corns are expected to become widely cultivated, and the principles involved in their…
- flow (mechanics)
deformation and flow: flow, in physics, alteration in shape or size of a body under the influence of mechanical forces. Flow is a change in deformation that continues as long as the force is applied.
- flow (mathematics)
analysis: Dynamical systems theory and chaos: …differential equations, otherwise known as dynamical systems theory, which seeks to establish general properties of solutions from general principles without writing down any explicit solutions at all. Dynamical systems theory combines local analytic information, collected in small “neighbourhoods” around points of special interest, with global geometric and topological properties of…
- flow (industrial engineering)
production system: Underlying principles: …may be further characterized by flows (channels of movement) in the process: both the physical flow of materials, work in the intermediate stages of manufacture (work in process), and finished goods; and the flow of information and the inevitable paperwork that carry and accompany the physical flow. The physical flows…
- flow (geology)
landslide: Types of landslides: …viscous fluid is called a flow. The most important fluidizing agent is water, but trapped air is sometimes involved. Contact between the flowing mass and the underlying material can be distinct, or the contact can be one of diffuse shear. The difference between slides and flows is gradational, with variations…
- flow control (air-traffic control)
traffic control: Traffic elements: …Administration instituted a policy of flow controls. These controls required an aircraft to remain at its origin airport unless a landing opportunity was estimated to be available at the destination airport at the estimated arrival time. This results in a significantly reduced workload for the terminal air traffic controllers at…
- flow control (computing)
computer science: Networking and communication: Network protocols also include flow control, which keeps a data sender from swamping a receiver with messages that it has no time to process or space to store, and error control, which involves transmission error detection and automatic resending of messages to correct such errors. (For some of the…
- flow diagram
flowchart, graphical representation of a process, such as a manufacturing operation or computer operation, indicating the various steps that are taken as the product moves along the production line or the problem moves through the computer. Individual operations can be represented by closed boxes
- flow law of ice (geophysics)
glacier: Glacier flow: …as the flow law or constitutive law of ice: the rate of shear strain is approximately proportional to the cube of the shear stress. Often called the Glen flow law by glaciologists, this constitutive law is the basis for all analyses of the flow of ice sheets and glaciers.
- flow limitation (pathology)
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: …as difficulty in exhaling (called flow limitation), which causes increased lung volume and manifests as breathlessness. Other early symptoms of the condition include a “smokers cough” and daily sputum production. Coughing up blood is not a feature of COPD and when present raises concern about a second, tobacco-related condition, particularly…
- flow meter (device)
flow meter, Device that measures the velocity of a gas or liquid. It has applications in medicine as well as in chemical engineering, aeronautics, and meteorology. Examples include pitot tubes, venturi tubes, and rotameters (tapered graduated tubes with a float inside that is supported by the
- flow rate (cell physiology)
nervous system: Uncharged molecules: …of time is called the flow rate, or flux rate. Diffusion continues until the concentrations on both sides of the membrane are equal. A condition of no net flux is then established with an equal, random diffusion of molecules in both directions. This is called the equilibrium state.
- flow rate (physics)
fluid mechanics: …mechanics, science concerned with the response of fluids to forces exerted upon them. It is a branch of classical physics with applications of great importance in hydraulic and aeronautical engineering, chemical engineering, meteorology, and zoology.
- flow structure (geology)
igneous rock: Flow structures: These are planar or linear features that result from flowage of magma with or without contained crystals. Various forms of faintly to sharply defined layering and lining typically reflect compositional or textural inhomogeneities, and they often are accentuated by concentrations or preferred orientation…
- Flow, my teares (song by Dowland)
John Dowland: His famous Lachrimae, or Seaven Teares Figured in Seaven Passionate Pavans (1604), became one of the most widely known compositions of the time. In his chromatic fantasies, the finest of which are “Forlorne Hope Fancye” and “Farewell,” he developed this form to a height of intensity unequaled…
- Flow-Matic (computer language)
computer: COBOL: Flow-matic used a more English-like syntax and vocabulary:
- flow-till (geology)
glacial landform: Glacial deposition: …resulting deposit is called a flow-till by some authors. On the other hand, the debris may be laid down more or less in place as the ice melts away around and beneath it. Such deposits are referred to as melt-out till, and sometimes as ablation till. In many cases, the…
- flowbox (papermaking)
papermaking: Formation of paper sheet by machines: …headbox, more commonly called a flowbox or breastbox, consisted of a rectangular wooden vat that extended across the full width of the machine behind the Fourdrinier breast roll. The box was provided with baffles to mix and distribute the stock. A flat metal plate extending across the machine (knife slice)…
- flowchart
flowchart, graphical representation of a process, such as a manufacturing operation or computer operation, indicating the various steps that are taken as the product moves along the production line or the problem moves through the computer. Individual operations can be represented by closed boxes
- flower (plant anatomy)
flower, the characteristic reproductive structure of angiosperms. As popularly used, the term “flower” especially applies when part or all of the reproductive structure is distinctive in colour and form. In their range of colour, size, form, and anatomical arrangement, flowers present a seemingly
- Flower and the Leaf, The (English poem)
English literature: Courtly poetry: …apocryphal trifles such as “The Flower and the Leaf” and “The Assembly of Ladies” (both c. 1475), the former, like a surprising quantity of 15th-century verse of this type, purportedly written by a woman. The stock figures of the ardent but endlessly frustrated lover and the irresistible but disdainful…
- flower arrangement
floral decoration, art of arranging living or dried plant material for adornment of the body or home or as a part of public ceremonies, festivals, and religious rituals. Since the earliest days of civilization, humans have used floral decorations, composed of living or dried cut-plant materials or
- flower bug (insect)
flower bug, (family Anthocoridae), any of at least 400 species of small insects in the true bug order, Heteroptera, that are black with white markings and are usually found on flowers, under loose bark, or in leaf litter. Flower bugs range in size from 2 to 5 mm (0.08 to 0.2 inch) in length. Their
- flower cards (cards)
hanafuda, (Japanese: “flower cards”), deck of 48 cards divided into 12 suits of four cards. Each suit is named for a month of the year and pictures a flower identified with that month. The cards are tiny, only 218 by 114 inches (5.4 by 3.2 cm), but about three times thicker than Western cards.
- flower chafer (insect)
flower chafer, (subfamily Cetoniinae), any of a group of beetles in the family Scarabaeidae (insect order Coleoptera) that are distributed worldwide and are brilliantly coloured, with the majority of the iridescent species occurring in the tropics. Most measure less than 12 mm (0.5 inch), although
- flower child (subculture)
hippie, member, during the 1960s and 1970s, of a countercultural movement that rejected the mores of mainstream American life. The movement originated on college campuses in the United States, although it spread to other countries, including Canada and Britain. The name derived from “hip,” a term
- Flower Decoration in the House (work by Jekyll)
floral decoration: 20th century: The book Flower Decoration in the House (1907) greatly influenced the development of 20th-century floral decoration as an art. The author was Gertrude Jekyll, already notable in the gardening world. For a long time, floral decoration in big houses had been the charge of the head gardeners…
- Flower Drum Song (film by Koster [1961])
James Hong: Career: …enclaves, such as the musical Flower Drum Song (1961), the war film The Sand Pebbles (1966), and the police procedural TV series Hawaii Five-O. Such roles constituted a majority of the work available to actors of Asian descent at the time. His career progressed as more roles became open to…
- flower fly (insect)
hover fly, (family Syrphidae), any member of a family that contains about 6,000 species of insects in the fly order, Diptera. Their various common names refer to the behaviour of hovering around flowers. Hover flies, with their yellow markings, resemble wasps or bees but do not bite or sting. They
- flower garden (horticulture)
gardening: Flower gardens: Though flower gardens in different countries may vary in the types of plants that are grown, the basic planning and principles are nearly the same, whether the gardens are formal or informal. Trees and shrubs are the mainstay of a well-designed flower garden.…
- Flower of My Secret, The (film by Almodovar [1995])
history of film: European cinema: …flor de mi secreto (1995; The Flower of My Secret), Carne trémula (1997; Live Flesh), Todo sobre mi madre (1999; All About My Mother), Habla con ella (2002; Talk to Her), La mala educación (2004; Bad Education), Volver (2006), La piel que habito (2011;
- flower painting (art)
Chinese painting: Flower painting: Flower painting, previously associated chiefly with Buddhist art, came into its own as a separate branch of painting in the Five Dynasties. At Chengdu, the master Huang Quan brought to maturity the technique of mogu hua (“boneless painting”), in which he applied light colours with…
- flower stalk (plant part)
inflorescence: Indeterminate inflorescence.: …a short stalk, called a pedicel. An example of a raceme is found in the snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus).
- Flower, Charles Edward (British theater owner)
Royal Shakespeare Company: …built through the efforts of Charles Edward Flower. This theatre was the site of an annual festival of Shakespeare’s plays, and its resident seasonal company was called the Shakespeare Memorial Company. In 1925 the company, which by then had become one of the most prestigious in Great Britain, was granted…
- Flower, Fist and Bestial Wail (poetry by Bukowski)
Charles Bukowski: Beginning with Flower, Fist and Bestial Wail (1959), volumes of his poetry appeared almost annually via small underground publishing houses. By 1963, the year he published It Catches My Heart in Its Hands—a collection of poetry about alcoholics, prostitutes, losing gamblers, and down-and-out people—Bukowski had a loyal…
- Flower, Lucy Louisa Coues (American welfare worker)
Lucy Louisa Coues Flower was an American welfare worker, a leader in efforts to provide services for poor and dependent children, to expand the offerings of public education, and to establish a juvenile court system. After a year at Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn, New York, in 1856–57,
- Flower, Sir William Henry (British zoologist)
Sir William Henry Flower was a British zoologist who made valuable contributions to structural anthropology and the comparative anatomy of mammals. Flower became a member of the surgical staff at Middlesex Hospital, London, after serving as an assistant surgeon in the Crimean War. He was
- flowering (botany)
Poaceae: Characteristic morphological features: …itself, peanutgrass burial begins before flowering.
- flowering ash (tree)
ash: Major species: The flowering ash (F. ornus) of southern Europe produces creamy white fragrant flowers, has leaves with seven leaflets, and reaches 21 metres (69 feet). The Chinese ash (F. chinensis) yields Chinese white wax.
- Flowering Cherry (play by Bolt)
Robert Bolt: …the success of his play Flowering Cherry (London, 1957), a Chekhovian study of failure and self-deception, enabled him to leave teaching. Bolt’s most successful play was A Man for All Seasons, a study of the fatal struggle between Henry VIII of England and his lord chancellor, Sir Thomas More, over…
- flowering dogwood (plant)
dogwood: Major species: Flowering dogwood (C. florida), a North American species, is widely grown as an ornamental for its showy petal-like bracts (modified leaves) under the tiny flowers. Cornelian cherry (C. mas), a European species also grown as an ornamental, produces fruit that is eaten fresh or made…
- flowering inch plant (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: Flowering inch plant (T. cerinthoides), with leaves green and smooth above and purplish and fuzzy beneath, has purplish hairy blossoms. T.×andersoniana comprises a complex series of garden hybrids. Also grown in the garden is the common spiderwort, or widow’s tears (T. virginiana), an upright juicy-stemmed…
- Flowering Judas (short story by Porter)
Flowering Judas, short story by Katherine Anne Porter, published in Hound and Horn magazine in 1930. It is the title story of Porter’s first and most popular collection, which was published in the same year. When the collection was reissued in 1935, four stories were added to make a total of 10.
- flowering maple (plant, Abutilon species)
abutilon: Chinese lantern, also known as flowering maple (Abutilon ×hybridum), is planted outdoors in warm regions and grown in greenhouses elsewhere. It is a fast-growing shrub with attractive hanging flowers. Another species, sometimes known as redvein flowering maple (A. pictum), is a handsome variegated-leaf shrub reaching…
- Flowering of the Cumberland (work by Arnow)
Harriette Arnow: …on the Cumberland (1960) and The Flowering of the Cumberland (1963).
- flowering plant (plant)
angiosperm, any of about 300,000 species of flowering plants, the largest and most diverse group within the kingdom Plantae. Angiosperms represent approximately 80 percent of all the known green plants now living. The angiosperms are vascular seed plants in which the ovule (egg) is fertilized and
- flowering quince (plant)
flowering quince, (genus Chaenomeles), genus of three species of flowering plants in the rose family (Rosaceae), native to eastern Asia. Flowering quince is cultivated primarily as an ornamental for its showy flowers, though its astringent applelike fruit can be used in preserves and liqueurs and
- flowering rush (plant)
flowering rush, (Butomus umbellatus), perennial freshwater plant native to Eurasia but now common throughout the north temperate zone as a weed. Butomus umbellatus is the only species of the family Butomaceae (order Alismatales). Flowering rushes can grow fully submerged but are most commonly found
- flowering spurge (plant)
spurge: Major species: Important as weeds are flowering spurge (E. corollata), of the middle and eastern United States; the leafy spurge (E. escula), naturalized from Europe in the northern United States and adjacent Canada; spotted spurge (E. maculata); prostrate spurge and the related European petty spurge (E. peplus); and sun spurge (E.…
- flowering stone (plant)
lithops, (genus Lithops), genus of about 40 species of small succulent plants of the carpetweed family (Aizoaceae), native to southern Africa. The plants are generally found in rocky arid regions of southern Angola, Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa, and it is believed that their small rocklike
- Flowering Tree, A (opera by Adams)
Peter Sellars: … (1987), Doctor Atomic (2005), and A Flowering Tree (2006).
- flowerpecker (bird)
flowerpecker, any of 44 species belonging to the songbird family Dicaeidae (sometimes placed with the sunbirds in family Nectariniidae), order Passeriformes, that have a double-tubed and brush-tipped tongue and finely serrated bill. Flowerpeckers occur in southern Asia, western Pacific islands, and
- flowerpot snake (reptile)
blind snake: …tropics; however, one species, the flowerpot snake (Ramphotyphlops braminus), now occurs on many oceanic islands and all continents except Antarctica. It gained its worldwide distribution through its presence in the soil of potted plants and because of parthenogenesis, a form of reproduction that does not require fertilization to produce offspring.…
- Flowers (song by Cyrus)
Miley Cyrus: Bangerz, Plastic Hearts, and Endless Summer Vacation: …the number one single “Flowers,” which earned Cyrus her first Grammy wins. The song won for both record of the year and best solo pop performance.
- Flowers and Shadows (novel by Okri)
Ben Okri: His first novels, Flowers and Shadows (1980) and The Landscapes Within (1981), employ surrealistic images to depict the corruption and lunacy of a politically scarred country. The short-story collections Incidents at the Shrine (1986) and Stars of the New Curfew (1988) portray the essential link in Nigerian culture…
- Flowers and Trees (animated cartoon)
animation: Walt Disney: …Dance, 1929), three-strip Technicolor (Flowers and Trees, 1932), and the illusion of depth with his multiplane camera (The Old Mill, 1937). With each step, Disney seemed to come closer to a perfect naturalism, a painterly realism that suggested academic paintings of the 19th century. Disney’s resident technical wizard was…
- Flowers for Children (work by Child)
Lydia Maria Child: …books are three volumes of Flowers for Children (1844–47), Fact and Fiction (1846), The Freedmen’s Book (1865), and An Appeal for the Indians (1868). Child’s other work included popular volumes of advice for women, such as The Frugal Housewife (1829). Her letters were compiled in Lydia Maria Child, Selected Letters,…
- Flowers in the Dirt (album by McCartney)
Paul McCartney: Wings and solo career: …critics loved his 1989 album, Flowers in the Dirt, which coincided with his return to live performance, and Flaming Pie (1997) was even more highly praised. In 1997 McCartney was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II “for services to music.” The next year Linda died of cancer. (In the 2000s McCartney…
- Flowers of Evil, The (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
- flowers of tan (slime mold)
Fuligo: Fuligo septica, the best-known species, is also called “flowers of tan,” from the frequent appearance of its yellow fruiting body in tan bark bits used for tanning hides.
- Flowers of the Forest (ballad by Cockburn)
Alicia Cockburn: …of the popular ballad “Flowers of the Forest.” Her lyrics beginning “I’ve seen the smiling of Fortune beguiling,” set to the old air of “Flowers of the Forest,” were probably written before 1731, although they were not published until 1765. They were occasioned by the failure of seven Selkirkshire…