- hvite hoteller, Det (novella by Nesbø)
Jo Nesbø: …stand-alone books, including the novella Det hvite hotellet (2007; “The White Hotel”) and the novels Hodejegerne (2009; Headhunters; film 2011), Sønnen (2014; The Son), and Kongeriket (2020; The Kingdom). Blod på snø (2015; Blood on Snow) and Mere blod (2015; Midnight Sun) are linked crime thrillers set in 1970s Norway.…
- Hwabaek (ancient Korean government)
Korea: The Three Kingdoms: …the Council of Nobles (Hwabaek), which made important decisions. The council’s membership consisted of men of chin’gol (“true-bone”) class, who were of the high aristocracy.
- Hwagje-rŭl wihayŏ (work by Yi)
Yi Munyŏl: Hwagje-rŭl wihayŏ (1982; Hail to the Emperor!), a jeu d’esprit, is a rambunctious satire on imperial delusions that showcases the author’s incredible erudition. In Yŏngung sidae (1984; The Age of Heroes), Yi imaginatively reconstructed what he imagined his father’s life might have been like after his defection to…
- Hwai Ho (river, China)
Huai River, river in east-central China that drains the plain between the Huang He (Yellow River) and the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). The river has a length of 660 miles (1,100 km) and drains an area of 67,000 square miles (174,000 square km). It is fed by numerous tributary streams rising in the
- Hwaian (China)
Huai’an, city and river port, north-central Jiangsu sheng (province), eastern China. It is situated on the Grand Canal, located at the point where (until 1853) it crossed the lower course of the Huang He (Yellow River). The city came into being in 2001, when what were then the cities of Huai’an and
- Hwaiyin (former city, Huai’an, China)
Huaiyin, former city, north-central Jiangsu sheng (province), China. It is situated on the Grand Canal, located at the point where (until 1853) it crossed the lower course of the Huang He (Yellow River). In 2001 Huaiyin and several other surrounding administrative entities were amalgamated to
- hwan (Korean currency)
won, monetary units of South Korea and North Korea. The Bank of Korea has the exclusive authority to issue banknotes and coins for South Korea. Banknotes are issued in denominations ranging from 1,000 to 50,000 won. The notes are adorned on the obverse with early Yi (Chosŏn) dynasty figures,
- Hwang Ho (river, China)
Yellow River, principal river of northern China, east-central and eastern Asia. The Yellow River is often called the cradle of Chinese civilization. With a length of 3,395 miles (5,464 km), it is the country’s second longest river—surpassed only by the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang)—and its drainage
- Hwang Kyo-Ahn (South Korean politician)
South Korea: The Sixth Republic: Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-Ahn was named acting president pending ratification of the impeachment by the Constitutional Court. The head of the national pension fund was also implicated in the influence-peddling scandal, as was the acting head of Samsung. The court upheld the impeachment on March 10, 2017,…
- Hwang Tonggyu (Korean poet)
Korean literature: Modern literature: 1910 to the end of the 20th century: The poet Hwang Tonggyu, for example, drew material not only from his own experiences but also from the common predicament of the Korean people, expressing what others know but do not think of saying or cannot say. The novelist Yun Hŭnggil is another example of a writer…
- Hwang Woo-Suk (South Korean scientist)
Hwang Woo-Suk is a South Korean scientist whose revolutionary claims of having cloned human embryos from which he extracted stem cells were discredited as fabrications. In 2005, Hwang debuted the first cloned dog, Snuppy, an Afghan hound. Hwang studied at the College of Veterinary Medicine at Seoul
- Hwang, David Henry (American playwright)
David Henry Hwang is an American playwright, screenwriter, and librettist whose work, by his own account, concerns the fluidity of identity. He is probably best known for his Tony Award-winning play M. Butterfly (1988), based on the true story of a French diplomat who had a long affair with a
- Hwange (Zimbabwe)
Hwange, town, western Zimbabwe. It was founded about 1900 after the discovery of coal in the vicinity and was named for a local chief, Whanga, who was the dynastic head of the Abananza people. By 1908 a brickyard was established, utilizing local clays, and the production of coke began in 1913. The
- Hwange National Park (national park, Zimbabwe)
Hwange National Park, park in northwestern Zimbabwe, on the Botswana frontier. It was established in 1928 as a game reserve, and as a national park in 1930. The park’s area of 5,657 square miles (14,651 square km) is largely flat and contains fine hardwood forests of mukwa and Zimbabwean teak.
- Hwanghae (sea, Asia)
Yellow Sea, large inlet of the western Pacific Ocean lying between mainland China on the west and north and the Korean peninsula on the east. It is situated to the north of the East China Sea, which it bounds on a line running from the mouth of the Yangtze River (Chiang Jiang) to Cheju Island off
- Hwangjo ka (Korean song)
Korean literature: Ancient times: “Hwangjo ka” (17 bce; “Orioles’ Song”), composed in Chinese, is a well-known example. “Hwangjo ka,” which is thought to be the first lyric poem in Korean literature, evokes the personal loneliness of the unfortunate Koguryŏ king Yuri.
- Hwanung (Korean mythology)
Tangun: …creator, and the son of Hwanung, who fathered his child by breathing on a beautiful young woman. Tangun reportedly became king in 2333 bc.
- Hwaŏm (Buddhist sect)
Kegon, Buddhist philosophical tradition introduced into Japan from China during the Nara period (710–784). Although the Kegon school can no longer be considered an active faith teaching a separate doctrine, it continues to administer the famous Tōdai Temple monastery at Nara. The name Kegon is a
- hwarangdo (Korean youth group)
hwarangdo, youth group following a unique military and philosophical code developed in the ancient Korean state of Silla about the 6th century ce. The hwarangdo were groups of elite youths (hwarang; the suffix -do means “group,” “disciple,” or “follower”) who were trained almost equally in academic
- Hwaseong (fortress, Suwon, South Korea)
Suwon: The most notable is Hwaesong, a fortification built by King Jeongjo in 1796 that formerly enclosed all of Suwon before the city’s expansion beyond its walls. The fortress was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1997. The annual Hwaesong Cultural Festival (October) includes a reenactment of King Jeongjo’s…
- Hwasŏng (fortress, Suwon, South Korea)
Suwon: The most notable is Hwaesong, a fortification built by King Jeongjo in 1796 that formerly enclosed all of Suwon before the city’s expansion beyond its walls. The fortress was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1997. The annual Hwaesong Cultural Festival (October) includes a reenactment of King Jeongjo’s…
- Hwei (people)
Hui, an official nationality of China, composed of nearly 10 million people. The Hui are Chinese Muslims (i.e., neither Turkic nor Mongolian) who have intermingled with the Han Chinese throughout China but are relatively concentrated in western China—in the provinces or autonomous regions of
- Hwicce (people)
Hwicce, the inhabitants of one of the subkingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England that coincided with the medieval diocese of Worcester, a territory that then encompassed present Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, and southwest Warwickshire. The southern part had been wrested from the Britons by the West
- Hwlffordd (Wales, United Kingdom)
Haverfordwest, market town, historic and present county of Pembrokeshire (Sir Benfro), southwestern Wales. It is situated at the head of navigation on a deep inlet of the Irish Sea and is the administrative centre of Pembrokeshire county. The town grew up as a walled borough with a castle (c. 1120)
- HWNS (Australian charitable organization)
House with No Steps (HWNS), Australian charitable organization that provides support, services, and employment for people with disabilities. House with No Steps was founded in 1962 as an outgrowth of a motorized-wheelchair club that had been started by a group of individuals with disabilities in
- Hy-Speed Longhand (writing method)
shorthand: Modern abbreviated longhand systems: Another American method, Hy-Speed Longhand, was first published under that title in 1932. Based on Andrew J. Graham’s Brief Longhand, published in 1857, its principles include the omission of silent letters and most vowels, the substitution of letters, numbers, or signs, and the combination of certain letters.
- hyacinth (gem)
hyacinth, a red, orange, or yellow variety of the gemstone zircon
- hyacinth (plant)
hyacinth, (genus Hyacinthus), small genus of bulbous herbs (family Asparagaceae, formerly Hyacinthaceae), native primarily to the Mediterranean region and tropical Africa. The common garden hyacinths are derived from Hyacinthus orientalis and are popular spring ornamentals. Most species have four
- hyacinth macaw (bird)
macaw: The cobalt-blue hyacinth macaw (Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus) of Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay is the largest of all parrots, measuring 95–100 cm (37.5–39.5 inches) long. The scarlet macaw (Ara macao) is probably the best-known New World parrot. Its brilliant red, yellow, and blue plumage contrasts with a bare white…
- Hyacinthia (Spartan festival)
Hyacinthus: …important of Spartan festivals, the Hyacinthia, in the Spartan month Hyacinthius. Probably an early summer festival, it lasted three days, the rites gradually passing from mourning for Hyacinthus to rejoicing in the majesty of Apollo. This festival was clearly connected with vegetation and marked the passage from the youthful verdure…
- Hyacinthoides (plant, genus Hyacinthoides)
bluebell, (genus Hyacinthoides), genus of 11 species of bulbous perennial plants (family Asparagaceae, formerly Hyacinthaceae) native to Eurasia. The bell-shaped blue flower clusters of English bluebell, or wild hyacinth (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), and Spanish bluebell (H. hispanica) are borne on
- Hyacinthoides hispanica (plant)
bluebell: …wild hyacinth (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), and Spanish bluebell (H. hispanica) are borne on plants about 30 cm (1 foot) tall. Both species are cultivated as garden ornamentals.
- Hyacinthoides non-scripta (plant)
bluebell: …clusters of English bluebell, or wild hyacinth (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), and Spanish bluebell (H. hispanica) are borne on plants about 30 cm (1 foot) tall. Both species are cultivated as garden ornamentals.
- Hyacinthus (Greek mythology)
Hyacinthus, in Greek legend, a young man of Amyclae in Laconia. According to the usual version, his great beauty attracted the love of Apollo, who killed him accidentally while teaching him to throw the discus; others related that Zephyrus (or Boreas) out of jealousy deflected the discus so that it
- Hyacinthus (plant)
hyacinth, (genus Hyacinthus), small genus of bulbous herbs (family Asparagaceae, formerly Hyacinthaceae), native primarily to the Mediterranean region and tropical Africa. The common garden hyacinths are derived from Hyacinthus orientalis and are popular spring ornamentals. Most species have four
- Hyacinthus orientalis (plant)
hyacinth: …garden hyacinths are derived from Hyacinthus orientalis and are popular spring ornamentals.
- hyacynthine macaw (bird)
macaw: The cobalt-blue hyacinth macaw (Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus) of Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay is the largest of all parrots, measuring 95–100 cm (37.5–39.5 inches) long. The scarlet macaw (Ara macao) is probably the best-known New World parrot. Its brilliant red, yellow, and blue plumage contrasts with a bare white…
- Hyades (Greek mythology)
Hyades, in Greek mythology, daughters of the Titan Atlas and the Oceanid Aethra, the five (or more) sisters of the Pleiades who nursed the infant wine god, Dionysus, and as a reward were made the five stars in the head of the constellation Taurus, the bull. According to another version, they so
- Hyades (astronomy)
Hyades, cluster of several hundred stars in the zodiacal constellation Taurus. As seen from Earth, the bright star Aldebaran appears to be a member of the cluster, but in fact Aldebaran is much closer to the Earth than the Hyades’ distance of about 150 light-years. Five genuine members of the group
- hyaena (mammal)
hyena, (family Hyaenidae), any of three species of coarse-furred, doglike carnivores found in Asia and Africa and noted for their scavenging habits. Hyenas have long forelegs and a powerful neck and shoulders for dismembering and carrying prey. Hyenas are tireless trotters with excellent sight,
- Hyaena brunnea (mammal)
hyena: The smaller brown hyena weighs about 40 kg; the coat is shaggy and dark with an erectile white mane over the neck and shoulders and horizontal white bands on the legs. The brown hyena lives in Southern Africa and western coastal deserts, where it is called the…
- Hyaena hyaena (mammal)
hyena: Five races of striped hyenas live in scrub woodland as well as in arid and semiarid open country from Morocco to Egypt and Tanzania, Asia Minor, the Arabian Peninsula, the Caucasus, and India. These small hyenas average 30–40 kg. Colour is pale gray with black throat fur and…
- Hyaenidae (mammal family)
carnivore: genets, and related species), and Hyaenidae (hyenas). There are three aquatic families: Otariidae (sea lions and fur seals), Phocidae (true, or earless, seals), and Odobenidae (the walrus). These aquatic families are
- Hyaenodon (fossil mammal genus)
Hyaenodon, extinct genus of carnivorous mammals that first appeared in the fossil record about 42 million years ago during the middle of the Eocene Epoch and persisted until about 25 million years ago near the end of the Oligocene Epoch. The genus, in the order Creodonta, contained about 30
- hyaenodont (fossil mammal family)
Creodonta: …distinguished: the Oxyaenidae and the Hyaenodontidae. The oxyaenids had relatively short faces and powerful limbs, perhaps resembling badgers, wolverines, and bears. They first appeared in the early Paleocene Epoch (about 65.5 million years ago) and became extinct at the end of the Eocene (about 33.9 million years ago). Oxyaenids lived…
- Hyaenodontidae (fossil mammal family)
Creodonta: …distinguished: the Oxyaenidae and the Hyaenodontidae. The oxyaenids had relatively short faces and powerful limbs, perhaps resembling badgers, wolverines, and bears. They first appeared in the early Paleocene Epoch (about 65.5 million years ago) and became extinct at the end of the Eocene (about 33.9 million years ago). Oxyaenids lived…
- Hyakuren (Japanese artist)
Tomioka Tessai was a Japanese artist of bunjinga, or “literati painting” (which originated in China and was also called Nanga, or the Southern school of Chinese art). Tomioka’s philosophical view was deeply rooted in Confucianism; and, as a creative and original artist, he managed to avoid the
- hyakushō (Japanese society)
Japan: Commerce, cities, and culture: …the nationwide farming populace (hyakushō) of independent landowners, although subject to heavy taxes and various kinds of labor services, sought the means to enjoy a better standard of living. In addition to their primary efforts as cultivators, they reclaimed new lands and produced various commercial crops and handicraft goods…
- hyakushō ikki (Japanese revolt)
ikki, peasant uprisings in Japan beginning in the Kamakura period (1192–1333) and continuing through the Tokugawa (Edo) period (1603–1867). Though the welfare of the city dweller improved during Tokugawa times, the welfare of poor peasants worsened: excessive taxation and rising numbers of famines
- hyaline cartilage (anatomy)
hyaline cartilage, type of connective tissue, glossy pearl-gray or blue-white in appearance and resilient, found on surfaces of joints and in the cartilage making up the fetal skeleton. In human adults, hyaline cartilage persists at the ends of bones in free-moving joints as articular cartilage, at
- hyaline layer (anatomy)
integument: Skin structure: …a clear layer, called the stratum lucidum, can be distinguished between the stratum granulosum and the stratum corneum.
- hyaline membrane disease (pathology)
respiratory distress syndrome of newborns, a common complication in infants, especially in premature newborns, characterized by extremely laboured breathing, cyanosis (a bluish tinge to the skin or mucous membranes), and abnormally low levels of oxygen in the arterial blood. Before the advent of
- hyaline rock (geology)
igneous rock: Crystallinity: The subaphanitic, or hyaline, rocks are referred to as glassy, or vitric, in terms of granularity.
- hyalocytes of Balazs (physiology)
human eye: The vitreous body: …population of specialized cells, the hyalocytes of Balazs, which may contribute to the breakdown and renewal of the hyaluronic acid. The vitreous body serves to keep the underlying retina pressed against the choroid.
- hyalophane (mineral)
hyalophane, a barium-rich variety of potassium feldspar; see
- Hyalophora cecropia (insect)
saturniid moth: Major species: The cecropia moth (Hyalophora cecropia) is the largest moth native to North America, attaining a wingspread of about 15 cm (6 inches). It is brown with white, red, and gray markings and large, distinctive, crescent-shaped eye spots. The larva grows to 10 cm (4 inches) in…
- Hyaloraphidium (fungus genus)
fungus: Evolution and phylogeny of fungi: >Hyaloraphidium. Pneumocystis jirovecii causes pneumonia in mammals, including humans with weakened immune systems; pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) is the most common opportunistic infection in people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and has been a major cause of death in people with AIDS. Pneumocystis was initially described…
- Hyaloraphidium curvatum (fungus)
fungus: Evolution and phylogeny of fungi: Hyaloraphidium curvatum was previously classified as a colourless green alga; however, it has since been recognized as a fungus on the basis of molecular sequence data, which show it to be a member of the order Monoblepharidales in the phylum Chytridiomycota.
- Hyalospongiae (invertebrate)
glass sponge, any of a class (Hexactinellida, also called Hyalospongiae, or Triaxonia) of sponges characterized by a skeleton that consists of silica spicules (needlelike structures) often united into a delicate geometric network—e.g., that of Venus’s flower basket (q.v.). Glass sponges occur
- hyaluronan (biochemistry)
hyaluronic acid, naturally occurring polysaccharide found in the extracellular matrix of vertebrate tissues, particularly soft connective tissues. It is also found in certain body fluids, including fluid in the eyes and the synovial fluid of joints. Hyaluronic acid has several important functions,
- hyaluronic acid (biochemistry)
hyaluronic acid, naturally occurring polysaccharide found in the extracellular matrix of vertebrate tissues, particularly soft connective tissues. It is also found in certain body fluids, including fluid in the eyes and the synovial fluid of joints. Hyaluronic acid has several important functions,
- hyaluronidase (enzyme)
hyaluronidase, any of a group of enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis (chemical decomposition involving the elements of water) of certain complex carbohydrates such as hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfates. The enzymes have been found in insects, leeches, snake venom, mammalian tissues (testis
- hyang’ak (Korean music)
Korean music: Court instrumental music: …court music was divided into hyang’ak, Korean music; tang’ak, Tang and Song Chinese music; and a’ak, Confucian ritual music. The instruments used for these ensembles were of Chinese derivation and included sets of tuned stones (in Korean p’yŏn’gyŏng) and bells (p’yŏnjong), mouth organ (saeng), and instruments in all the other…
- hyang-p’iri (musical instrument)
p’iri: The largest is the hyang-p’iri, which is about 27 cm (11 inches) long and has a reed that is 7 cm (3 inches) long. Because its tone is loud and nasal, the instrument often plays the main melodic part in ensembles. It appears in court, shaman, and folk genres,…
- hyangch’al (Korean writing)
Korean literature: …extended system of transcription, called hyangch’al, followed shortly thereafter, in which entire sentences in Korean could be written in Chinese. In another system, kugyŏl, abridged versions of Chinese characters were used to denote grammatical elements and were inserted into texts during transcription. Extant literary works indicate, however, that before the…
- hyangga (Korean verse form)
Korean language: General considerations: …from the 25 poems (called hyangga) that were composed as early as the 10th century and reflect the language of the Silla kingdom. Written with Chinese characters used in various ways to stand for Korean meanings and sounds, the poems are difficult to decipher, and there is no consensus on…
- Hyannis (Massachusetts, United States)
Hyannis, unincorporated village in Barnstable city, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S., on the southern coast of Cape Cod. Its name is that of a local 17th-century Algonquian Indian chief. A popular summer beach and yachting resort with ferryboat services to Nantucket Island and Martha’s Vineyard, it
- Hyas (crab genus)
spider crab: …crabs of the genera Libinia, Hyas, Sternorhynchus, Pitho, and Lambrus are common on the Atlantic coast of North America. Pacific coast spider crabs include the genera Loxorhynchus, Pugettia, and Epialtus.
- Hyatt Corporation (American company)
Pritzker family: In 1957 they bought the Hyatt House hotel in Los Angeles and built this investment over the years into a chain of more than 150 Hyatt hotels in the United States and abroad. Jay and Robert specialized in buying financially troubled companies and rejuvenating them into profit-making enterprises. By the…
- Hyatt Regency walkway collapse (disaster, Kansas City, Missouri, United States [1981])
Hyatt Regency walkway collapse, disaster that occurred at a hotel in Kansas City, Missouri, U.S., on July 17, 1981, when two suspended walkways above the lobby area collapsed, killing 114 people. When the Hyatt Regency Hotel opened for business in downtown Kansas City, local leaders were proud of
- Hyatt, Alpheus (American zoologist and paleontologist)
Alpheus Hyatt was an American zoologist and paleontologist who achieved eminence in the study of invertebrate fossil records, contributing to the understanding of the evolution of the cephalopods (a class of mollusks including squids and octopuses) and of the development of primitive organisms.
- Hyatt, Anna Vaughn (American sculptor)
Anna Hyatt Huntington was an American sculptor who brought great subtlety and vividness to equestrian and animal subjects. Anna Hyatt Huntington was the daughter of noted Harvard paleontologist Alpheus Hyatt. She was educated privately and began her study of sculpture with Henry Hudson Kitson in
- Hyatt, Dave (American software developer)
Firefox: …led by the American developers Dave Hyatt and Blake Ross, sought to create a light fast-loading browser that would appeal to users in its efficiency. In 2002 they released their first browser, Phoenix, which soon included features such as bookmarking (for saving website addresses) and the ability to add extensions…
- Hyatt, John Wesley (American inventor)
John Wesley Hyatt was an American inventor and industrialist who discovered the process for making celluloid, the first practical artificial plastic. As a young man, Hyatt trained as a printer in Illinois and then in Albany, New York. In 1863 he was attracted by a reward of $10,000 offered by a New
- Hyattsville (Maryland, United States)
Hyattsville, city, Prince George’s county, central Maryland, U.S., a northeastern residential suburb of Washington, D.C., at the head of the Anacostia River. Settled about the time of the American Civil War as Hart, it was renamed at its incorporation (1886) for its founder, Christopher Clarke
- Hybla Heraea (ancient city, Italy)
Ragusa: …the site of the ancient Hybla Heraea) is separated from the upper (modern) town by a declivity. Ragusa was the centre of an independent county from 1091 until it was united with that of Modica in 1296. The old town was destroyed by an earthquake of 1693, after which the…
- hybodont (fossil fish)
chondrichthyan: Evolution: …to modern sharks, the order Hybodontii. They probably represent an intermediate state in selachian evolution and are classified by some authorities in the order Selachii. Although the jaws had the primitive double articulation, the skeletal support of the pectoral and pelvic fins was close to that of modern selachians, with…
- Hybodontii (fossil fish)
chondrichthyan: Evolution: …to modern sharks, the order Hybodontii. They probably represent an intermediate state in selachian evolution and are classified by some authorities in the order Selachii. Although the jaws had the primitive double articulation, the skeletal support of the pectoral and pelvic fins was close to that of modern selachians, with…
- Hybopsis biguttata (fish)
chub: The hornyhead chub is blue-backed with greenish sides and a light belly. It lives in clear streams and is about 15–24 cm (6–9 inches) long. Some chubs will take a fisherman’s artificial fly. Other cyprinid chubs include the western North American fishes of the genera Gila…
- hybrid (genetics)
hybrid, offspring of parents that differ in genetically determined traits. The parents may be of different species, genera, or (rarely) families. The term hybrid, therefore, has a wider application than the terms mongrel or crossbreed, which usually refer to animals or plants resulting from a cross
- hybrid (mythology)
myth: Relationships of mixture: …readiness to be fascinated by monsters. Monsters are chaos beasts, lurking at the interstices of order, be they conceived as mythical creatures who preceded creation, survivals from an archaic era, creatures who dwell in dangerous lands remote from human habitation, or beings who appear in nightmares. Though the forms and…
- hybrid bicycle (vehicle)
bicycle: Basic types: Hybrid bicycles combine the features of road bicycles and mountain bikes. They have become very popular and are generally used for light recreation and urban commuting. Most have flat handlebars and medium-width tires designed for paved roads.
- hybrid breakdown (biology)
evolution: Hybrid breakdown: In plants more than in animals, hybrids between closely related species are sometimes partially fertile. Gene exchange may nevertheless be inhibited because the offspring are poorly viable or sterile. Hybrids between the cotton species Gossypium barbadense, G. hirsutum, and G. tomentosum appear
- hybrid car
automobile: Electric and hybrid vehicles: Modern electric cars and trucks have been manufactured in small numbers in Europe, Japan, and the United States since the 1980s. However, electric propulsion is only possible for relatively short-range vehicles, using power from batteries or fuel cells. In a typical system, a…
- hybrid cooker
solar oven: Types of solar ovens: A hybrid cooker is a box cooker equipped with a supplementary electrical heating system, which can be used at night and when it is overcast or cloudy. Those tend to be larger, fixed installations for use by a community or group. Parabolic cookers—which use a parabolic…
- hybrid cypress (tree)
cypress: The hybrid or Leyland cypress (Cupressocyparis leylandii) is an ornamental windbreak developed by crossing the Monterey cypress with the yellow cypress (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis).
- hybrid electric automobile
automobile: Electric and hybrid vehicles: Modern electric cars and trucks have been manufactured in small numbers in Europe, Japan, and the United States since the 1980s. However, electric propulsion is only possible for relatively short-range vehicles, using power from batteries or fuel cells. In a typical system, a…
- hybrid inviability (biology)
evolution: Hybrid inviability: Occasionally, prezygotic mechanisms are absent or break down so that interspecific zygotes (fertilized eggs) are formed. These zygotes, however, often fail to develop into mature individuals. The hybrid embryos of sheep and goats, for example, die in the early developmental stages before birth.…
- hybrid lens (optometry)
contact lens: In 2005 hybrid lenses were developed that are gas-permeable and rigid and surrounded by a soft ring. These lenses provide the comfort of a soft lens with the visual sharpness of a hard lens.
- hybrid orbital (chemistry)
Linus Pauling: Elucidation of molecular structures: …was a resonance combination (or hybrid) of other structures. His book The Nature of the Chemical Bond, and the Structure of Molecules and Crystals (1939) provided a unified summary of his vision of structural chemistry.
- hybrid perpetual rose (plant)
rose: Major species and hybrids: …fragile tea roses with vigorous hybrid perpetual roses. The hybrid perpetuals achieved great popularity until they were supplanted by the hybrid teas in the early 20th century. Polyantha roses are a class of very hardy roses that produce dense bunches of tiny blossoms. Floribunda roses are hardy hybrids that resulted…
- hybrid presidential-parliamentary system (government)
political system: Constitutional government: …constitutional democracy is the hybrid presidential-parliamentary system, exemplified by the government of France. In such systems there is both a directly elected president with substantial executive powers and a presidentially appointed prime minister, who must retain majority support in the legislature. If the president’s party or coalition also controls a…
- hybrid sterility (biology)
evolution: Hybrid sterility: Hybrid zygotes sometimes develop into adults, such as mules (hybrids between female horses and male donkeys), but the adults fail to develop functional gametes and are sterile.
- hybrid tea rose (plant)
rose: Major species and hybrids: …rose is that of the hybrid tea roses, which accounts for the majority of roses grown in greenhouses and gardens and sold in florist shops. Hybrid teas come in the complete range of rose colours and have large symmetrical blossoms. Hybrid teas resulted from the crossbreeding of frequently blooming but…
- hybrid vigour (genetics)
heterosis, the increase in such characteristics as size, growth rate, fertility, and yield of a hybrid organism over those of its parents. Plant and animal breeders exploit heterosis by mating two different pure-bred lines that have certain desirable traits. The first-generation offspring generally
- hybridity (anthropology)
anthropology: The study of ethnicity, minority groups, and identity: …to the growth of “hybridity”—the dissolution of rigid cultural boundaries between groups hitherto perceived as separate, the intermixture of various identities, in effect the dissolution of identities themselves. Much anthropology in this field demonstrates how identities have been and are invented and reinvented for political and other purposes, out…
- hybridization (genetics)
conservation: Introduced species: As briefly mentioned above, hybridization is another mechanism by which introduced species can cause extinction. In general, species are considered to be genetically isolated from one another—they cannot interbreed to produce fertile young. In practice, however, the introduction of a species into an area outside its range sometimes leads…
- hybridization (chemistry)
boron group element: Salts of M2+ ions: The boron orbitals are hybridized to either the sp2 (when boron forms bonds with three other atoms, for example, in borazine) or the sp3 (when boron forms bonds with four atoms, as in metal borohydrides) configuration (see chemical bonding: Valence bond theory: Hybridization).
- hybridoma (biology)
human genetics: The genetics of antibody formation: …hybrid cell, known as a hybridoma, multiplies rapidly in culture. Since the antibodies obtained from hybridomas are produced by clones derived from a single lymphocyte, they are called monoclonal antibodies.
- hybris
hubris, in ancient Athens, the intentional use of violence to humiliate or degrade. The word’s connotation changed over time, and hubris came to be defined as overweening presumption that leads a person to disregard the divinely fixed limits on human action in an ordered cosmos. The most-famous