- Faith No More (American rock group)
Courtney Love: …became the lead singer of Faith No More.
- Faith, Adam (British singer)
John Barry: …worked with pop singers, including Adam Faith. After agreeing to compose the scores for two films in which Faith had been cast, Barry was approached to do the musical arrangements for Dr. No.
- faith, articles of (religion)
creed, an authoritative formulation of the beliefs of a religious community (or, by transference, of individuals). The terms “creed” and “confession of faith” are sometimes used interchangeably, but when distinguished “creed” refers to a brief affirmation of faith employed in public worship or
- faith, confession of (theology)
confession of faith, formal statement of doctrinal belief ordinarily intended for public avowal by an individual, a group, a congregation, a synod, or a church; confessions are similar to creeds, although usually more extensive. They are especially associated with the churches of the Protestant
- Faith, Congregation for the Doctrine of the (Roman Catholic Church)
inquisition: History: …Paul VI and renamed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.) In 1547 the government of Venice established a tribunal of laymen, which was converted into a tribunal of clergy by 1551 but closely monitored by the Venetian government. The Venetian inquisition lasted until 1797. Another institutional inquisition, that…
- faith, defender of the (English royal title)
defender of the faith, a title belonging to the sovereign of England in the same way as Christianissimus (“most Christian”) belonged to the king of France. The title was first conferred by Pope Leo X on Henry VIII (Oct. 11, 1521) as a reward for the king’s pamphlet Assertio septem sacramentorum
- faith, leap of (religion)
Christianity: Faith and reason: …in his idea of the leap of faith. He believed that without risk there is no faith, and that the greater the risk the greater the faith. Faith is thus a passionate commitment, not based upon reason but inwardly necessitated, to that which can be grasped in no other way.
- Faith, Reason, and Civilization: An Essay in Historical Analysis (work by Laski)
Harold Joseph Laski: …of Our Time (1943) and Faith, Reason, and Civilization: An Essay in Historical Analysis (1944), he called for broad economic reforms.
- Faith, Thirteen Articles of (Judaism)
Thirteen Articles of Faith, a summary of the basic tenets of Judaism as perceived by the 12th-century Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides. They first appeared in his commentary on the Mishna, Kitāb al-Sirāj, as an elaboration on the section Sanhedrin 10, which sets forth the reasons why a Jew would
- Faithful (film by Mazursky [1996])
Paul Mazursky: Later work: Moderately better was Faithful (1996), which was adapted from Chazz Palminteri’s play. Cher starred as the suicidal wife of a businessman (Ryan O’Neal) who has hired a hit man (Palminteri) to kill her, but the two bond while waiting for the husband’s final signal. Mazursky then directed the…
- Faithful Admonition (work by Knox)
John Knox: Escape to the Continent: …in 1554 Knox published his Faithful Admonition to the Protestants who remained in England. Its extremism and intemperate language served to increase the sufferings of those to whom it was addressed; and, coming as it did from one who was in comparative safety, it alienated many in England from him.
- Faithful and Virtuous Night (poetry by Glück)
Louise Glück: Faithful and Virtuous Night (2014) deals with mortality and nocturnal silence, sometimes from a male perspective; it won the National Book Award. The poems in Winter Recipes from the Collective (2021) often read like fables or short stories. In 2022 Glück released her first work…
- Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God, A (work by Edwards)
Jonathan Edwards: Pastorate at Northampton: His subsequent report, A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1737), made a profound impression in America and Europe, particularly through his description of the types and stages of conversion experience.
- Faithful River, The (work by Żeromski)
Stefan Żeromski: …lyrical novel Wierna rzeka (1912; The Faithful River, filmed 1983). In both the short story and the novel the theme is elaborated by indelible images and by sad, compassionate comments on that national tragedy.
- faithful, consent of the (Roman Catholicism)
Roman Catholicism: Organs of teaching authority: …the traditional belief that “the consent of the faithful” is a source of authentic doctrine. The conventional resolution of this problem, which stipulates that the consent of the faithful is formed under the direction of the pastors, deprives the consent of the faithful of any meaning.
- Faithful, Liturgy of the (Christianity)
Christianity: New liturgical forms and antiliturgical attitudes: …of the Catechumens and the Liturgy of the Faithful. This basic structure goes back to a time in which the church was a missionary church that grew for the most part through conversion of adults who were first introduced to the Christian mysteries as catechumens. They received permission to take…
- Faithfull Shepheardesse, The (work by Fletcher)
comedy: Sentimental comedy of the 17th and 18th centuries: …the publication of John Fletcher’s Faithfull Shepheardesse (c. 1608), an imitation of the Pastor fido, by the Italian poet Battista Guarini. In his Compendium of Tragicomic Poetry (1601), Guarini had argued the distinct nature of the genre, maintaining it to be a third poetic kind, different from either the comic…
- Faithfull, Marianne (British singer)
Metallica: …featuring haunting backing vocals by Marianne Faithfull, demonstrated that Hetfield retained his knack for aggressive and intelligent lyrics. However, the driving thrash metal sound of Master of Puppets had clearly become part of the band’s past.
- Faithless (film by Ullmann [1999])
Liv Ullmann: Kristin Lavransdatter (1995); Trolösa (1999; Faithless), for which Bergman wrote the screenplay; and Miss Julie (2014), which she adapted from August Strindberg’s play of the same name. In 2022 Ullmann received an honorary Academy Award, noted for a “bravery and emotional transparency [that] has gifted audiences with deeply affecting screen…
- Faithless: Tales of Transgression (short stories by Oates)
Joyce Carol Oates: …Oates published the short-story collection Faithless: Tales of Transgression, “richly various” tales of sin. An extensive and mainly retrospective volume of her stories, High Lonesome: New & Selected Stories, 1966–2006, was released in 2006. Wild Nights!: Stories About the Last Days of Poe, Dickinson, Twain, James, and Hemingway (2008) featured…
- Faithorne, William (English engraver)
William Faithorne was an English engraver and portrait draftsman noted for his excellent line engravings. A pupil of the painter Robert Peake the Elder and of the engraver John Payne, Faithorne was captured during the English Civil Wars, imprisoned, and exiled. Returning from Paris to London in
- Faits Divers (film by Autant-Lara)
Claude Autant-Lara: Autant-Lara’s first short film, Faits divers (1923; “Diverse Facts”), was made while he was an assistant director to René Clair. After directing two other brief films, he accepted a job in Hollywood directing French versions of American films. It was not until 1933, however, that he directed his first…
- Faiyum (governorate, Egypt)
Al-Fayyūm, muḥāfaẓah (governorate) of Upper Egypt, located in a great depression of the Western Desert southwest of Cairo. Extending about 50 miles (80 km) east-west and about 35 miles (56 km) north-south, the whole Fayyūm—including Wadi Al-Ruwayān, a smaller, arid depression—is below sea level
- Faiyum, Al- (Egypt)
Al-Fayyūm, capital of Al-Fayyūm muḥāfaẓah (governorate), Egypt. The town is located in the southeastern part of the governorate, on the site of the ancient centre of the region, called Shedet in pharaonic times and Crocodilopolis, later Arsinoe, in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods. Its ruins to the
- Faiz (Urdu poet)
Islamic arts: Other poetic forms: …in the 19th century, and Faiz, in the 20th; and by the modern Turkish poet Nazım Hikmet (died 1963).
- Faizabad (India)
Faizabad, city, east-central Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It lies on the Ghaghara River, about 75 miles (120 km) east of Lucknow. The city of Ayodhya, just to the east, is a suburb. Faizabad was founded in 1730 by Sādāt ʿAlī Khan, the first nawab of Oudh (now Ayodhya), who made it his
- Faizābād (Afghanistan)
Feyẕābād, town, northeastern Afghanistan. It lies along the Kowkcheh River, at 4,000 feet (1,200 m) above sea level. Feyẕābād was destroyed by Morād Beg of Qondūz in 1821 and its inhabitants removed to Qondūz, but, after Badakhshan was annexed by ʿAbd ar-Raḥmān, ruler of Afghanistan (1880–1901),
- Faizābād, Treaty of (Great Britain-Oudh [1775])
Treaties of Banaras: …is otherwise known as the Treaty of Faizabad. It was forced on the new vizier of Oudh by the company’s governing council after the death of Shujāʿ. The vizier had to pay a larger subsidy for the use of British troops and cede Banaras (now Varanasi) to the East India…
- Fajans, Kasimir (American chemist)
Kasimir Fajans was a Polish-American physical chemist who discovered the radioactive displacement law simultaneously with Frederick Soddy of Great Britain. According to this law, when a radioactive atom decays by emitting an alpha particle, the atomic number of the resulting atom is two fewer than
- Fajardo (Puerto Rico)
Fajardo, town, eastern Puerto Rico, on the Fajardo River lowlands. Founded in 1760, it was a scene of fighting during the Spanish-American War (1898). Its principal manufactures are cigars, furniture, and metal and electronic components. It is linked by a modern highway to San Juan and lies about 2
- Fajardo, Francisco (Spanish explorer)
Caracas: History of Caracas: …the valley in 1557 by Francisco Fajardo, the son of a Spanish captain and an Indian chief’s daughter, and in 1561 Juan Rodríguez Suárez founded a town on the site of the ranch; but the town was soon destroyed by Indian attacks. The conquest and resettlement of the region began…
- Fajia (Chinese philosophy)
Legalism, school of Chinese philosophy that attained prominence during the turbulent Warring States era (475–221 bce) and, through the influence of the philosophers Shang Yang, Li Si, and Hanfeizi, formed the ideological basis of China’s first imperial dynasty, the Qin (221–207 bce). The three main
- Fakaofo (atoll, Tokelau, New Zealand)
Fakaofo, coral atoll of Tokelau, a dependency of New Zealand in the South Pacific Ocean. Its 61 islets rise to 10 feet (3 metres) above sea level and encircle a closed lagoon that measures 7.3 miles (11.7 km) by 5.5 miles (8.9 km). Discovered (1835) by whalers, the atoll possesses fresh water. The
- Fakatuʿiʿo Tonga
Tonga, country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It consists of some 170 islands divided into three main island groups: Tongatapu in the south, Ha‘apai in the centre, and Vava‘u in the north. Isolated islands include Niuafo‘ou, Niuatoputapu, and Tafahi (together known as the Niuatoputapu, or
- fake news
Upton Sinclair: …movie theatres, a forerunner of “fake news” and the attack ads on television decades later. Sinclair recounted the campaign in I, Candidate for Governor: And How I Got Licked (1935) and said about his experience in politics, “The American People will take Socialism, but they won’t take the label. I…
- Fake, Caterina (American entrepreneur)
Stewart Butterfield: …years later Butterfield married blogger Caterina Fake, and together with Classon they founded Ludicorp, which developed a multiplayer online game called Game Neverending. The struggling enterprise was abandoned by Ludicorp in favour of an image-sharing service (developed by Cal Henderson and Eric Costello) that was christened Flickr. The trailblazing photo-sharing…
- Fakhfakh, Elyes (Tunisian politician)
Rached Ghannouchi: Parliamentary leadership: …in naming a prime minister, Elyes Fakhfakh, the centrist nominee of the newly inaugurated President Saied, was only able to form a government after negotiating with Ghannouchi for Ennahda’s approval of a unity cabinet. Tunisia fell into deeper crisis in the months ahead, however, not least because of the economic…
- Fakhr ad-Dīn ar-Rāzī (Muslim theologian)
Fakhr ad-Dīn ar-Rāzī was a Muslim theologian and scholar, author of one of the most authoritative commentaries on the Qurʾān in the history of Islām. His aggressiveness and vengefulness created many enemies and involved him in numerous intrigues. His intellectual brilliance, however, was
- Fakhr ad-Dīn II (Lebanese leader)
Fakhr ad-Dīn II was a Lebanese ruler (1593–1633) who for the first time united the Druze and Maronite districts of the Lebanon Mountains under his personal rule; he is frequently regarded as the father of modern Lebanon. With the death of Fakhr ad-Dīn’s father, Korkmaz, in 1585, a civil war broke
- Fakhr al-Dīn Ibrāhīm ʿIrāqī Hamadānī (Persian poet)
ʿIrāqī was one of the most outstanding poets of 13th-century Persia. Very little is known about ʿIrāqī’s early life. There is evidence that he abandoned a teaching career to follow a group of wandering Sufis, or mystics, as far as India in search of higher mystical knowledge. After studying for 25
- Fakhr od-Dīn Gorgānī (Persian author)
Islamic arts: Epic and romance: …o-Rāmīn (“Vīs and Rāmīn”) by Fakhr od-Dīn Gorgānī (died after 1055), which has parallels with the Tristan story of medieval romance. These were soon superseded, however, by the great romantic epics of Neẓāmī of Ganja (died c. 1209), in Caucasia. The latter are known as the Khamseh (“The Quintuplet” or…
- Fakhruddin, Moḥammad (ruler of Jambi)
Jambi: Moḥammad Fakhruddin (ruled Jambi 1833–41) invaded the southeastern Sumatran city of Palembang in 1833 but was defeated by the Dutch and recognized Dutch suzerainty. Dutch colonial rule was firmly established in the early 20th century. The Japanese occupied Jambi (1942–45) during World War II, and…
- fakir (Islam and Hinduism)
fakir, originally, a mendicant dervish. In mystical usage, the word fakir refers to man’s spiritual need for God, who alone is self-sufficient. Although of Muslim origin, the term has come to be applied in India to Hindus as well, largely replacing gosvāmin, sadhu, bhikku, and other designations.
- Fakir, Abdul (American singer)
the Four Tops: July 1, 2005, Detroit), Abdul (“Duke”) Fakir (b. December 26, 1935, Detroit), Lawrence Payton (b. 1938, Detroit—d. June 20, 1997, Southfield, Michigan), and Levi Stubbs (byname of Levi Stubbles; b. June 6, 1936, Detroit—d. October 17, 2008, Detroit).
- Fakkān (United Arab Emirates)
Khor Fakkan, exclave and port town located in Sharjah emirate, United Arab Emirates. It is on the east coast of the Musandam Peninsula, facing the Gulf of Oman; the port and its hinterland divide the emirate of Fujairah into its two major portions. Situated on a natural cove (Arabic: khawr), Khor
- Faktorowicz, Maksymilian (American makeup designer)
Max Factor was the dean of Hollywood makeup experts. He was a pioneer in developing makeup specifically for motion-picture actors and was given a special award by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1928 for his achievements. Amid the increasing anti-Semitism in tsarist Russia,
- Faku (Mpondo chief)
Mpondo: …the leadership of their chief, Faku, however, the Mpondo reorganized themselves. Faku established an army on the Zulu model and organized production of grain for sale to facilitate the rebuilding of their cattle herds. By the early 1840s Faku had re-created the Mpondo state and, in order to gain grazing…
- falafel (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
- Falaise (France)
Falaise, town, Calvados département, Normandy région, northwestern France. It lies on the Ante River, about 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Caen. The town was the birthplace of William the Conqueror, first of the Norman kings of England. The castle (12th–13th century), which overlooks the town from a
- Falaise, Treaty of (England-Scotland [1174])
Scotland: David I’s successors: …the English king by the Treaty of Falaise (1174); he was able, however, to buy back his kingdom’s independence by the Quitclaim of Canterbury (1189), though it should be emphasized that this document disposed of the Treaty of Falaise and not of the less-precise claims of superiority over Scotland that…
- falaj (water channel)
Oman: Plant and animal life: …channels known as aflāj (singular: falaj). The channels often run underground and originate in wells near mountain bases. The aflāj collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2006.
- Falaj al-Muʿallá (United Arab Emirates)
Umm al-Quwain: …capital is the oasis of Falaj al-Muʿallá, with extensive plantations of date palms. Otherwise, the emirate is almost entirely uninhabited desert. In 1964–72 a large portion of its revenues came from the sale of postage stamps, printed abroad not for any legitimate postal purpose but entirely for sale to collectors.
- Falange (political organization, Spain)
Falange, extreme nationalist political group founded in Spain in 1933 by José Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of the former dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera. Influenced by Italian fascism, the Falange joined forces (February 1934) with a like-minded group, Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Sindicalista, and
- Falange Española (political organization, Spain)
Falange, extreme nationalist political group founded in Spain in 1933 by José Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of the former dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera. Influenced by Italian fascism, the Falange joined forces (February 1934) with a like-minded group, Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Sindicalista, and
- Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional-Sindicalista (political organization, Spain)
Falange, extreme nationalist political group founded in Spain in 1933 by José Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of the former dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera. Influenced by Italian fascism, the Falange joined forces (February 1934) with a like-minded group, Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Sindicalista, and
- Falange Nacional (political party, Chile)
Chile: New political groupings: …their party to form the National Falange (Falange Nacional). In 1957 the National Falange fused with the Social Christian Party (which had also seceded from the Conservatives) to form the Christian Democratic Party, whose program tended toward serious reforms in the archaic economic and social structures. The Communist Party regained…
- Falasha (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
- Falca, Pietro (Venetian artist)
Pietro Longhi was a painter of the Rococo period known for his small scenes of Venetian social and domestic life. He was the son of a silversmith, Alessandro Falca, in whose workshop he received his first training. Later he worked under the Veronese historical painter Antonio Balestra, but his one
- Falcao, Jose (Portuguese translator)
biblical literature: Portuguese versions: …New Testament from Greek by José Falcão came out in Lisbon (1956–65).
- falciparum malaria (disease)
malaria: The course of the disease: Victims of this “malignant tertian” form of the disease may deteriorate rapidly from mild symptoms to coma and death unless they are diagnosed and treated promptly and properly. The greater virulence of P. falciparum is associated with its tendency to infect a large proportion of the red blood…
- Falcipennis canadensis (bird)
grouse: The spruce grouse (Falcipennis canadensis), found in northerly conifer country, is nearly as big as a ruffed grouse, the male darker. Its flesh usually has the resinous taste of conifer buds and needles, its chief food. Also of evergreen forests is the blue grouse (Dendragapus obscurus),…
- Falckner, Justus (American clergyman)
Protestantism: North America: …on the Delaware River ordained Justus Falckner, a Halle-educated Pietist, for service among the mostly Pietistic Dutch Lutherans in New York. Many German Pietists emigrated to North America—often traveling through London, where they were helped by the Pietist court chaplain M. Ziegenhagen—including those from the Rhineland and southern Germany who…
- Falco (bird genus)
falcon: …of the family Falconidae (order Falconiformes), diurnal birds of prey characterized by long, pointed wings and swift, powerful flight. The name is applied in a restricted sense, as true falcons, to the genus Falco, which numbers more than 35 species. Falcons occur virtually worldwide. They range in size from about…
- Falco albigularis (bird)
falcon: The bat falcon (F. albigularis) of Mexico and Central and South America is a little bird with a dark back, white throat, barred black-and-white breast, and reddish belly. It preys upon birds. The forest falcon (Micrastur semitorquatus) of tropical America hunts birds and reptiles in the…
- Falco columbarius (bird)
merlin, (Falco columbarius), small falcon found at high latitudes throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Adult males have slate-blue backs with finely streaked underparts; females and immature birds have brown backs; all have a tail with narrow white bands. During most of the year merlins inhabit open
- Falco mexicanus (bird)
falcon: The prairie falcon (F. mexicanus), a desert falcon, inhabits canyon and scrub country in western North America.
- Falco peregrinus (bird)
peregrine falcon, (Falco peregrinus), the most widely distributed species of bird of prey, with breeding populations on every continent except Antarctica and many oceanic islands. Sixteen subspecies are recognized. The peregrine falcon is best known for its diving speed during flight—which can
- Falco peregrinus anatum (bird)
peregrine falcon: The American peregrine falcon (F. peregrinus anatum), which once bred from Hudson Bay to the southern United States, was formerly an endangered species. It had completely vanished from the eastern United States and eastern boreal Canada by the late 1960s. After Canada had banned DDT use…
- Falco rusticolus (bird)
gyrfalcon, (Falco rusticolus), Arctic bird of prey of the family Falconidae that is the world’s largest falcon. Confined as a breeder to the circumpolar region except for isolated populations in Central Asian highlands, it is sometimes seen at lower latitudes in winters when food is scarce. The
- Falco sparverius (bird)
kestrel: …birds, but one species, the American kestrel (F. sparverius), called sparrow hawk in the United States, is common throughout the Americas. The American kestrel is about 30 cm (12 inches) long, white or yellowish below and reddish brown and slate gray above, with colourful markings on the head.
- Falco subbuteo (bird)
hobby: …of the genus Falco (primarily F. subbuteo) that are intermediate in size and strength between the merlin and the peregrine. F. subbuteo is about 33 cm (13 inches) long and is dark bluish brown above and white below, with dark streaking and reddish leg feathering. It breeds in Europe, northwestern…
- Falco tinnunculus (bird)
kestrel: The common kestrel (F. tinnunculus), ranging over most of the Old World and sometimes called the Old World, Eurasian, or European kestrel, is slightly larger than the American kestrel but less colourful. It is the only kestrel in Britain, where it is called “windhover” from its…
- Falco, Edie (American actress)
Edie Falco is an American actress who was perhaps best known for playing Carmela Soprano on the HBO TV series The Sopranos (1999–2007). Falco was the daughter of artistic parents, a jazz drummer and an actress, and she grew up in the blue-collar Long Island suburbs of Northport and West Islip. She
- Falco, Edith (American actress)
Edie Falco is an American actress who was perhaps best known for playing Carmela Soprano on the HBO TV series The Sopranos (1999–2007). Falco was the daughter of artistic parents, a jazz drummer and an actress, and she grew up in the blue-collar Long Island suburbs of Northport and West Islip. She
- Falcomonas (algae genus)
algae: Annotated classification: Cryptomonas, Falcomonas, Plagioselmis, Rhinomonas, and Teleaulax. Division Rhodophyta (red algae) Predominantly filamentous; mostly photosynthetic, a few parasitic; photosynthetic species with chlorophyll a; chlorophyll d present in some
- Falcón (state, Venezuela)
Falcón, estado (state), northwestern Venezuela. It is bounded on the north by the Caribbean Sea, west by the Gulf of Venezuela, northwest by Zulia state, and south by Lara and Yaracuy states. It includes the Paraguaná Peninsula. The coastal region was first explored and mapped in 1499 by Juan de la
- Falcon (launch vehicle)
Falcon, privately developed family of three launch vehicles—Falcon 1, Falcon 9, and Falcon Heavy—built by the U.S. corporation SpaceX with funding from South African-born American entrepreneur Elon Musk. Falcon 1 could place a 1,010-kg (2,227-pound) payload into orbit at lower cost than other
- Falcon (automobile)
automobile: American compact cars: …(269 to 279 cm), the Ford Falcon, Chrysler Valiant, and Chevrolet Corvair were smaller than most American cars but still larger than the average European models. By the mid-1960s a demand for more highly individualized luxury models of compact size had brought lines of “intermediate” cars from all manufacturers. The…
- falcon (bird)
falcon, any of nearly 60 species of hawks of the family Falconidae (order Falconiformes), diurnal birds of prey characterized by long, pointed wings and swift, powerful flight. The name is applied in a restricted sense, as true falcons, to the genus Falco, which numbers more than 35 species.
- Falcon (missile)
rocket and missile system: Air-to-air: …the AIM-4 (for air-intercept missile) Falcon, the AIM-9 Sidewinder, and the AIM-7 Sparrow. The widely imitated Sidewinder was particularly influential. Early versions, which homed onto the infrared emissions from jet engine tailpipes, could approach only from the target’s rear quadrants. Later versions, beginning with the AIM-9L, were fitted with more…
- Falcon 1 (launch vehicle)
Falcon: …family of three launch vehicles—Falcon 1, Falcon 9, and Falcon Heavy—built by the U.S. corporation SpaceX with funding from South African-born American entrepreneur Elon Musk.
- Falcon 9 (launch vehicle)
Dragon: …is launched by a Falcon 9 launch vehicle (also developed by SpaceX) from Cape Canaveral, Florida. At the end of its mission, Dragon splashes down at sea.
- Falcon and the Snowman, The (film by Schlesinger [1985])
John Schlesinger: Films of the late 1960s and ’70s: The Falcon and the Snowman (1985), the account of two young California men (Timothy Hutton and Sean Penn) who sell government secrets to the Russians, failed to attract audiences when it was released, but its reputation increased over the years. The little-seen The Believers (1987),…
- Falcon and the Winter Soldier, The (American television miniseries)
Captain America: The modern era: The made-for-television miniseries The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2021) saw the mantle of Captain America passed to Sam Wilson (played by Anthony Mackie).
- Falcon Crest (American television series)
Mariska Hargitay: …of the prime-time soap opera Falcon Crest for a season. She continued making guest appearances in TV shows, including Baywatch, Wiseguy, thirtysomething, and Booker, until she was again cast in a lead role, in the detective series Tequila and Bonetti (1992), which again proved short-lived. Hargitay costarred in yet another…
- Falcon Dam (dam, United States-Mexico)
Monterrey: The contemporary city: …Mexican beneficiary of the large Falcon (Falcón) Dam and Reservoir project, on the lower Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte); local rivers also provide hydroelectric power.
- Falcon Heavy (launch vehicle)
Falcon: Falcon Heavy—built by the U.S. corporation SpaceX with funding from South African-born American entrepreneur Elon Musk.
- Falcon Island (island, Tonga)
Haʿapai Group: Fonuafoʿou (Falcon Island), 19 miles (30 km) west of Nomuka, is the peak of a submarine volcano, the emergent portion of which is alternately raised by eruptions and completely eroded by waves and wind. The island grew to as high as 1,050 feet (320 metres)…
- Falcón, Henri (Venezuelan politician)
Nicolás Maduro: Election to a second term of Nicolás Maduro: Nevertheless, Henri Falcón, onetime governor and former member of the PUV, launched an active campaign, as did evangelical minister Javier Bertucci. Voters stayed away from the polls in droves. According to the National Electoral Council, only 46 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot (opposition sources…
- Falcón, Juan (Venezuelan politician)
Venezuela: The Monagas and the civil wars: …Liberals, led by the generals Juan Falcón and Antonio Guzmán Blanco.
- Falconer (work by Cheever)
American literature: Realism and metafiction: …homosexuality in his prison novel Falconer (1977) and even more explicitly in his personal journals, published posthumously in 1991.
- falconer (hunting)
falconry: History: …the Home Office before a falconer could take a young hawk for falconry.
- Falconer of Thoroton, Charles Falconer, Lord (British politician)
Charles Falconer, Lord Falconer of Thoroton was a British politician whose term as lord chancellor (2003–07) was marked by reform of the legal system of the United Kingdom. Falconer was educated at Trinity College, Glenalmond (now Glenalmond College), in Scotland and studied law at Queens’ College,
- Falconer, Charles Leslie (British politician)
Charles Falconer, Lord Falconer of Thoroton was a British politician whose term as lord chancellor (2003–07) was marked by reform of the legal system of the United Kingdom. Falconer was educated at Trinity College, Glenalmond (now Glenalmond College), in Scotland and studied law at Queens’ College,
- Falconer, Etta Zuber (American educator and mathematician)
Etta Zuber Falconer was an American educator and mathematician who influenced many African American women to choose careers in science and mathematics. Zuber graduated summa cum laude from Fisk University in Nashville, Tenn., in 1953 with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics. Among her teachers at
- Falconer, Martha Platt (American social worker)
Martha Platt Falconer was an American social worker who helped transform U.S. institutions for delinquent or displaced and homeless young women from fundamentally a system of incarceration to one based on rehabilitation. On the death of her mother in 1877, Martha Platt lived with an older sister in
- falconet (bird)
falcon: …(6 inches) long in the falconets (Microhierax) to about 60 cm (24 inches) in the gyrfalcon, an Arctic species. In true falcons the female is the larger and bolder of the sexes and is preferred for the sport of falconry. Falcons have plumes called “flags” on their legs and a…
- Falconet, Étienne-Maurice (French sculptor)
Étienne-Maurice Falconet was a sculptor who adapted the classical style of the French Baroque to an intimate and decorative Rococo ideal. He was patronized by Mme de Pompadour and is best known for his small sculptures on mythological and genre themes and for the designs he made for the Sèvres
- Falconetti, Maria (French actress)
Carl Theodor Dreyer: Filmed in France, it starred Maria Falconetti as the mystically inspired heroine. Dreyer created a new kind of historical drama by using sustained close-ups to establish an intimate relationship between the audience and the characters.
- Falconetto, Gian Maria (Italian painter and architect)
Giovanni Maria Falconetto was an Italian painter and architect. His father, Giacomo Falconetto, a brother, Giovanni Falconetto, and a great uncle, Stefano de Verona, also were noted painters. Little is known of Falconetto’s life. He studied painting in his early years and worked for a time in Rome,