- horizontal resistance (biology)
plant disease: Variable resistance: Horizontal resistance, on the other hand, protects plant varieties against several strains of a pathogen, although the protection is not as complete. Horizontal resistance is more common and involves many genes.
- horizontal scroll (painting)
makimono, in Japanese art, hand scroll, or scroll painting designed to be held in the hand (as compared to a hanging scroll). See scroll
- horizontal scrub (vegetation)
Tasmania: Plant and animal life: …almost impenetrable thicket known as horizontal scrub develops. This is caused by the growth of a remarkable small tree called the horizontal (Anodopetalum biglandulosum). The slender trunk of the tree falls over under its own weight, and from it branches arise that behave in the same way. On the mountain…
- horizontal segregation (economics and society)
segregation: …two dimensions: vertical segregation and horizontal segregation. The phenomenon of occupational sex segregation can be used to explain each: pay differentials between men and women across occupations within a given labour force characterize vertical segregation, while horizontal segregation illustrates the separation of various individuals in terms of the concentration of…
- horizontal semicircular canal (anatomy)
human ear: Semicircular canals: …according to their position: superior, horizontal, and posterior. The superior and posterior canals are in diagonal vertical planes that intersect at right angles. Each canal has an expanded end, the ampulla, which opens into the vestibule. The ampullae of the horizontal and superior canals lie close together, just above the…
- horizontal speciation (biology)
evolution: Evolution within a lineage and by lineage splitting: …within a lineage, or by cladogenesis, in which a lineage splits into two or more separate lines. Anagenetic evolution has doubled the size of the human cranium over the course of two million years; in the lineage of the horse it has reduced the number of toes from four to…
- horizontal stabilizer
airplane: Elevator, aileron, and rudder controls: …the elevator, attached to the horizontal stabilizer, controls movement around the lateral axis and in effect controls the angle of attack. Forward movement of the control column lowers the elevator, depressing the nose and raising the tail; backward pressure raises the elevator, raising the nose and lowering the tail. Many…
- horizontal stratification (biology)
community ecology: Stratification and gradation: …become stratified both vertically and horizontally during the process of succession as species become adapted to their habitat. Gradations in environmental factors such as light, temperature, or water are responsible for this fractionation. The vertical stratification that occurs within forests results from the varying degrees of light that the different…
- horizontal transmission (textual criticism)
textual criticism: Recension: This is called “horizontal” transmission, and a tradition of this kind is called “open” or “contaminated.” The practice of critics faced with contamination tends to vary, for historical reasons, from field to field. Editors of classical texts generally adopt a controlled eclecticism, classifying the witnesses broadly by groups…
- horizontal two-bar loom (weaving)
textile: Two-bar: …is a representation of a horizontal two-bar (or two-beamed—i.e., warp beam and cloth beam) loom pictured on a pottery dish found at Al-Badārī, Egypt. The warp is stretched between two bars or beams, pegged to the ground at each of the four corners. Lease (or laze) rods are used to…
- horizontal waterwheel
energy conversion: Waterwheels: A horizontal-shaft water mill was first described by the Roman architect and engineer Vitruvius about 27 bce. It consisted of an undershot waterwheel in which water enters below the centre of the wheel and is guided by a millrace and chute. The waterwheel was coupled with…
- horizontal-axis wind turbine (technology)
wind turbine: Types: …implementation of wind energy systems: horizontal-axis wind turbines (HAWTs) and vertical-axis wind turbines (VAWTs). HAWTs are the most commonly used type, and each turbine possesses two or three blades or a disk containing many blades (multibladed type) attached to each turbine. VAWTs are able to harness wind blowing from any…
- horizontal-hold control (television)
television: Controls: …of the picture; (5) a horizontal-hold control, which adjusts the horizontal deflection generator so that it conforms exactly to the control of the horizontal synchronizing impulses; (6) a vertical-hold control, which performs the same function for the vertical deflection generator; (7) a hue (or “tint”) control, which shifts all the…
- Horkheimer, Max (German philosopher)
Max Horkheimer was a German philosopher who, as director of the Institute for Social Research (1930–41; 1950–58), developed an original interdisciplinary movement, known as critical theory, that combined Marxist-oriented political philosophy with social and cultural analysis informed by empirical
- Horla, The (short story by Maupassant)
The Horla, short story by Guy de Maupassant that is considered a masterly tale of the fantastic. The story was originally published as “Lettre d’un fou” (“Letter from a Madman”) in 1885 and was revised, retitled “Le Horla,” and published again in October 1886; the third and definitive version was
- Horlivka (Ukraine)
Horlivka, city, eastern Ukraine. It lies in the centre of the Donets Basin industrial area on the headwaters of the small Korsun River. Horlivka was founded in 1867 as a mining settlement beside the newly constructed railway from Kharkiv to Taganrog on the Sea of Azov. Several other small mining
- Horloge amoureux, L’ (work by Froissart)
Jean Froissart: L’Horloge amoureux compares the heart to a clock, and Méliador is a chivalrous romance. His ballades and rondeaux expose the poet’s personal feelings. Despite his fame during his lifetime, Froissart apparently died in obscurity.
- Hörmander, Lars V. (Swedish mathematician)
Lars V. Hörmander was a Swedish mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1962 for his work on partial differential equations. Between 1987 and 1990 he served as a vice president of the International Mathematical Union. In 1988 Hörmander was awarded the Wolf Prize. Hörmander attended the
- Hörmander, Lars Valter (Swedish mathematician)
Lars V. Hörmander was a Swedish mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1962 for his work on partial differential equations. Between 1987 and 1990 he served as a vice president of the International Mathematical Union. In 1988 Hörmander was awarded the Wolf Prize. Hörmander attended the
- horme (philosophical concept)
Dante: Exile, Il convivio, and De monarchia: …introduces the crucial concept of horme—that is, of an innate desire that prompts the soul to return to God. But it requires proper education through examples and doctrine. Otherwise it can become misdirected toward worldly aims and society torn apart by its destructive power. In the Convivio Dante establishes the…
- Hormel Foods Corporation (American company)
Austin: Hormel Foods Corporation (originally founded as Geo. A. Hormel & Company), a meatpacking and food-processing corporation begun in Austin in 1891, is the economic mainstay, supplemented by other food-processing concerns and the manufacture of cardboard cartons. The Hormel Institute (1942), affiliated with the University of…
- Hormisdas, Saint (pope)
Saint Hormisdas ; feast day August 6) was the pope from 514 to 523. He reunited the Eastern and Western churches, which had been separated since the Acacian Schism (q.v.) of 484. Born of a wealthy family of Frosinone in the Campania, Hormisdas was married before he rose in the church. (His son
- Hormizd (Sāsānian prince)
Bahrām II: …his position against a brother, Hormizd, viceroy of the eastern provinces. In 283, exploiting Bahrām’s preoccupations, the Roman emperor Carus invaded Mesopotamia unopposed and entered Ctesiphon, the Sāsānian capital. Carus’ sudden death, however, forced the Romans to withdraw, and soon thereafter the overthrow of Hormizd made Bahrām secure. Numerous southern…
- Hormizd I (Sāsānian king)
Hormizd I was the king of the Sāsānian empire (reigned ad 272–273); he was the son and successor of Shāpūr I. Known before his accession as Hormizd-Ardashīr, he acted as viceroy of the Persian province of Armenia. During Shāpūr’s capture of Antioch from the Romans after 256, Hormizd exercised
- Hormizd II (Sāsānian king)
Hormizd II was the king of the Sāsānian empire (reigned ad 302–309); he was the son and successor of Narses. Little is known of Hormizd’s reign, although according to one ancient source he executed some members of the Manichaean religion. At Hormizd’s death powerful nobles killed his son
- Hormizd IV (Sāsānian king)
Hormizd IV was the king of the Sāsānian empire (reigned 578/579–590); he was the son and successor of Khosrow I. According to one ancient source, Hormizd protected the common people while maintaining severe discipline in his army and court. When the priests demanded a persecution of the Christians,
- Hormizd the Brave (Sāsānian king)
Hormizd I was the king of the Sāsānian empire (reigned ad 272–273); he was the son and successor of Shāpūr I. Known before his accession as Hormizd-Ardashīr, he acted as viceroy of the Persian province of Armenia. During Shāpūr’s capture of Antioch from the Romans after 256, Hormizd exercised
- Hormizd-Ardashīr (Sāsānian king)
Hormizd I was the king of the Sāsānian empire (reigned ad 272–273); he was the son and successor of Shāpūr I. Known before his accession as Hormizd-Ardashīr, he acted as viceroy of the Persian province of Armenia. During Shāpūr’s capture of Antioch from the Romans after 256, Hormizd exercised
- Hormizdagān, Battle of (Persian history)
ancient Iran: Rise of Ardashīr I: …battle on the plain of Hormizdagān (224), Artabanus was killed.
- Hormizdas (prince of Sāsānian empire)
Hormizd II: …throne, and imprisoned another son, Hormizdas. In 324 Hormizdas escaped to the court of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great.
- hormone (biochemistry)
hormone, organic substance secreted by plants and animals that functions in the regulation of physiological activities and in maintaining homeostasis. Hormones carry out their functions by evoking responses from specific organs or tissues that are adapted to react to minute quantities of them. The
- hormone receptor-positive breast cancer (pathology)
letrozole: …effective in the treatment of hormone-dependent breast cancers—those that contain cells expressing estrogen receptors, which are also known as hormone receptor-positive breast cancers.
- hormone replacement therapy (medicine)
hormone replacement therapy (HRT), estrogen or a combination of estrogen and progesterone given to restore concentrations of these hormones to physiologically active levels in menopausal or postmenopausal women. HRT is most often used to control menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes and to
- hormone therapy
prostate cancer: Treatment: Hormone therapy attacks androgens that stimulate the growth of prostate cancer. A form of hormone therapy involves drugs called LHRH analogs, or LHRH agonists, that chemically block the production of androgens. Side effects of hormone therapy may include reduced libido, abnormal growth or sensitivity of…
- hormone-dependent breast cancer (pathology)
letrozole: …effective in the treatment of hormone-dependent breast cancers—those that contain cells expressing estrogen receptors, which are also known as hormone receptor-positive breast cancers.
- Hormozgān (province, Iran)
Hormozgān, ostān (province), southern Iran, bordering the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman on the south and bounded by the ostāns of Būshehr and Fārs on the west and northwest, Kermān on the east and northeast, and Sīstān-e Balūchestān on the southeast. The province was named after Hormuz, an
- Hormuz (island, Iran)
Hormuz, mostly barren, hilly island of Iran on the Strait of Hormuz, between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, 5 miles (8 km) off the coast. The population may decline by half in summer through migration. Hormuz village is the only permanent settlement. Resources include red ochre for export.
- Hormuz, Strait of (strait, Persian Gulf)
Strait of Hormuz, channel linking the Persian Gulf (west) with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea (southeast). The strait is 35 to 60 miles (55 to 95 km) wide and separates Iran (north) from the Arabian Peninsula (south). It contains the islands of Qeshm (Qishm), Hormuz, and Hengām (Henjām) and
- Hormuzd Ardashīr (Iran)
Ahvāz, city, capital of Khūzestān province, southwestern Iran. Ahvāz is situated on both banks of the Kārūn River where it crosses a low range of sandstone hills. The town has been identified with Achaemenid Tareiana, a river crossing on the royal road connecting Susa, Persepolis, and Pasargadae.
- Hörn (Norse mythology)
Freyja, (Old Norse: “Lady”), most renowned of the Norse goddesses, who was the sister and female counterpart of Freyr and was in charge of love, fertility, battle, and death. Her father was Njörd, the sea god. Pigs were sacred to her, and she rode a boar with golden bristles. A chariot drawn by
- horn (musical instrument group)
horn, in music, any of several wind instruments sounded by vibration of the player’s tensed lips against a mouthpiece and primarily derived from animal horns blown at the truncated narrow end or, as among many tropical peoples, at a hole in the side. Metal construction, at first imitating natural
- horn (zoology)
horn, in zoology, either of the pair of hard processes that grow from the upper portion of the head of many hoofed mammals. The term is also loosely applied to antlers and to similar structures present on certain lizards, birds, dinosaurs, and insects. True horns—simple unbranched structures that
- horn (glacial landform)
arête: …a high triangular peak or horn (such as the Matterhorn) formed by three or more glaciers eroding toward each other.
- horn (musical instrument)
horn, the orchestral and military brass instrument derived from the trompe (or cor) de chasse, a large circular hunting horn that appeared in France about 1650 and soon began to be used orchestrally. Use of the term French horn dates at least from the 17th century. Valves were added to the
- Horn & Hardart Automat (American cafeteria chain)
Horn & Hardart Automat, any of a chain of cafeterias in New York City and Philadelphia opened by Joseph V. Horn and Frank Hardart, where low-priced prepared food and beverages were obtained, especially from coin-operated compartments. Horn and Hardart opened their first lunchroom in Philadelphia in
- horn angle (geometry)
mathematics: The universities: …tangent to it (called the horn angle): if this angle is not zero, a contradiction quickly ensues, but, if it is zero, then, by definition, there can be no angle. For the relation of force, resistance, and the speed of the body moved by this force, Bradwardine suggested an exponential…
- Horn Blows at Midnight, The (film by Walsh [1945])
Raoul Walsh: At Warner Brothers: The Roaring Twenties, High Sierra, and White Heat: The Horn Blows at Midnight (1945) was not as successful at the box office, but this oddball fantasy at least was original; Benny played a trumpet player who falls asleep and dreams he is an angel sent to destroy the world by blowing on the…
- horn book (education)
hornbook, form of children’s primer common in both England and America from the late 16th to the late 18th century. A sheet containing the letters of the alphabet was mounted on a wooden frame and protected with thin, transparent plates of horn. The frame was shaped like a table-tennis paddle, had
- Horn Concerto No. 1 in E-flat Major (work by Strauss)
Horn Concerto No. 1 in E-flat Major, concerto for orchestra and French horn by German composer Richard Strauss, first performed in Meiningen, Germany, on March 4, 1885. The concerto is one of the most-demanding solo works for the horn, using the highest and lowest notes in the instrument’s
- horn coral (fossil coral)
horn coral, any coral of the order Rugosa, which first appeared in the geologic record during the Ordovician Period, which began 488 million years ago; the Rugosa persisted through the Permian Period, which ended 251 million years ago. Horn corals, which are named for the hornlike shape of the
- horn dance (dance)
horn dance, English ritual dance of Abbots Bromley, Staffordshire; it is related to Morris dancing. See Morris
- horn enclosure (acoustics)
electromechanical transducer: Electromagnetic speakers: A horn enclosure uses a flared tube to obtain the best acoustic coupling between the loudspeaker cone and the outside, thereby radiating the best possible coherent wave from the speaker cone. Such a system is extremely efficient and is therefore used in public-address systems, open-air theatres,…
- horn fly (insect)
horn fly, (Haematobia irritans), insect of the family Muscidae (order Diptera) and a serious cattle pest. Adult horn flies cluster at the base of horns and on the neck and rump of cattle and suck blood. Their attacks cause loss of weight and milk production in affected cattle. The horn fly, about
- horn mercury (chemical compound)
calomel (Hg2Cl2), a very heavy, soft, white, odourless, and tasteless halide mineral formed by the alteration of other mercury minerals, such as cinnabar or amalgams. Calomel is found together with native mercury, cinnabar, calcite, limonite, and clay at Moschellandsberg, Germany; Zimapán, Mexico;
- horn of plenty (motif)
cornucopia, decorative motif, dating from ancient Greece, that symbolizes abundance. The motif originated as a curved goat’s horn filled to overflowing with fruit and grain. It is emblematic of the horn possessed by Zeus’s nurse, the Greek nymph Amalthaea (q.v.), which could be filled with whatever
- horn plantain (fruit and plant)
plantain: History: …have a common origin: the horn plantain and the French plantain. Both types grow in India, Africa, Egypt, and tropical America. The French plantains also occur in Indonesia and the islands of the Pacific. In some parts of East Africa the plantain is an important beer-making crop, notably in central…
- horn shark (fish)
bullhead shark: …conduct population surveys of the horn shark (H. francisci) of the eastern Pacific Ocean, whitespotted bullhead shark (H. ramalheira) of the western Indian Ocean, and the Oman bullhead shark (H. omanensis) of the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea.
- horn shell (gastropod family)
gastropod: Classification: …families, including worm shells (Vermetidae), horn shells (Potamididae), and button shells (Modulidae). Superfamily Strombacea Foot and operculum greatly modified and move with a lurching motion; feed on algae and plants; some species used for human food; conchs (Strombidae) of tropical oceans and the pelican’s foot shells (Aporrhaidae
- horn silver (mineral)
cerargyrite, gray, very heavy halide mineral composed of silver chloride (AgCl); it is an ore of silver. It forms a complete solid-solution series with bromyrite, silver bromide (AgBr), in which bromine completely replaces chlorine in the crystal structure. These are secondary minerals that
- horn viper (snake grouping)
sidewinder, any of four species of small venomous snakes that inhabit the deserts of North America, Africa, and the Middle East, all of which utilize a “sidewinding” style of crawling. The sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes) is a rattlesnake. This pit viper (subfamily Crotalinae) has small horns above
- Horn, Arvid Bernhard, Greve (Swedish statesman)
Arvid Bernhard, Count Horn was a Swedish soldier and statesman who played a key role in beginning Sweden’s 18th-century Age of Freedom—a 52-year period of parliamentary rule. Entering the Swedish Army in 1682, Horn served with distinction in Hungary and in the Low Countries. His military prowess
- Horn, Cape (cape, Chile)
Cape Horn, steep rocky headland on Hornos Island, Tierra del Fuego Archipelago, southern Chile. Located off the southern tip of mainland South America, it was named Hoorn for the birthplace of the Dutch navigator Willem Corneliszoon Schouten, who rounded it in 1616. False Cape Horn (Falso Cabo de
- Horn, Gertrude Franklin (American author)
Gertrude Atherton was an American novelist, noted as an author of fictional biography and history. Atherton’s biography of Nikolay Petrovich Rezanov appeared in the 11th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (see the Britannica Classic: Nicolai Petrovich de Rezánov). Gertrude Horn grew up in a
- Horn, Gustave Karlsson (Swedish general)
Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar: He and the Swedish general Gustav Horn then invaded southern Germany. He was awarded the duchy of Franconia for victories that helped bring about the downfall of the Emperor’s general Albrecht Wenzel von Wallenstein.
- Horn, Jeff (Australian boxer)
Manny Pacquiao: …WBO welterweight title to Australia’s Jeff Horn. Pacquiao bounced back to capture the WBA welterweight title in a victory over Lucas Matthysse on July 15, 2018. On July 20, 2019, he won a split decision over the previously undefeated Keith Thurman to take the WBA super welterweight belt and become,…
- Horn, John (American psychologist)
human intelligence: Blood-flow studies: The psychologist John Horn, a prominent researcher in this area, found that older adults show decreased blood flow to the brain, that such decreases are greater in some areas of the brain than in others, and that the decreases are particularly notable in those areas responsible for…
- Horn, Roni (American conceptual sculptor, installation artist, draftsman, and photographer)
Roni Horn American conceptual sculptor, installation artist, draftsman, and photographer well known for her Iceland-based body of work. Horn left high school at age 16 and enrolled at the Rhode Island School of Design (B.F.A., 1975). She went on to study sculpture and drawing and graduated in 1978
- Horn, Shirley (American musician)
Shirley Horn was an American jazz artist whose ballads, sung in a breathy contralto to her own piano accompaniment, earned her both critical acclaim and popular renown. Horn was raised in Washington, D.C., and attended the Junior School of Music at Howard University, where she studied classical
- Horn, Shirley Valerie (American musician)
Shirley Horn was an American jazz artist whose ballads, sung in a breathy contralto to her own piano accompaniment, earned her both critical acclaim and popular renown. Horn was raised in Washington, D.C., and attended the Junior School of Music at Howard University, where she studied classical
- horn-of-plenty mushroom (fungus)
mushroom: Other mushrooms: cibarius) and the horn-of-plenty mushroom (Craterellus cornucopioides). Puffballs (family Lycoperdaceae), stinkhorns, earthstars (a kind of puffball), and bird’s nest fungi are usually treated with the mushrooms. Another group of ascomycetes includes the cup fungi, with a cuplike or dishlike fruiting structure, sometimes highly coloured.
- horn-tooth moss (plant)
horn-tooth moss, any plant of the genus Ceratodon (about 5 species) in the subclass Bryidae. The most abundant of the species, C. purpureus, has a worldwide distribution and is conspicuous because of its purple capsule (spore case), especially when growing on bare, acidic soil or burned areas.
- Hornád River (river, Europe)
Hernád River, river in Hungary and Slovakia that rises on the northern slope of the Low Tatra (Nízké Tatry) mountains in Slovakia and flows east and south to join the Sajo, a tributary of the Tisza, after a course of 165 miles (265
- Hornaday, Cordelia (American entrepreneur)
Knott’s Berry Farm: …Park, California) and his wife, Cordelia Knott (née Cordelia Hornaday; b. January 23, 1890—d. April 23, 1974, Buena Park, California). Knott, the son of a farmer, grew up in Pomona, California, where he met and married his high-school friend Cordelia. In 1920 they leased 10 acres (4 hectares) of land…
- hornbeam (plant)
hornbeam, (genus Carpinus), genus of about 25 species of hardy slow-growing ornamental and timber trees in the birch family (Betulaceae), distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere. The related hop-hornbeam (Ostyra) is in a different genus of the birch family. Hornbeam trees have smooth or
- Hornbein, Thomas F. (American explorer and mountaineer)
Mount Everest: The U.S. ascent of 1963: Unsoeld and Thomas F. Hornbein, made mountaineering history by ascending the West Ridge, which until then had been considered unclimbable. They descended the traditional way, along the Southeast Ridge toward the South Col, thus also accomplishing the first major mountain traverse in the Himalayas. On the descent,…
- hornbill (bird)
hornbill, (family Bucerotidae), any of approximately 60 species of Old World tropical birds constituting the family Bucerotidae (order Coraciiformes). They are noted for the presence, in a few species, of a bony casque, or helmet, surmounting the prominent bill. They are typically large-headed,
- hornblende (mineral)
hornblende, calcium-rich amphibole mineral that is monoclinic in crystal structure. Hornblende’s generalized chemical formula is (Ca,Na)2(Mg,Fe,Al)5(Al,Si)8O22 (OH)2. The four end-members and the cation content of their respective compositions are as follows: hornblende, Ca2(Mg4Al) (Si7Al);
- hornblende-hornfels facies (geology)
metamorphic rock: Hornblende-hornfels facies: A generally deeper level of contact metamorphism at pressures of a few kilobars is represented by the hornblende-hornfels facies. Hydrated phases become stable, and the transition to regional metamorphism becomes apparent. Because of the generally greater depth, this type of aureole is often…
- hornblendite (rock)
amphibolite: In igneous rocks, the term hornblendite is more common and restrictive; hornblende is the most common amphibole and is typical of such rocks. Hornblendite is an ultramafic rock (dominantly dark minerals). True hornblendites contain little other than amphibole and are probably derived from the alteration of pyroxene and olivine.
- Hornblower, Horatio (fictional character)
Horatio Hornblower, fictional character, a British naval officer who is the hero of 12 books (mostly novels) by C.S. Forester that are set at the time of the Napoleonic Wars. The Hornblower novels begin with The Happy Return (1937; also published as Beat to Quarters) and conclude with the
- Hornblower, Jonathan (British inventor)
Jonathan Hornblower was a British inventor of the double-beat valve, the first reciprocating compound steam engine. Hornblower’s invention, patented in 1781, was a steam engine with two cylinders, a significant contribution to efficiency. When Hornblower applied to Parliament for an extension of
- hornbook (education)
hornbook, form of children’s primer common in both England and America from the late 16th to the late 18th century. A sheet containing the letters of the alphabet was mounted on a wooden frame and protected with thin, transparent plates of horn. The frame was shaped like a table-tennis paddle, had
- Hornbook, Adam (British writer)
Thomas Cooper was an English writer whose political epic The Purgatory of Suicides (1845) promulgated in verse the principles of Chartism, Britain’s first specifically working-class national movement, for which Cooper worked and suffered imprisonment. While working as a shoemaker, Cooper read
- Hornborgesjön, Lake (lake, Sweden)
lake: Chemical precipitates: Lake Hornborgasjön, Sweden, long prized as a national wildlife refuge, became the subject of an investigation in 1967. Lake Trummen, also in Sweden, was treated by dredging its upper sediments. In Switzerland, Lake Wiler (Wilersee) was treated by the removal of water just above the…
- Hornbostel and Sachs system (music classification)
stringed instrument: …West the most widely accepted system of classification is that developed by E.M. von Hornbostel and Curt Sachs, a method based on the type of material that is set into vibration to produce the original sound. Thus, stringed instruments are identified as chordophones—that is to say, instruments in which the…
- Hornbostel, Erich Moritz von (Austrian musicologist)
Erich Moritz von Hornbostel was an Austrian musicologist and ethnologist. Brought up in a highly musical home, Hornbostel studied piano, harmony, and counterpoint. Although by his late teens he was a skilled performer and composer, his university studies (at Heidelberg, 1895–99) were in the natural
- Hornby, C. H. St. John (English businessman)
typography: The private-press movement: …the Ashendene, was conducted by C.H. St. John Hornby, a partner in the English booksellers W.H. Smith and Son. Hornby in 1900 met Emery Walker and Sydney Cockerell (Morris’ secretary at the Kelmscott Press), who encouraged and instructed him and helped in devising two types for his own use: Subiaco,…
- Hornby, Lesley (British fashion model)
Twiggy is a British fashion model and actress whose gamine frame and mod look defined the fashion industry during much of the late 20th century. She is widely considered to have been one of the world’s first supermodels—a top fashion model who appears simultaneously on the covers of the world’s
- Hornby, Nicholas (British writer)
Nick Hornby is a British novelist, screenwriter, and essayist known for his sharply comedic, pop-culture-drenched depictions of dissatisfied adulthood as well as for his music and literary criticism. Hornby’s parents divorced when he was young, after which he lived with his mother and sister. He
- Hornby, Nick (British writer)
Nick Hornby is a British novelist, screenwriter, and essayist known for his sharply comedic, pop-culture-drenched depictions of dissatisfied adulthood as well as for his music and literary criticism. Hornby’s parents divorced when he was young, after which he lived with his mother and sister. He
- Horne & Corden (British television show)
James Corden: …in the limited-run sketch comedy Horne & Corden (2009). His noteworthy guest appearance in a 2010 episode of Doctor Who spurred the show’s producers to revive his character the following season. Corden later appeared in the 10-episode TV comedy thriller The Wrong Mans (2013–14), which garnered him a BAFTA nomination.
- Horne Islands (islands, Wallis and Futuna)
Horne Islands, pair of volcanic islands (Futuna and Alofi) forming the southwestern part of the French overseas collectivity of Wallis and Futuna, in the west-central Pacific Ocean. Futuna (not to be confused with its namesake in Vanuatu, which is said to have been settled from Futuna) is the site
- Horne, Filips van Montmorency, count van (Dutch statesman)
Filips van Montmorency, count van Horne was the stadtholder of Gelderland and Zutphen, admiral of the Netherlands, and member of the council of state of the Netherlands (1561–65), who sought to preserve the traditional rights and privileges of the Netherlands and to end the Spanish Inquisition. A
- Horne, Filips van Montmorency, graaf van (Dutch statesman)
Filips van Montmorency, count van Horne was the stadtholder of Gelderland and Zutphen, admiral of the Netherlands, and member of the council of state of the Netherlands (1561–65), who sought to preserve the traditional rights and privileges of the Netherlands and to end the Spanish Inquisition. A
- Horne, Herman Harrell (American educational philosopher)
Herman Harrell Horne was an American educational philosopher who represented the idealistic viewpoint in contrast to the pragmatism of John Dewey and his followers. Horne earned his undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill (1895) and received his
- Horne, Îles de (islands, Wallis and Futuna)
Horne Islands, pair of volcanic islands (Futuna and Alofi) forming the southwestern part of the French overseas collectivity of Wallis and Futuna, in the west-central Pacific Ocean. Futuna (not to be confused with its namesake in Vanuatu, which is said to have been settled from Futuna) is the site
- Horne, John (British politician)
John Horne Tooke was a radical politician, one of the most effective English agitators for parliamentary reform and freedom of dissent in the late 18th century. He attacked the powerful Whig magnates but stopped short of advocating democracy. Born John Horne, the son of a poultry dealer, he assumed
- Horne, Lena (American singer and actress)
Lena Horne was an American singer and actress who first came to fame in the 1940s. Horne left school at age 16 to help support her ailing mother and became a dancer at the Cotton Club in Harlem, New York City. In two years at the Cotton Club she appeared with such entertainers as Cab Calloway and
- Horne, Lena Calhoun (American singer and actress)
Lena Horne was an American singer and actress who first came to fame in the 1940s. Horne left school at age 16 to help support her ailing mother and became a dancer at the Cotton Club in Harlem, New York City. In two years at the Cotton Club she appeared with such entertainers as Cab Calloway and
- Horne, Marilyn (American opera singer)
Marilyn Horne is an American mezzo-soprano noted for the seamless quality and exceptional range and flexibility of her voice, especially in coloratura roles by Gioacchino Rossini and George Frideric Handel. She was also instrumental in reviving interest in their lesser-known operas. Horne studied