- Jesus of the People (painting by McKenzie)
Christology: Early 20th century to the present: …the winning painting, Janet McKenzie’s Jesus of the People, Jesus is dark-skinned, thick-lipped, and feminine.
- Jesus Only (religious movement, United States)
Jesus Only, movement of believers within Pentecostalism who hold that true baptism can only be “in the name of Jesus” rather than in the name of all three persons of the Trinity. The movement likely began in 1913 with R.E. McAlister, who, following the formula for baptism found in the Acts of the
- Jesus Prayer (Eastern Orthodoxy)
Jesus Prayer, in Eastern Christianity, a mental invocation of the name of Jesus Christ, considered most efficacious when repeated continuously. The most widely accepted form of the prayer is “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me.” It reflects the biblical idea that the name of God is
- Jesus Rolls, The (film by Turturro [2019])
Susan Sarandon: Her later movie credits included The Jesus Rolls (2019), a comedy centring on a character from the cult classic The Big Lebowski (1998); the animated Fearless (2020); and Ride the Eagle (2021), a dramedy in which she was cast as a mother estranged from her son.
- Jesus son of Joseph
Jesus was a religious leader revered in Christianity, one of the world’s major religions. He is regarded by most Christians as the Incarnation of God. The history of Christian reflection on the teachings and nature of Jesus is examined in the article Christology. Ancient Jews usually had only one
- Jesus the Nazarene
Jesus was a religious leader revered in Christianity, one of the world’s major religions. He is regarded by most Christians as the Incarnation of God. The history of Christian reflection on the teachings and nature of Jesus is examined in the article Christology. Ancient Jews usually had only one
- Jesus the Son of Sirach, Wisdom of (biblical literature)
Ecclesiasticus, deuterocanonical biblical work (accepted in the Roman Catholic canon but noncanonical for Jews and Protestants), an outstanding example of the wisdom genre of religious literature that was popular in the early Hellenistic period of Judaism (3rd century bce to 3rd century ce). This
- Jesus Walks (song by West)
Kanye West: The College Dropout: …Wire” and the gospel-choir-backed “Jesus Walks.” The latter cut won a Grammy Award for best rap song in 2005, and West also picked up awards that year for best rap album and best rhythm-and-blues song (as one of the songwriters of Alicia Keys’s “You Don’t Know My Name”).
- Jesus’ Son (film by Maclean [1999])
Billy Crudup: Early roles and breakout performance in Almost Famous: …Country (1998), and Alison Maclean’s Jesus’ Son (1999). He also had a few lead parts—as a parolee who falls for his brother’s wife in Grind (1997), American long-distance runner Steve Prefontaine in Without Limits (1998), and a congressional candidate haunted by his deceased girlfriend in Waking the Dead (2000). His…
- Jesus, Fort (fort and museum, Mombasa, Kenya)
Mombasa: It is the site of Fort Jesus, built by the Portuguese (1593–95) and now a museum. There are Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals. A Hindu temple built in 1952 has a gilded dome. Mombasa’s many historical and cultural attractions have made it a popular tourist destination.
- Jesus, Passion of (Gospels)
Passion of Jesus, final events in the life of Jesus as related in the canonical Gospels. The word passion is derived from Latin passio (“suffering” or “enduring”). Compared with the Gospels’ sparse accounts of Jesus’ early years and occasional glimpses of his public ministry, the reports of his
- Jesus, Society of (religious order)
Jesuit, member of the Society of Jesus (S.J.), a Roman Catholic order of religious men founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola, noted for its educational, missionary, and charitable works. The order has been regarded by many as the principal agent of the Counter-Reformation and was later a leading force
- Jesus, the Virgin, and the Baptist (painting by Gossart)
Jan Gossart: Other early works, such as Jesus, the Virgin, and the Baptist, reflect his interest in the works of Jan van Eyck and Albrecht Dürer. Another early work, famous for its sense of mood, is the Agony in the Garden.
- Jesus, Tomé de (Portuguese writer)
Portuguese literature: The novel and other prose: …religious and other topics; and Tomé de Jesus with his mystic and devotional treatise Trabalhos de Jesus (1602–09; “Deeds of Jesus”). The work of scientists included that of a cosmographer and mathematician, Pedro Nunes, and of a botanist, Garcia da Orta, whose Colóquios dos simples e drogas (1563; Colloquies on…
- jet (gemstone)
jet, a dense, fine-grained, compact variety of subbituminous coal, or lignite. It is coal-black in colour and has a hardness of 2+ and a specific gravity of 1.1 to 1.4. Unlike lignite, it is not laminated and so has little tendency to split but breaks with a conchoidal fracture. It can be worked
- JET (nuclear physics facility)
plasma: Applications of plasmas: …machine called the JET (Joint European Torus) was able to generate 1.7 million watts of fusion power for almost 2 seconds after researchers injected titrium into the JET’s magnetically confined plasma. It was the first successful controlled production of fusion power in such a confined medium.
- Jet (American magazine)
Ebony: The circulation of Jet, another Johnson magazine with an emphasis on news as well as entertainment, was about 900,000.
- jet (drug)
ketamine, general anesthetic agent related structurally to the hallucinogen phencyclidine (PCP). Ketamine was first synthesized in 1962 at Parke Davis Laboratories by American scientist Calvin Stevens, who was searching for a new anesthetic to replace PCP, which was not suitable for use in humans
- jet aircraft
military aircraft: The jet age: Beginning in the 1920s, steady advances in aircraft performance had been produced by improved structures and drag-reduction technologies and by more powerful, supercharged engines, but by the early 1930s it had become apparent to a handful of farsighted engineers that speeds would soon…
- jet airplane
military aircraft: The jet age: Beginning in the 1920s, steady advances in aircraft performance had been produced by improved structures and drag-reduction technologies and by more powerful, supercharged engines, but by the early 1930s it had become apparent to a handful of farsighted engineers that speeds would soon…
- Jet CD (album by Puffy AmiYumi)
Puffy AmiYumi: Their albums Jet CD (1998) and Fever Fever (1999) were regarded as J-pop classics.
- jet ejector pump
pump: Electromagnetic pumps.: In the jet ejector pump, fluid passes through a venturi nozzle (see venturi tube) and develops a suction that causes a second stream of fluid to be entrained. In the aspirator pump, water flows through a venturi nozzle and develops a suction for drawing in air. Steam…
- jet engine (engineering)
jet engine, any of a class of internal-combustion engines that propel aircraft by means of the rearward discharge of a jet of fluid, usually hot exhaust gases generated by burning fuel with air drawn in from the atmosphere. The prime mover of virtually all jet engines is a gas turbine. Variously
- jet fuel
kerosene: Standard commercial jet fuel is essentially a high-quality straight-run kerosene, and many military jet fuels are blends based on kerosene.
- jet lag (biological condition)
jet lag, physiological desynchronization caused by transmeridian (east-west) travel between different time zones. The severity and extent of jet lag vary according to the number of time zones crossed as well as the direction of travel—most people find it difficult to travel eastward (i.e., to adapt
- jet propulsion
cephalopod: Locomotion: …move by crawling, swimming, or jet propulsion, mainly the latter. The mantle, which has a passive role in the majority of mollusks, has become involved in locomotion in cephalopods, having almost entirely lost its rigid shell and become highly muscular. Its expansion and contraction produce a locomotory water current by…
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory (laboratory, Pasadena, California, United States)
Mario Molina: Molina worked in the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena from 1982 to 1989, when he became a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. In 2004 he moved to the University of California, San Diego. Molina was awarded the U.S. Presidential…
- Jet Ranger (helicopter)
Charles Wilfred Butler: …army helicopter (1961) into the Bell Jet Ranger (1965). He and his designers restyled the machine inside and out in the manner of automotive design, creating in the process one of the world’s most successful and beautiful helicopters.
- Jet Set, the (American music group)
the Byrds, American band of the 1960s who popularized folk rock, particularly the songs of Bob Dylan, and whose changes in personnel created an extensive family tree of major country rock bands and pop supergroups. The principal members were Roger McGuinn (original name James Joseph McGuinn III; b.
- jet skiing (recreation)
surfing: Tow-in surfing: The introduction of jet-skis, too, has radically redefined big-wave riding. First, it allowed surfers to handle waves that were more than 30 feet (9 metres) tall. (At that height the water flowing up the face of the wave pushes the surfer back, making it impossible to catch a…
- jet stream (meteorology)
jet stream, a region of long, narrow, high-speed winds that typically flow northeastward, eastward, and southeastward in the middle and upper troposphere or lower stratosphere. Jet streams are characterized by wind motions that generate strong vertical shearing action, which is thought to be
- jet syndrome (biological condition)
jet lag, physiological desynchronization caused by transmeridian (east-west) travel between different time zones. The severity and extent of jet lag vary according to the number of time zones crossed as well as the direction of travel—most people find it difficult to travel eastward (i.e., to adapt
- jet, radio (astronomy)
radio jet, material spewing from the centres of some galaxies at close to the speed of light and emitting strong radio waves. The most powerful extragalactic sources of radio waves are double-lobed sources (or “dumbbells”) in which two large regions of radio emission are situated in a line on
- Jetavana (monastic settlement, Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka)
South Asian arts: Sri Lankan architecture: …other sites; of these the Jetavana at Anurādhapura is the largest, though now largely ruined.
- Jetavanavihāravāsī (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Theravada: …whom the third group, the Jetavanaviharavasi, was loosely associated—established the first monastery in Sri Lanka and preserved intact the original Theravadin teachings.
- jeté (ballet movement)
jeté, (French jeté: “thrown”), ballet leap in which the weight of the dancer is transferred from one foot to the other. The dancer “throws” one leg to the front, side, or back and holds the other leg in any desired position upon landing. Among the commonly seen forms of this step are the jeté
- jeté battu (ballet)
jeté: …of this step are the jeté battu, in which the legs are crossed in the air before the descent; the grand jeté, a broad, high leap with one leg stretched forward and the other back like a “split” in the air; and the jeté en tournant, or tour jeté (“flung…
- jeté en tournant (ballet)
jeté: …in the air; and the jeté en tournant, or tour jeté (“flung turn”), in which the dancer executes a half-turn in the air away from the forward leg before landing on it.
- Jeter, Derek (American baseball player)
Derek Jeter is an American professional baseball player who, as a shortstop for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball (MLB), was selected to multiple American League (AL) All-Star teams and was one of the most popular players of his time. Jeter grew up in Michigan and started playing Little
- Jeter, Derek Sanderson (American baseball player)
Derek Jeter is an American professional baseball player who, as a shortstop for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball (MLB), was selected to multiple American League (AL) All-Star teams and was one of the most popular players of his time. Jeter grew up in Michigan and started playing Little
- Jeter, Mildred Delores (American civil rights activist)
Loving v. Virginia: …Loving, a white man, and Mildred Jeter, a woman of mixed African American and Native American ancestry, traveled from their residences in Central Point, Virginia, to Washington, D.C., to be married on June 2, 1958. Having returned to Central Point, they lived in the home of Mildred’s parents while Richard,…
- Jethro (biblical figure)
Jethro, in the Old Testament, priest of Midian of the Kenite clan, with whom Moses took refuge after he killed an Egyptian and whose daughter Moses married (Exodus 3:1). After the Exodus, Jethro visited the Hebrews encamped at the “mountain of God” and brought with him Moses’ wife and sons. There
- Jethro Tull (British musical group)
art rock: …created by such groups as Jethro Tull and the Strawbs. In common, all these bands regularly employ complicated and conceptual approaches to their music. Moreover, there has been a relatively fluid movement of musicians between bands that fall under the most general definition of art rock. Among the musicians who…
- JetRanger III (helicopter)
Textron Inc.: …craft, including the commercial 206B JetRanger III, the AH-1W SuperCobra attack helicopter, and the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior armed reconnaissance helicopter. With Boeing Company it produces the V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft as a military transport. Cessna, located in Wichita, Kansas, has built nearly half of the world’s general aviation aircraft in…
- Jetstar (Australian airline)
Qantas: …Qantas launched the low-cost carrier Jetstar to compete in the budget market.
- Jett, Joan (American musician)
Wanda Jackson: …was coproduced by rock musician Joan Jett. Jackson was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2009.
- jetty (marine structure)
jetty, any of a variety of engineering structures connected with river, harbour, and coastal works designed to influence the current or tide or to protect a harbour or beach from waves (breakwater). The two principal kinds of jetties are those constructed at river mouths and other coastal entrances
- Jeu d’Adam (French literature)
French literature: Religious drama: …is the Jeu d’Adam (Adam: A Play). It is known from a copy in an Anglo-Norman manuscript, and it may have originated in England in the mid-12th century. With lively dialogue and the varied metres characteristic of the later mystères (all of which were based on biblical stories), it…
- jeu de boules (French game)
boules, French ball game, similar to bowls and boccie. It is thought to have originated about 1910, but it is based on the very old French game of jeu Provençal. Boules is played between two players or teams. Players take turns throwing or rolling a ball (boule) as close as possible to the target
- Jeu de l’amour et du hasard, Le (work by Marivaux)
Pierre Marivaux: …l’amour et du hasard (1730; The Game of Love and Chance) display typical characteristics of his love comedies: romantic settings, an acute sense of nuance and the finer shades of feeling, and deft and witty wordplay. This verbal preciousness is still known as marivaudage and reflects the sensitivity and sophistication…
- Jeu de la feuillée (work by Adam de la Halle)
Adam De La Halle: Adam’s Jeu de la feuillée (“Play of the Greensward”) is a satirical fantasy based on his own life, written to amuse his friends in Arras upon his departure for Paris to pursue his studies. Le Congé (“The Leave Taking”) expresses his sorrow at leaving his wife…
- jeu de paume (sport)
real tennis, racket sport that is descended from and almost identical to the medieval tennis game jeu de paume (“game of the palm”). Real tennis has been played since the Middle Ages, but the game has become almost completely obscured by its own descendant, lawn tennis. Although real tennis
- Jeu de Paume (museum, Paris, France)
Jeu de Paume, museum in Paris built as a tennis court and later converted into an Impressionist art museum and subsequently into a photography museum. (Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.) The Jeu de Paume was constructed in the 17th century in the Tuileries Gardens in Paris.
- Jeu de Robin et de Marion, Le (work by Adam de la Halle)
Adam De La Halle: Jeu de Robin et de Marion is a dramatization of the pastoral theme of a knight’s wooing of a pretty shepherdess, with dances and peasants’ dialogue. Jeu du pélérin (“Play of the Pilgrim”) mocks his friends for forgetting him.
- Jeu de Saint Nicolas, Le (work by Bodel)
Le Jeu de Saint Nicolas, miracle play by Jehan Bodel, performed in 1201. Le Jeu de Saint Nicolas treats a theme earlier presented in Latin, notably by Hilarius (flourished 1125), giving it new form and meaning by relating it to the Crusades. In Bodel’s play the saint’s image, to which the sole
- Jeu de Taquin (game)
Fifteen Puzzle, puzzle consisting of 15 squares, numbered 1 through 15, which can be slid horizontally or vertically within a four-by-four grid that has one empty space among its 16 locations. The object of the puzzle is to arrange the squares in numerical sequence using only the extra space in the
- Jeu du pélérin (work by Adam de la Halle)
Adam De La Halle: Jeu du pélérin (“Play of the Pilgrim”) mocks his friends for forgetting him.
- Jeu-jen (people)
Juan-juan, Central Asian people of historical importance. Because of the titles of their rulers, khan and khagan, scholars believe that the Juan-juan were Mongols or Mongol-speaking peoples. The empire of the Juan-juan lasted from the beginning of the 5th century ad to the middle of the 6th
- Jeune Afrique (news magazine)
Jeune Afrique L’intelligent, weekly newsmagazine in the French language that presents news and interpretative and editorial commentary on Africa, especially French-speaking Africa. It is published in Paris and is the preeminent newsmagazine covering African affairs in French and perhaps in any
- Jeune Afrique L’intelligent (news magazine)
Jeune Afrique L’intelligent, weekly newsmagazine in the French language that presents news and interpretative and editorial commentary on Africa, especially French-speaking Africa. It is published in Paris and is the preeminent newsmagazine covering African affairs in French and perhaps in any
- Jeune Ahmed, Le (film by Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne [2019])
Dardenne brothers: For Le Jeune Ahmed (2019; Young Ahmed), the brothers were named best director at Cannes. The drama follows a radicalized Muslim teenager who attempts to kill his teacher.
- Jeune Belgique (Belgian literary society)
Belgian literature: The Jeune Belgique movement: Impetus for the long-awaited literary renaissance came from Max Waller, founder in 1881 of an influential review, La Jeune Belgique (“Young Belgium”), which suggested a national literary consciousness; in reality, however, the review was the vehicle of expression of individual writers dedicated…
- Jeune Belgique, La (journal)
La Jeune Belgique, (“Young Belgium”), influential review (1881–97), edited by poet and novelist Max Waller; it gave its name to a literary movement (though never a formal “school”) that aimed to express a genuinely Belgian consciousness and to free the literature of Belgium from outworn
- Jeune Canada (Canadian organization)
Robert Charbonneau: …his teens he had joined Jeune Canada (“Young Canada”), a Quebec nationalist organization, and by 1933–34, on its behalf, was broadcasting pleas for Quebec independence, the French language, and Roman Catholicism. In 1934, with friend Paul Beaulieu, he founded La Relève (later called La Nouvelle Relève, “The New Relief”), a…
- Jeune France, La (French music group)
André Jolivet: …La Spirale, later to become La Jeune France (the name originated with Hector Berlioz), dedicated to fostering modern nationalistic music. During his service in the French Army during World War II, Jolivet grew interested in primitive religion and magic—influences that may be detected in his style.
- Jeune Latour, Le (play by Gérin-Lajoie)
Antoine Gérin-Lajoie: …French Canadian play, the tragedy Le Jeune Latour (1844; “The Young Latour”). While on the staff of the Montreal newspaper La Minerve, of which he soon became the editor, he studied law and, in 1848, was called to the Quebec bar. He later served as translator to the legislative assembly…
- Jeune Parque, La (poem by Valéry)
La Jeune Parque, poem by Paul Valéry, published in 1917. An enigmatic work noted for both its difficulty and its formal beauty, it presents in 500 lines the musings of Clotho, the youngest of the three Fates, as she stands at the seashore just before dawn. She stands uncertain whether to remain a
- Jeune, Claude Le (French composer)
Claude Le Jeune was a French composer of the late Renaissance, known for his psalm settings and for his significant contributions to musique mesurée, a style reflecting the long and short syllables of Classical prosody. His works are noted for their skillful integration of lively rhythms with
- Jeunes Tunisiens (political party, Tunisia)
Young Tunisians, political party formed in 1907 by young French-educated Tunisian intellectuals in opposition to the French protectorate established in 1881. The party, headed by Ali Bash Hamba and Bashir Sfar, demanded complete Tunisian control of the government and administration of the country
- Jeunesse et amours de Manuel Héricourt (work by Adam)
Paul Adam: …the form of a novel, Jeunesse et amours de Manuel Héricourt, appeared in 1913.
- Jeunet, Jean-Pierre (French film director)
Audrey Tautou: The romantic fable, directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, was an international hit, became the top-grossing French-language movie of all time in the United States, and scored an Oscar nomination for best foreign-language film. It also earned Tautou a BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts) nomination for best actress. In…
- Jeux (ballet by Nijinsky)
dance: Innovations in the 20th century: In Jeux (1913; “Games”), Nijinsky was one of the first choreographers to introduce a modern theme and modern design into ballet. Based on his own (rather erroneous) idea of a tennis match, the choreography incorporated sporting movements and dancers in modern dress. In The Rite of…
- jeux direct (court game)
pelota: …can be classified as either jeux directs—games in which the players face each other and the pelota is hit freely between opponents—or jeux indirects—games in which the ball is hit off a wall. The second class has many variations, including bare-hand (main nue), the most popular. Pelota courts include the…
- Jeux du Canada (Canadian sporting event)
Canada Games, national sporting event held every two years in Canada, both the Winter and Summer Games being held at four-year intervals. The idea of the Canada Games was first suggested in 1924 by Norton Crow, secretary of the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, but received little support. The idea
- jeux indirect (court game)
pelota: …is hit freely between opponents—or jeux indirects—games in which the ball is hit off a wall. The second class has many variations, including bare-hand (main nue), the most popular. Pelota courts include the one-walled place libre, the two- or three-walled fronton, and the small, covered court, called the trinquet. The…
- Jevons, William Stanley (English economist and logician)
William Stanley Jevons was an English logician and economist whose book The Theory of Political Economy (1871) expounded the “final” (marginal) utility theory of value. Jevons’s work, along with similar discoveries made by Karl Menger in Vienna (1871) and by Léon Walras in Switzerland (1874),
- Jew (people)
Jew, any person whose religion is Judaism. In the broader sense of the term, a Jew is any person belonging to the worldwide group that constitutes, through descent or conversion, a continuation of the ancient Jewish people, who were themselves descendants of the Hebrews of the Bible (Old
- Jew of Home Depot, and Other Stories, The (short stories by Apple)
Max Apple: The Jew of Home Depot, and Other Stories (2007) is a collection of eclectic stories whose characters range from a disabled little girl who bonds with the mute characters of Disneyland to a teenage girl with a passion for shot put.
- Jew of Malta, The (play by Marlowe)
The Jew of Malta, five-act tragedy in blank verse by Christopher Marlowe, produced about 1590 and published in 1633. In order to raise tribute demanded by the Turks, the Christian governor of Malta seizes half the property of all Jews living on Malta. When Barabas, a wealthy Jewish merchant,
- Jew Süss (work by Feuchtwanger)
Lion Feuchtwanger: …Süss (1925; also published as Jew Süss and Power), set in 18th-century Germany, revealed a depth of psychological analysis that remained characteristic of his subsequent work—the Josephus-Trilogie (Der jüdische Krieg, 1932; Die Söhne, 1935; Der Tag wird kommen, 1945); Die Geschwister Oppenheim (1933; The Oppermanns), a novel of modern life;…
- Jew’s Beech, The (work by Droste-Hülshoff)
Annette, Freiin von Droste-Hülshoff: …a novella, Die Judenbuche (1842; The Jew’s Beech), is a psychological study of a Westphalian villager who murders a Jew. For the first time in German literature, the fate of the hero is portrayed as arising from his social environment; the crime becomes understandable within the context of the life…
- Jew’s ear fungus
Basidiomycota: The ear fungus (Auricularia auricula-judae) is a brown, gelatinous edible fungus found on dead tree trunks in moist weather in the autumn. One of 10 widespread Auricularia species, it is ear- or shell-shaped and sometimes acts as a parasite, especially on elder (Sambucus).
- jew’s harp (musical instrument)
jew’s harp, musical instrument consisting of a thin wood or metal tongue fixed at one end to the base of a two-pronged frame. The player holds the frame to his mouth, which forms a resonance cavity, and activates the instrument’s tongue by either plucking it with the fingers or jerking a string
- Jew’s mallow (plant)
tossa jute, (Corchorus olitorius), annual herbaceous plant in the mallow family (Malvaceae), cultivated as a source of jute fibre and for its edible leaves. Tossa jute is grown throughout tropical Asia and Africa, and its mucilaginous leaves and young stems are commonly eaten as a vegetable similar
- Jew’s myrtle (plant)
broom: Butcher’s broom (Ruscus aculeatus) is a shrub of the family Asparagaceae with small whitish flowers and red berries.
- Jew, The (Portuguese writer)
Antônio José da Silva was a Portuguese writer whose comedies, farces, and operettas briefly revitalized the Portuguese theatre in a period of dramatic decadence. Silva was born in Brazil, the son of Jews. Though his parents professed Christianity, his mother was accused by the Inquisition of
- jewel (mineral)
gemstone, any of various minerals highly prized for beauty, durability, and rarity. A few noncrystalline materials of organic origin (e.g., pearl, red coral, and amber) also are classified as gemstones. Gemstones have attracted humankind since ancient times, and have long been used for jewelry. The
- jewel beetle (insect)
metallic wood-boring beetle, (family Buprestidae), any of some 15,000 species of beetles (insect order Coleoptera), mostly distributed in tropical regions, that are among the most brilliantly coloured insects. These beetles are long, narrow, and flat, with a tapering abdomen. The wing covers
- Jewel Cave National Monument (monument, South Dakota, United States)
Jewel Cave National Monument, limestone caverns in southwestern South Dakota, U.S., 15 miles (24 km) west of Custer. Established in 1908, the monument occupies a surface area of 2 square miles (5 square km) in the Black Hills. The caverns consist of a series of chambers joined by narrow passages.
- Jewel Changi Airport (airport, Singapore)
Moshe Safdie: …Residential Development (2016) and the Jewel Changi Airport (2018), both in Singapore; the latter features a central waterfall. He also created high-density housing interspersed with gardens in Qinhuangdao (2017), China, and Toronto (2019). Safdie’s projects from the 2020s included the mixed-use complex Raffles City Chongqing (2020), China, which he described…
- Jewel Companies Inc. (American company)
Jewel-Osco, American retail grocery and pharmacy chain operating as a subsidiary of the grocery distributor and retailer SuperValu Inc. The company originated in 1899, when Frank Vernon Skiff and Frank Ross founded the Jewel Tea Company to supply condiments to the Chicago area from horse-drawn
- Jewel in the Crown, The (novel by Scott)
The Raj Quartet: The tetralogy, composed of The Jewel in the Crown (1966), The Day of the Scorpion (1968), The Towers of Silence (1971), and A Division of the Spoils (1975), is set in India during the years leading up to that country’s independence from the British raj (sovereignty). The story examines…
- Jewel in the Crown, The (British television miniseries)
The Jewel in the Crown, acclaimed British television miniseries (1984) that was adapted by Ken Taylor from The Raj Quartet, a series of novels by Paul Scott about the last days of British rule in India. The story covers the period from 1942, in the midst of World War II, to the beginning of Indian
- Jewel of the Nile, The (film by Teague [1985])
Michael Douglas: Noteworthy acting roles: …Stone (1984) and its sequel, The Jewel of the Nile (1985), and again teamed with the same costars for the popular dark comedy The War of the Roses (1989). One of Douglas’s most memorable roles was in Fatal Attraction (1987), in which he portrayed a family man terrorized by a…
- jewel orchid (plant)
jewel orchid, any member of several closely related genera of orchids (family Orchidaceae) cultivated for their striking leaf patterns. Downy rattlesnake plantain (Goodyera pubescens), native to eastern North America, has dark green leaves with silver and white veins. The Hawai’i jewel orchid
- Jewel Thief (film by Anand [1967])
Kishore Kumar: …Nau do gyarah (1957), and Jewel Thief (1967). A new high point in Kumar’s career came in 1969: the film Aradhana catapulted Rajesh Khanna to superstardom, and Kumar, who had lent his voice to Khanna, became the leading playback singer of the Hindi film industry. Kumar retained that position until…
- Jewel, John (English bishop)
John Jewel was an Anglican bishop of Salisbury and controversialist who defended Queen Elizabeth I’s religious policies opposing Roman Catholicism. The works Jewel produced during the 1560s defined and clarified points of difference between the churches of England and Rome, thus strengthening the
- Jewel-Osco (American company)
Jewel-Osco, American retail grocery and pharmacy chain operating as a subsidiary of the grocery distributor and retailer SuperValu Inc. The company originated in 1899, when Frank Vernon Skiff and Frank Ross founded the Jewel Tea Company to supply condiments to the Chicago area from horse-drawn
- jeweler’s lense
microscope: Principles: …are generally referred to as eye loupes or jewelers’ lenses. The traditional simple microscope was made with a single magnifying lens, which was often of sufficient optical quality to allow the study of microscopical organisms including Hydra and protists.
- jeweler’s saw
saw: …wood or other materials, the coping, or jeweler’s, saw, which is basically a hacksaw with a deeper U-shaped frame and a much narrower blade, is well-suited.