- Grimké sisters (American abolitionists)
Grimké sisters, American antislavery crusaders and women’s rights advocates. Sarah Grimké (in full Sarah Moore Grimké; b. Nov. 26, 1792, Charleston, S.C., U.S.—d. Dec. 23, 1873, Hyde Park, Mass.) and her sister Angelina Grimké (in full Angelina Emily Grimké; b. Feb. 20, 1805, Charleston, S.C.,
- Grimké, Angelina (American abolitionist)
Grimké sisters: Angelina followed in 1829 and also became a Quaker. In 1835 Angelina wrote a letter of approval to William Lloyd Garrison that he subsequently published in his abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator. From that time on, the sisters were deeply involved in the abolition movement, with…
- Grimké, Angelina Emily (American abolitionist)
Grimké sisters: Angelina followed in 1829 and also became a Quaker. In 1835 Angelina wrote a letter of approval to William Lloyd Garrison that he subsequently published in his abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator. From that time on, the sisters were deeply involved in the abolition movement, with…
- Grimké, Angelina Weld (American dramatist)
Angelina Weld Grimké was an African-American poet and playwright, an important forerunner of the Harlem Renaissance. Grimké was born into a prominent biracial family of abolitionists and civil-rights activists; the noted abolitionists Angelina and Sarah Grimké were her great-aunts, and her father
- Grimké, Charlotte Forten (American abolitionist and educator)
Charlotte Forten Grimké was an American abolitionist and educator best known for the five volumes of diaries she wrote. They were published posthumously. Forten was born into a prominent free Black family in Philadelphia. Her father ran a successful sail-making business. Many members of her family
- Grimké, Sarah (American abolitionist)
Grimké sisters: Sarah, who had objected to the rather superficial education made available to her, made a number of visits to Philadelphia, where she became acquainted with the Society of Friends; at length, in 1821, she became a member and left her Southern home permanently. Angelina followed…
- Grimké, Sarah Moore (American abolitionist)
Grimké sisters: Sarah, who had objected to the rather superficial education made available to her, made a number of visits to Philadelphia, where she became acquainted with the Society of Friends; at length, in 1821, she became a member and left her Southern home permanently. Angelina followed…
- Grimm’s Fairy Tales (work by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm)
Grimm’s Fairy Tales, classic and influential collection of folklore by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, first published in two volumes as Kinder- und Hausmärchen (1812–15; “Children’s and Household Tales”) and later revised and enlarged seven times between 1819 and 1857. The work was first translated into
- Grimm’s law (linguistics)
Grimm’s law, description of the regular correspondences in Indo-European languages formulated by Jacob Grimm in his Deutsche Grammatik (1819–37; “Germanic Grammar”); it pointed out prominent correlations between the Germanic and other Indo-European languages of Europe and western Asia. The law was
- Grimm, Brothers (German folklorists and linguists)
The Brothers Grimm were two German folklorists and linguists who are today best known for their Kinder- und Hausmärchen (1812–22). This collection of stories, called Grimm’s Fairy Tales in the English-speaking world, led to the modern study of folklore. They were among the most important German
- Grimm, Friedrich Melchior, Freiherr von (German literary critic)
Friedrich Melchior, baron von Grimm was a critic of German descent who played an important part in the spread of 18th-century French culture throughout Europe. After studying in Leipzig, Grimm attached himself to the powerful Schönberg family. In 1748 he went to Paris as escort to their second son
- Grimm, Hans (German writer)
Hans Grimm was a German writer whose works were popular expressions of Pan-Germanism and helped to prepare the climate of opinion in Germany that embraced the nationalist and expansionist policies of Adolf Hitler. Educated in Munich and Lausanne, he received commercial training in England and in
- Grimm, Hans Emil Wilhelm (German writer)
Hans Grimm was a German writer whose works were popular expressions of Pan-Germanism and helped to prepare the climate of opinion in Germany that embraced the nationalist and expansionist policies of Adolf Hitler. Educated in Munich and Lausanne, he received commercial training in England and in
- Grimm, Jacob Ludwig Carl (German author, folklorist, and philologist)
Brothers Grimm: The Brothers Grimm were Jacob Ludwig Carl Grimm (b. January 4, 1785, Hanau, Hesse-Kassel [Germany]—d. September 20, 1863, Berlin) and Wilhelm Carl Grimm (b. February 24, 1786, Hanau, Hesse-Kassel [Germany]—d. December 16, 1859, Berlin). They together compiled several collections of folk music and folk literature. Jacob in particular did…
- Grimm, Wilhelm Carl (German author, folklorist, and philologist)
Brothers Grimm: September 20, 1863, Berlin) and Wilhelm Carl Grimm (b. February 24, 1786, Hanau, Hesse-Kassel [Germany]—d. December 16, 1859, Berlin). They together compiled several collections of folk music and folk literature. Jacob in particular did important work in historical linguistics and Germanic philology, which included the formulation of Grimm’s law, a…
- Grimmelshausen, Hans Jacob Christoph von (German novelist)
Hans Jacob Christoph von Grimmelshausen was a German novelist, whose Simplicissimus series is one of the masterworks of his country’s literature. Satiric and partially autobiographical, it is a matchless social picture of the often grotesque Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). Apparently the son of an
- Grimmelshausen, Hans Jakob Christoffel von (German novelist)
Hans Jacob Christoph von Grimmelshausen was a German novelist, whose Simplicissimus series is one of the masterworks of his country’s literature. Satiric and partially autobiographical, it is a matchless social picture of the often grotesque Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). Apparently the son of an
- Grimmia (plant)
fringe moss, any of the plants of the genus Grimmia (subclass Bryidae), which includes more than 100 species distributed throughout the world, primarily on rocks or stone walls. A few species grow on roofs or in streams; G. maritima forms cushions up to four centimetres (1 12 inches) tall on rocks
- Grimmia maritima (plant)
fringe moss: …the plants of the genus Grimmia (subclass Bryidae), which includes more than 100 species distributed throughout the world, primarily on rocks or stone walls. A few species grow on roofs or in streams; G. maritima forms cushions up to four centimetres (1 12 inches) tall on rocks along seashores. Nearly…
- Grímnismál (ancient Scandinavian poem)
Germanic religion and mythology: The beginning of the world of giants, gods, and men: Another didactic poem, “Grímnismál” (“The Lay of Grímnir [Odin]”), adds further details. The trees were the giant’s hair and his brains the clouds. Snorri quotes the three poetic sources just mentioned, giving a more coherent account and adding some details. One of the most interesting is the reference…
- Grimoald (Merovingian official)
Grimoald was a Carolingian mayor of the palace of Austrasia. Grimoald succeeded his father, Pippin I of Landen, in 643 and for 13 years served under King Sigebert III. But, when the latter died in 656, Grimoald, rich and able, attracted sufficient partisans to consider that the time was ripe to
- Grimoald (duke of Benevento)
coin: Post-Roman coinage in the West: …struck in the name of Grimoald, duke of Beneventum (662–671), which was followed by gold and silver from a number of mints elsewhere. In Africa the Vandal kings Gunthamund (484–496) and Hilderic (523–?530) issued silver and bronze coinage, respectively, inscribed with their names; the types and denominations looked to imperial…
- Grimoald III (Benevento leader)
Italy: The south, 774–1000: Arichis and his son Grimoald III (787–806) were powerful rulers who held off the Franks, even if Grimoald temporarily had to pay tribute to Charlemagne after an invasion in 787. They controlled the entire southern mainland except for the Bay of Naples and the end of the “heel” and…
- Grimoald, Nicholas (English scholar)
Nicholas Grimald was an English scholar and poet, best known as a contributor to Songes and Sonettes (1557), known as Tottel’s Miscellany, an anthology of contemporary poetry he may have edited. Grimald was educated at Cambridge and Oxford universities. He graduated with an M.A. from Oxford (1543)
- Grimond of Firth, Joseph Grimond, Baron (British politician)
Jo Grimond was the leader of the British Liberal Party during its resurgence after World War II. Educated at Eton and the University of Oxford, Grimond was called to the bar in 1937. After serving as an officer in the British army from 1939 to 1947, he was appointed secretary of the Scottish
- Grimond, Jo (British politician)
Jo Grimond was the leader of the British Liberal Party during its resurgence after World War II. Educated at Eton and the University of Oxford, Grimond was called to the bar in 1937. After serving as an officer in the British army from 1939 to 1947, he was appointed secretary of the Scottish
- Grimond, Joseph (British politician)
Jo Grimond was the leader of the British Liberal Party during its resurgence after World War II. Educated at Eton and the University of Oxford, Grimond was called to the bar in 1937. After serving as an officer in the British army from 1939 to 1947, he was appointed secretary of the Scottish
- Grimsby (film by Leterrier [2016])
Sacha Baron Cohen: …Cohen cowrote and starred in The Brothers Grimsby (2016), a spy comedy in which he played the hapless brother of an assassin (Mark Strong), and he portrayed the villainous Time in Alice Through the Looking Glass (2016). He then debuted the television series Who Is America? in 2018, once again…
- Grimsby (England, United Kingdom)
Grimsby, town and seaport, unitary authority of North East Lincolnshire, historic county of Lincolnshire, eastern England. It is situated on the south side of the River Humber estuary, 6 miles (10 km) from the North Sea. Although it was important as a medieval market town near a small harbour on
- Grímsey (island, Iceland)
Grímsey, Icelandic island in the Greenland Sea, 50 miles (80 km) north of the town of Akureyri on the northern coast of Iceland. The island, 3 miles (5 km) long and 2 square miles (5 square km) in area, straddles the Arctic Circle and is the northernmost inhabited location in Iceland and the only
- Grimshaw, Beatrice (Australian writer)
Beatrice Grimshaw was an Irish-born writer and traveler whose many books deal with her travels and adventures in the South Seas. Grimshaw was educated at Victoria College, Belfast; at Pension Retailaud, Caen, France; at the University of Belfast; and at Bedford College, London. She was commissioned
- Grimshaw, Beatrice Ethel (Australian writer)
Beatrice Grimshaw was an Irish-born writer and traveler whose many books deal with her travels and adventures in the South Seas. Grimshaw was educated at Victoria College, Belfast; at Pension Retailaud, Caen, France; at the University of Belfast; and at Bedford College, London. She was commissioned
- Grímsson, Ólafur Ragnar (president of Iceland)
Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson is an Icelandic educator and politician who was the longest-serving president of Iceland (1996–2016). He is known for his strong advocacy of environmental issues. Grímsson was born in a small fishing town on Iceland’s northwestern peninsula. He graduated from the Reykjavík
- Grímsvötn (volcano, Iceland)
glacier: Glacier floods: The 1922 Grímsvötn outburst released about 7.1 cubic kilometres (1.7 cubic miles) of water in a flood that was estimated to have reached almost 57,000 cubic metres (2,000,000 cubic feet) per second. Outburst floods occur in many glacier-covered mountain ranges; some break out regularly each year, some…
- Grimthorpe, Edmund Beckett, 1st Baron (British horologist)
Edmund Beckett, 1st Baron Grimthorpe was an English lawyer and horologist notorious in his day for his disputatious demeanour but now better remembered as the designer of the highly accurate regulator incorporated in the clock in Elizabeth Tower (formerly St. Stephen’s Tower) of the British Houses
- Grimvald, Nicholas (English scholar)
Nicholas Grimald was an English scholar and poet, best known as a contributor to Songes and Sonettes (1557), known as Tottel’s Miscellany, an anthology of contemporary poetry he may have edited. Grimald was educated at Cambridge and Oxford universities. He graduated with an M.A. from Oxford (1543)
- Grin, Aleksandr Stepanovich (Soviet author)
Aleksandr Stepanovich Grin was a Soviet prose writer notable for his romantic short stories of adventure and mystery. The son of an exiled Pole, Grin spent a childhood of misery and poverty in a northern provincial town. Leaving home at 15, he traveled to Odessa, where he fell in love with the sea,
- Grinberg, Uri Tsvi (Polish author)
Yiddish literature: Writers in Poland and the Soviet Union: …represented by the poetry of Uri Tsvi Grinberg. Although he is best known as a Hebrew poet, his early Yiddish works from 1912 to 1921 are also remarkable. His first book of poems, Ergets af felder (1915; “Somewhere in Fields”) describes wartime experiences in deliberately shocking images. In the title…
- Grinch, The (film by Mosier and Cheney [2018])
Benedict Cumberbatch: Doctor Strange and The Grinch: …voice to the animated features The Grinch and Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle (both 2018), playing the eponymous curmudgeon and the villainous tiger Shere Khan, respectively.
- grind (skateboarding)
skateboarding: A grind involves riding with the trucks against the edge or top of an object.
- grindability
coal utilization: Grindability: The grindability of a coal is a measure of its resistance to crushing. Two factors affecting grindability are the moisture and ash contents of a coal. In general, lignites and anthracites are more resistant to grinding than are bituminous coals. One commonly used method…
- Grindal, Edmund (archbishop of Canterbury)
Edmund Grindal was an English archbishop of Canterbury whose Puritan sympathies brought him into serious conflict with Queen Elizabeth I. Educated at Magdalene and Christ’s colleges, Cambridge, he became a royal chaplain and prebendary of Westminster in 1551 and, during the reign of Mary I, went to
- Grindel, Eugène (French author)
Paul Éluard was a French poet, one of the founders of the Surrealist movement and one of the important lyrical poets of the 20th century. In 1919 Éluard made the acquaintance of the Surrealist poets André Breton, Philippe Soupault, and Louis Aragon, with whom he remained in close association until
- Grindelwald (Switzerland)
Grindelwald, Alpine village and valley, Bern canton, south-central Switzerland. The village is scattered on the slopes of the Lütschine Valley (Lütschental), part of the Grindelwald Valley in the Bernese Oberland (highland), southeast of Interlaken. The Grindelwald Valley is shut in on the south by
- Grindelwald Valley (valley, Switzerland)
Grindelwald: valley, Bern canton, south-central Switzerland. The village is scattered on the slopes of the Lütschine Valley (Lütschental), part of the Grindelwald Valley in the Bernese Oberland (highland), southeast of Interlaken. The Grindelwald Valley is shut in on the south by the Wetterhorn, Mettenberg, and Eiger…
- grinder (food)
hoagie, submarine sandwich containing Italian meats, cheeses, and other fillings and condiments. The name likely comes from the Philadelphia area where, during World War I, Italian immigrants who worked at the Hog Island shipyard began making sandwiches; they were originally called “hoggies” before
- grinder
grinding machine, tool that employs a rotating abrasive wheel to change the shape or dimensions of a hard, usually metallic, body. All of the many types of grinding machines use a grinding wheel made from one of the manufactured abrasives, silicon carbide or aluminum oxide. The wheel is
- Grinder, John (American linguist)
Tony Robbins: He also trained with John Grinder, a linguist and codeveloper of “modeling,” a technique through which a trainee attains success by closely copying the conscious and unconscious behaviour of a successful person.
- Grinder, The (statue)
abrasive: History: …a Scythian slave, called “The Grinder,” in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, shows an irregularly shaped natural sharpening stone used to whet a knife.
- Grinder, The (American television series)
Rob Lowe: Later career: … (2011–14), the legal comedy series The Grinder (2015–16), the medical drama series Code Black (2016–18), and the procedural drama series 9-1-1: Lone Star (2020– ). He has hosted the podcast Literally! With Rob Lowe, in which he interviews entertainment industry friends and collaborators, since 2020. He has also starred with…
- grinding (food processing)
cereal processing: Milling: …procedure is milling—that is, the grinding of the grain so that it can be easily cooked and rendered into an attractive foodstuff. Cereals usually are not eaten raw, but different kinds of milling (dry and wet) are employed, depending on the cereal itself and on the eating customs of the…
- grinding (materials processing)
abrasive: Grinding: Grinding, the most important abrasive application, is in some way involved in the manufacture of almost every product. This use may be direct, as when the product requires pieces that must be made within close dimensional tolerance limits, or a very smooth surface, or…
- grinding machine
grinding machine, tool that employs a rotating abrasive wheel to change the shape or dimensions of a hard, usually metallic, body. All of the many types of grinding machines use a grinding wheel made from one of the manufactured abrasives, silicon carbide or aluminum oxide. The wheel is
- grinding wheel (tool)
machine tool: Grinding machines: …rotating abrasive wheel called a grinding wheel or an abrasive belt. Grinding is the most accurate of all of the basic machining processes. Modern grinding machines grind hard or soft parts to tolerances of plus or minus 0.0001 inch (0.0025 millimetre).
- grindle (fish)
bowfin, (Amia calva), freshwater fish of the order Amiiformes (infraclass Holostei); it is the only recognized living representative of its family (Amiidae), which dates back to the Jurassic Period (201.3 million to 145 million years ago). The bowfin is a voracious fish found in sluggish waters in
- Grindstone (racehorse)
D. Wayne Lukas: After his Grindstone won the 1996 Kentucky Derby, Lukas became the first trainer to win six consecutive Triple Crown races.
- grinduri (landmass)
Danube River: Physiography: …oblong strips of land called grinduri. Most grinduri are arable and cultivated, and some are overgrown with tall oak forests. A large quantity of reeds that grow in the shallow-water tracts are used in the manufacture of paper and textile fibres. The Danube delta covers an area of some 1,660…
- Grine felder (play by Hirshbein)
Yiddish literature: Yiddish theatre: …his most enduring achievement was Grine felder (1916; “Green Fields”), which dramatizes a yeshiva boy’s decision to leave his Talmudic studies and return to a more wholesome, provincial life.
- Griner, Brittney (American basketball player)
Brittney Griner is an American basketball player who is one of the game’s leading centers, especially known for her play with the Phoenix Mercury, which she helped win a WNBA championship (2014). Griner garnered international attention in 2022 when she was detained in Russia on a drug offense. She
- Griner, Brittney Yevette (American basketball player)
Brittney Griner is an American basketball player who is one of the game’s leading centers, especially known for her play with the Phoenix Mercury, which she helped win a WNBA championship (2014). Griner garnered international attention in 2022 when she was detained in Russia on a drug offense. She
- Griner, Cherelle (American teacher)
Brittney Griner: Personal life: Three years later Griner wed Cherelle Watson, a teacher. Following Brittney Griner’s detainment in Russia, Cherelle Griner publicly fought for her release.
- Grinevsky, Aleksandr Stepanovich (Soviet author)
Aleksandr Stepanovich Grin was a Soviet prose writer notable for his romantic short stories of adventure and mystery. The son of an exiled Pole, Grin spent a childhood of misery and poverty in a northern provincial town. Leaving home at 15, he traveled to Odessa, where he fell in love with the sea,
- Gringo (film by Edgerton [2018])
Charlize Theron: …2018 included the dark comedy Gringo, about a pharmaceutical company executive who is kidnapped by members of a drug cartel in Mexico, and Tully, for which she earned enthusiastic reviews for her uncompromising portrayal of an overwhelmed mother of three.
- Gringoire, Pierre (French author)
Pierre Gringore was a French actor-manager and playwright, best known as a writer of soties (satirical farces) for Les Enfants Sans Souci, a famous medieval guild of comic actors of which Gringore was for a time the second dignitary, Mère Sotte (Mother Fool). As Mère Sotte he enjoyed the favour of
- Gringore, Pierre (French author)
Pierre Gringore was a French actor-manager and playwright, best known as a writer of soties (satirical farces) for Les Enfants Sans Souci, a famous medieval guild of comic actors of which Gringore was for a time the second dignitary, Mère Sotte (Mother Fool). As Mère Sotte he enjoyed the favour of
- Gringos (novel by Portis)
Charles Portis: …Mexico, animates the plot of Gringos (1991), which, like much of Portis’s work, is populated with an assortment of itinerant misfits. Escape Velocity: A Charles Portis Miscellany (2012) contains various writings, including essays and short fiction. Throughout his oeuvre, Portis portrayed the restless pursuit of belief or adventure as emblematic…
- Grinius, Kazys (Lithuanian statesman)
Kazys Grinius was a Lithuanian patriot and statesman who was active in the struggle for independence from Russia and served as prime minister (1920–23) and president (1926) of the republic during the period of liberal democracy. Grinius studied medicine in Moscow and from 1894 practiced in several
- Grinnell (Iowa, United States)
Grinnell, city, Poweshiek county, east-central Iowa, U.S., about 50 miles (80 km) east-northeast of Des Moines. It was founded by Josiah Bushnell Grinnell, a Congregational clergyman, abolitionist, congressman, and railway promoter from Vermont, to whom Horace Greeley, the American journalist, made
- Grinnell College (college, Grinnell, Iowa, United States)
Grinnell College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Grinnell, Iowa, U.S. It is a liberal arts college that awards the bachelor of arts degree only. Students can study abroad in a number of countries in Asia, Europe, Latin America, Australia, the Middle East, and Africa.
- Grinnell’s axiom (biology)
principle of competitive exclusion, (after G.F. Gause, a Soviet biologist, and J. Grinnell, an American naturalist, who first clearly established it), statement that in competition between species that seek the same ecological niche, one species survives while the other expires under a given set of
- Grinnell, J. (American biologist)
principle of competitive exclusion: Gause, a Soviet biologist, and J. Grinnell, an American naturalist, who first clearly established it), statement that in competition between species that seek the same ecological niche, one species survives while the other expires under a given set of environmental conditions. The result is that each species occupies a distinct…
- Grinnell, Josiah Bushnell (American clergyman and statesman)
Grinnell: It was founded by Josiah Bushnell Grinnell, a Congregational clergyman, abolitionist, congressman, and railway promoter from Vermont, to whom Horace Greeley, the American journalist, made his famous statement, “Go West, young man, go West, and grow up with the country!” Grinnell’s home served as a station on the Underground…
- griot (African troubadour-historian)
griot, West African troubadour-historian. The griot profession is hereditary and has long been a part of West African culture. The griots’ role has traditionally been to preserve the genealogies, historical narratives, and oral traditions of their people; praise songs are also part of the griot’s
- Griots, Le Groupe des (literary group)
François Duvalier: …and became a member of Le Groupe des Griots, a circle of writers who embraced black nationalism and voodoo as the key sources of Haitian culture.
- griotte (African troubadour-historian)
griot, West African troubadour-historian. The griot profession is hereditary and has long been a part of West African culture. The griots’ role has traditionally been to preserve the genealogies, historical narratives, and oral traditions of their people; praise songs are also part of the griot’s
- grip (machine component)
materials testing: Static tension and compression tests: Test machine grips are designed to transfer load smoothly into the test piece without producing local stress concentrations. The ends of the test piece are often slightly enlarged so that if slight concentrations of stress are present these will be directed to the gauge section, and failures…
- grip (behavior)
human evolution: Refinements in hand structure: …strength in pinch and power grips. The fingertips are broad and equipped with highly sensitive pads of skin. The proportional lengths of the thumb and other fingers give us an opposable thumb with precise, firm contact between its tip and the ends of each of the other fingers. A special…
- Grip, Bo Jonsson (ruler of Finland)
Finland: Union with Sweden: …by 1374 a Swedish nobleman, Bo Jonsson Grip, had gained title to all of Finland. Grip died in 1386, and Finland soon after became part of the Kalmar Union.
- GRIP/GISP2 (geochronology)
glacier: Information from deep cores: …some locations, such as the Greenland Ice core Project/Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2 (GRIP/GISP2) sites at the summit of Greenland, these annual layers can be traced back more than 40,000 years, much like counting tree rings. The result is a remarkably high-resolution record of climatic change. When individual layers are…
- Gripe, Maria (Swedish author)
children’s literature: National and modern literature: …children, has been developed by Maria Gripe, whose Hugo and Josephine trilogy may become classic; Gunnel Linde’s Tacka vet jag Skorstensgränd (1959; Eng. trans., Chimney-Top Lane, 1965); and Anna Lisa Warnlöf, writing under the pseudonym of “Claque,” whose two series about Pella and Fredrika show an intuitive understanding of lonely…
- Gripenberg, Bertel Johan Sebastian, Friherre (Finnish poet)
Bertel Johan Sebastian, Baron Gripenberg was one of the foremost Finnish poets who wrote in Swedish. Gripenberg studied law at the University of Helsinki, became a freelance writer, and spent the last years of his life on his estate at Sääksmäki in southwestern Finland. His first collection, Dikter
- Gripenstedt, Johan August, Friherre (Swedish baron)
Johan August, Baron Gripenstedt was a politician who initiated and guided Sweden’s transition to a capitalist economy. He also played a decisive part in turning Sweden away from a Pan-Scandinavian foreign policy in the 1860s. After a career as an artillery officer in the Swedish army, Gripenstedt
- Griphopithecus (fossil primate genus)
human evolution: Background and beginnings in the Miocene: …may be either Kenyapithecus or Griphopithecus.
- grippe (disease)
influenza, an acute viral infection of the upper or lower respiratory tract that is marked by fever, chills, and a generalized feeling of weakness and pain in the muscles, together with varying degrees of soreness in the head and abdomen. Influenza is caused by any of several closely related
- gripper loom
floor covering: Loom-formed pile: On the gripper loom, each tuft is held by its beak-like gripper and taken from its yarn carrier to the fell of the carpet, the point at which the warp and weft intersect, after being precisely cut away by a traversing knife blade. One type of spool-gripper…
- Gripsholm, castle of (castle, Sweden)
Lake Mälaren: Near Mariefred is the castle of Gripsholm, begun in 1537 by Gustav I Vasa and known today for its portrait collection. In the episcopal palace at Strängnäs, Gustav I Vasa was elected king of Sweden in 1523. The island of Drottningholm (Queen’s Island) has a 17th-century palace that is…
- Griqua (people)
Griqua, 19th-century people, of mixed Khoekhoe and European ancestry, who occupied the region of central South Africa just north of the Orange River. In 1848 they were guaranteed some degree of autonomy by a treaty with the British governor of South Africa. Under the leadership of Adam Kok III, the
- Griqualand East (historical region, South Africa)
Griqualand East, historical region of South Africa that now lies within interior southwestern KwaZulu/Natal province and adjacent areas of Eastern province. In 1861 Adam Kok III, the chief of the Griqua people (a group of mixed white and Khoekhoe ancestry), led his people from what had become the
- Griqualand West (region, South Africa)
Griqualand West, historical and contemporary region in Northern Cape province, South Africa. The region lies directly northwest of the juncture of the Vaal and Orange rivers. It is an arid plateau settled in the late 18th century by the Griqua, a group of mixed white and Khoekhoe ancestry fleeing
- Gris, Juan (Spanish painter)
Juan Gris was a Spanish painter whose lucidly composed still lifes are major works of the style called Synthetic Cubism. Gris studied engineering at the Madrid School of Arts and Manufactures from 1902 to 1904, but he soon began making drawings for newspapers in the sensuously curvilinear Art
- grisactin (drug)
griseofulvin, drug produced by the molds Penicillium griseofulvum and P. janczewski and used in the treatment of ringworm, including athlete’s foot and infections of the scalp and nails. Griseofulvin exerts its antimicrobial activity by binding to microtubules, cellular structures responsible for
- grisaille (painting)
grisaille, painting technique by which an image is executed entirely in shades of gray and usually severely modeled to create the illusion of sculpture, especially relief. This aspect of grisaille was used particularly by the 15th-century Flemish painters (as in the outer wings of the van Eycks’
- Griscom, Elizabeth (American seamstress)
Betsy Ross was an American seamstress who, according to family stories, fashioned and helped design the first flag of the United States. Elizabeth Griscom, the eighth of 17 children, was brought up as a member of the Society of Friends, educated in Quaker schools, and became an apprentice to a
- Grisel (fictional character)
Griselda, character of romance in medieval and Renaissance Europe, noted for her enduring patience and wifely obedience. She was the heroine of the last tale in the Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, who derived the story from a French source. Petrarch translated Boccaccio’s Italian version into
- Griselda (fictional character)
Griselda, character of romance in medieval and Renaissance Europe, noted for her enduring patience and wifely obedience. She was the heroine of the last tale in the Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, who derived the story from a French source. Petrarch translated Boccaccio’s Italian version into
- Griseldis (fictional character)
Griselda, character of romance in medieval and Renaissance Europe, noted for her enduring patience and wifely obedience. She was the heroine of the last tale in the Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, who derived the story from a French source. Petrarch translated Boccaccio’s Italian version into
- Griselinia (plant genus)
Apiales: Other families: Griselinia is the only genus in Griseliniaceae; its six species occur in New Zealand and southern South America. Torricelliaceae has three genera: Torricellia, with three species native to the Himalayan region and western China; Aralidium, with one species in western Malesia; and Melanophylla, with seven…
- Griseliniaceae (plant family)
Apiales: Other families: …families in Apiales are Pennantiaceae, Griseliniaceae, Torricelliaceae, and Myodocarpaceae, which are woody species with separate male and female plants; their flowers are clustered at the ends of branches, and their fruits are single-seeded. Pennantia is the only genus in Pennantiaceae, with four species native to northeastern Australia, Norfolk Island, and…
- griseofulvin (drug)
griseofulvin, drug produced by the molds Penicillium griseofulvum and P. janczewski and used in the treatment of ringworm, including athlete’s foot and infections of the scalp and nails. Griseofulvin exerts its antimicrobial activity by binding to microtubules, cellular structures responsible for
- Grisette (fictional character)
Grisette, stock character in numerous 19th-century French novels, a pretty young woman who usually works as a laundress, milliner, or seamstress and who is an easy sexual conquest. Typically, such a character is hardworking and lighthearted, her cheerful disposition sometimes masking hunger or