- molecular oxygen
human genetic disease: Molecular oxygen: Molecular oxygen (O2), although essential for life, must be counted among the environmental toxins and mutagens. Because of its unusual electronic structure, O2 is most easily reduced not by electron pairs but rather by single electrons added one at a time. As O2…
- molecular proposition (philosophy)
analytic philosophy: Logical atomism: More complex propositions, called molecular propositions, are built up out of atomic propositions via the logical connectives—such as “… or …,” “… and …,” and “… not …”—and the truth-value of the molecular proposition is in each case a function of the truth-values of its component atomic propositions.
- molecular rearrangement (chemistry)
carbonium ion: Reactions.: …with internal sigma base: acid-catalyzed rearrangement of neopentyl alcohol, the electron pair coming from an internal carbon–carbon sigma bond:
- molecular shape
coordination compound: History of coordination compounds: Werner also established the configuration (the spatial arrangement of ligands around the metal ion) of complexes by comparing the number and type of isomers (see below Isomerism) that he actually prepared for various series of compounds with the number and type theoretically predicted for various configurations. In this way…
- molecular sieve (chemistry)
molecular sieve, a porous solid, usually a synthetic or a natural zeolite, that separates particles of molecular dimension. Zeolites are hydrated metal aluminosilicate compounds with well-defined crystalline structures. The silicate and aluminate groupings form three-dimensional crystal lattices
- molecular solid (crystallography)
chemical bonding: Molecular solids: The structures of molecular solids, which are solids composed of individual molecules, have also been touched on in the section on intermolecular forces. These molecules are held to one another by hydrogen bonds (if they can form them), dispersion forces, and other dipolar…
- molecular spectroscopy
spectroscopy: Molecular spectroscopy: A molecule is a collection of positively charged atomic nuclei surrounded by a cloud of negatively charged electrons. Its stability results from a balance among the attractive and repulsive forces of the
- molecular spectrum (physics)
spectrum: Band spectra is the name given to groups of lines so closely spaced that each group appears to be a band—e.g., nitrogen spectrum. Band spectra, or molecular spectra, are produced by molecules radiating their rotational or vibrational energies, or both simultaneously.
- molecular structure (chemistry)
molecule, a group of two or more atoms that form the smallest identifiable unit into which a pure substance can be divided and still retain the composition and chemical properties of that substance. The division of a sample of a substance into progressively smaller parts produces no change in
- molecular weight (chemistry)
molecular weight, mass of a molecule of a substance, based on 12 as the atomic weight of carbon-12. It is calculated in practice by summing the atomic weights of the atoms making up the substance’s molecular formula. The molecular weight of a hydrogen molecule (chemical formula H2) is 2 (after
- molecular-beam epitaxy (materials science)
advanced ceramics: Film deposition: …by molecular beam epitaxy, or MBE. In this technique molecular beams are directed at and react with other molecular beams at the substrate surface to produce atomic layer-by-layer deposition of the ceramic. Epitaxy (in which the crystallinity of the growing thin film matches that of the substrate) can often be…
- molecular-sieve chromatography (chemistry)
gel chromatography, in analytical chemistry, technique for separating chemical substances by exploiting the differences in the rates at which they pass through a bed of a porous, semisolid substance. The method is especially useful for separating enzymes, proteins, peptides, and amino acids from
- molecularity (chemistry)
reaction mechanism: Molecularity: The mechanism of an individual stage of a reaction can be described as unimolecular, bimolecular, and so on, according to the number of molecules necessarily concerned in covalency change in the transition state. As an extension of this classification, the number of molecules involved…
- molecule (chemistry)
molecule, a group of two or more atoms that form the smallest identifiable unit into which a pure substance can be divided and still retain the composition and chemical properties of that substance. The division of a sample of a substance into progressively smaller parts produces no change in
- Molen, Gerald R. (American producer)
Rain Man: Bruner (Gerald R. Molen) and Raymond (Hoffman). Raymond is an autistic savant, and Dr. Bruner spends some time explaining Raymond’s abilities and limitations to Charlie. Charlie takes Raymond out of the facility without permission, and the two brothers and Susanna spend the night in a motel…
- Molenbeek-Saint-Jean (Belgium)
Brussels: People: …notably in the communes of Molenbeek-Saint-Jean (Flemish: Sint-Jans-Molenbeek), Saint-Gilles (Sint-Gillis), Schaerbeek (Schaarbeek), and Saint-Josse-ten-Noode (Sint-Joost-ten-Node). All these immigrant groups brought increased ethnic and religious diversity to the historically Roman Catholic city. Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, for example, boasts an important Turkish community, and Schaerbeek has a relatively large number of mosques and
- Moleques do Sul guinea pig (rodent)
guinea pig: …Brazil and Uruguay; and the Moleques do Sul guinea pig (C. intermedia), which is limited to an island in the Moleques do Sul archipelago off the southern coast of Brazil. Breeding and molecular studies suggest that the domestic guinea pig was derived from one of the wild Brazilian, shiny, or…
- Moles, Abraham (French engineer and philosopher)
computational aesthetics: History: …Bense and, independently, French engineer Abraham Moles combined Birkhoff’s work with American engineer Claude Shannon’s information theory to come up with a scientific means of attempting to understand aesthetics. The ideas of Bense, which he called information aesthetics, and Moles were influential on some of the first computer-generated art, but…
- Moleschott, Jacob (Dutch-Italian physiologist and philosopher)
Jacob Moleschott was a physiologist and philosopher noted for his belief in the material basis of emotion and thought. His most important work, Kreislauf des Lebens (1852; “The Circuit of Life”), added considerable impetus to 19th-century materialism by demanding “scientific answers to scientific
- moleskin (fabric)
fustian: …which have pile surfaces, including moleskin, velveteen, and corduroy.
- Molesworth, Mrs. (British author)
children’s literature: Coming of age (1865–1945): …(Jan of the Windmill); and Mrs. Molesworth; and, furthering this trend, a growing literary population of real, or at least more real, children (by E. Nesbit and Ransome).
- Moley, Raymond (American journalist)
Raymond Moley was an American journalist and public figure, leader of the so-called Brain Trust of advisers to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. After graduating from Baldwin-Wallace College in his hometown, Moley took a job as superintendent of schools at Olmstead Falls, Ohio. He then attended
- Moleyns, Frederick de (British inventor)
incandescent lamp: Electric incandescent lamps: Frederick de Moleyns of England was granted the first patent for an incandescent lamp in 1841; he used powdered charcoal heated between two platinum wires. Commercial development of an incandescent lamp was delayed until a filament could be made that would heat to incandescence without…
- Molfetta (Italy)
Molfetta, town and episcopal see, Puglia (Apulia) regione, southeastern Italy. It lies along the Adriatic Sea, northwest of Bari city. An important port in the Middle Ages and a free city for a time, it was sacked by the French in 1529. Although Molfetta is mainly modern, its outstanding
- Moliant Cadwallon (work by Ferddig)
Celtic literature: The Middle Ages: …in the heroic tradition, including Moliant Cadwallon (“The Eulogy of Cadwallon”), by Afan Ferddig, the elegy on Cynddylan ap Cyndrwyn of Powys in the first half of the 7th century, and Edmyg Dinbych (“The Eulogy of Tenby”), by an unknown South Wales poet. Poetry claiming to foretell the future is…
- Molidae (fish family)
mola, any of six species of oceanic fishes of the family Molidae. Molas have a distinctive bullet-shaped appearance, with a short body that ends abruptly in a thick rudderlike structure called a clavus just behind the tall triangular dorsal and anal fins. The development of the clavus results from
- Molière (French dramatist)
Molière was a French actor and playwright, the greatest of all writers of French comedy. Although the sacred and secular authorities of 17th-century France often combined against him, the genius of Molière finally emerged to win him acclaim. Comedy had a long history before Molière, who employed
- Molière (play by Bulgakov)
Mikhail Bulgakov: …tragedy on the death of Molière, Molière. A revised version was finally staged in 1936 and had a run of seven nights before it was banned because of its thinly disguised attack on Stalin and the Communist Party.
- Molina, Alfred (British actor)
Raiders of the Lost Ark: Plot and characters: …by two guides, Satipo (Alfred Molina) and Barranca (Vic Tablian). Treacherous Barranca attempts to shoot Jones, but Jones’s trusty bullwhip disarms him. Jones and Satipo enter an ancient cavernous temple, narrowly avoiding various deadly booby traps until they reach a small golden idol. Jones retrieves the relic from a…
- Molina, Arturo Armando (president of El Salvador)
José Napoleon Duarte: Arturo Molina the winner. Following a radio broadcast supporting a coup, Duarte was arrested by the army, beaten, and sent into exile in Venezuela for more than seven years.
- Molina, Carlos María Isidro de Borbón, Count de (Spanish prince)
Carlos María Isidro de Borbón, conde de Molina was the first Carlist pretender to the Spanish throne (as Charles V) and the second surviving son of King Charles IV (see Carlism). Don Carlos was imprisoned in Napoleonic France from 1808 to 1814. During the period of liberal rule (1820–23) he was
- Molina, Luis de (Spanish theologian)
Luis de Molina was a Spanish Jesuit who devised the theological system known as Molinism, which endeavoured to confirm that man’s will remains free under the action of divine grace. Molina became a Jesuit at the University of Coimbra, Port. (1553), where he studied philosophy and theology
- Molina, Mario (American chemist)
Mario Molina was a Mexican-born American chemist who was jointly awarded the 1995 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, along with chemists F. Sherwood Rowland and Paul Crutzen, for research in the 1970s concerning the decomposition of the ozonosphere, which shields Earth from dangerous solar radiation. The
- Molina, Mario José (American chemist)
Mario Molina was a Mexican-born American chemist who was jointly awarded the 1995 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, along with chemists F. Sherwood Rowland and Paul Crutzen, for research in the 1970s concerning the decomposition of the ozonosphere, which shields Earth from dangerous solar radiation. The
- Molina, Pedro (Central American political leader)
cacos: …as José Matías Delgado and Pedro Molina, liberals who demanded independence under a federalist anticlerical constitution. They were opposed by the more conservative gazistas, led by José Cecilio del Valle, who insisted upon protection for private property and gradual change but also advocated safeguarding political liberties. Rivalry over political power,…
- Molina, Tirso de (Spanish dramatist)
Tirso de Molina was one of the outstanding dramatists of the Golden Age of Spanish literature. Tirso studied at the University of Alcalá and in 1601 was professed in the Mercedarian Order. As the order’s official historian he wrote Historia general de la orden de la Merced in 1637. He was also a
- Molinas, Jack (American basketball player)
Connie Hawkins: …money and other favours from—Jack Molinas, a former NBA player who had been banned from the league after less than one year for betting on games. In 1961 authorities brought down an extensive college basketball point-shaving ring masterminded by Molinas. His relationship with Hawkins threw the young man’s integrity…
- Moline (Illinois, United States)
Moline, city, Rock Island county, northwestern Illinois, U.S. It lies on the Mississippi River (there bridged to Iowa). With East Moline and Rock Island, Illinois, and Davenport and Bettendorf, Iowa, it forms a complex known as the Quad Cities. Sauk and Fox Indians inhabited the area at the time of
- Molineaux, Tom (American boxer)
boxing: The Queensberry rules: …slaves—Bill Richmond and his protégé Tom Molineaux. Both Richmond and Molineaux fought against the top English pugilists of the day; indeed, Molineaux fought Tom Cribb twice for the championship title, in 1810 and 1811. Soon British champions began touring the United States and fighting American opponents.
- Molines, Priscilla (English colonist)
John Alden and Priscilla Alden: Priscilla Mullins went to America with her parents and younger brother. The other three members of her family died during the terrible first winter of the Plymouth Colony. Probably in 1623 she and John were married. They lived in Plymouth until about 1631, when they…
- Molinet, Jean (French poet and chronicler)
Jean Molinet was a poet and chronicler who was a leading figure among the Burgundian rhetoricians and is best remembered for his version of the Roman de la rose. Molinet studied in Paris and about 1464 entered the service of Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, becoming secretary to Georges
- Molinism (theology)
Luis de Molina: …the theological system known as Molinism, which endeavoured to confirm that man’s will remains free under the action of divine grace.
- Molinos, Miguel de (Spanish priest)
Miguel de Molinos was a Spanish priest condemned for advocating an extreme form of Quietism, a doctrine that came to be considered heretical by the Roman Catholic Church. Ordained in 1652, Molinos in 1663 was sent to Rome. There, in 1675, he published his Spiritual Guide, a small handbook teaching
- Molinsky, Joan Alexandra (American entertainer)
Joan Rivers was an American entertainer who launched her career in show business in the 1960s as a raspy-voiced no-holds-barred nightclub and television comic and who was especially known for skewering both herself and celebrities. After graduating from Barnard College, Rivers joined (1961) the
- Molise (region, Italy)
Molise, regione, southeast-central Italy. It consists of the provinces of Campobasso and Isernia and was created in 1965 from the southern portion of the former region of Abruzzi e Molise. The region’s western sector is part of the mountainous Apennines; it is drained by the Volturno River westward
- Molitor, Paul (American baseball player)
Paul Molitor is a retired professional baseball player whose .306 lifetime batting average and 3,319 career hits made him one of the most consistent offensive players in Major League Baseball (MLB) history. Molitor was all-state in baseball and basketball in high school and all-conference in both
- Molitor, Paul Leo (American baseball player)
Paul Molitor is a retired professional baseball player whose .306 lifetime batting average and 3,319 career hits made him one of the most consistent offensive players in Major League Baseball (MLB) history. Molitor was all-state in baseball and basketball in high school and all-conference in both
- Moll Cutpurse (English criminal)
Moll Cutpurse was the most notorious female member of 17th-century England’s underworld. She was a thief, an entertainer, a receiver (fence) and broker of stolen goods, and a celebrated cross-dresser. Because much of the historical material relating to her life is fragmented, prejudiced,
- Moll Flanders (novel by Defoe)
Moll Flanders, picaresque novel by Daniel Defoe, published in 1722. The novel recounts the adventures of a lusty and strong-willed woman who is compelled, from earliest childhood, to make her own way in 17th-century England. The plot is summed up in the novel’s full title: The Fortunes and
- Moll, Balthasar Ferdinand (Austrian sculptor)
Western sculpture: Central Europe: …18th century, as represented by Balthasar Ferdinand Moll, inclined more toward a realistic Rococo style than to the Classicism of Donner; and, although the strange, neurotic genius Franz Xavier Messerschmidt began in this style, at the end of his career he produced a startling series of grimacing heads when he…
- molle azalea (plant)
azalea: Major species: …have been bred, including the molle azalea (R. molle), the Yodogawa azalea (R. yedoense), and the torch azalea (R. kaempferi).
- Molle Islands (islands, Australia)
Molle Islands, group of four small formations on the Great Barrier Reef, in Whitsunday Passage in the Coral Sea, 3 miles (5 km) off the northeastern coast of Queensland, Australia. In 1815 the patch of water behind the group was named Port Molle for Colonel George Molle. The name was later applied
- Mollejon Dam (dam, Belize)
Belize: Resources and power: …plant and that of nearby Mollejon Dam.
- Mollen Commission
Mollen Commission, commission created by New York City Mayor David Dinkins in 1994 to assess the extent of corruption in the New York City Police Department (NYPD). Informally named for its chairman, Milton Mollen, the city’s former deputy mayor for public safety, the commission uncovered blatant
- Mollendo (Peru)
Mollendo, city, Peru, on the Pacific coast. Founded in 1872, its site was chosen by the American engineer Henry Meiggs, builder of the Arequipa-Mollendo Railroad. Additional rail connections to local mines and to Puno and Lake Titicaca, supplemented by its artificial harbour and the Pan-American
- Moller, Lillian Evelyn (American psychologist and engineer)
Lillian Evelyn Gilbreth was an American psychologist and engineer who, with her husband, Frank Bunker Gilbreth, developed methods to increase the efficiency of industrial employees, most notably time-and-motion study. Moller received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in literature from the University
- Moller, Margarethe Meta (wife of Klopstock)
Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock: In 1754 he married Margarethe (Meta) Moller of Hamburg, who was the “Cidli” of his odes. Grief over her early death affected his creativity. A collection of his Oden (“Odes”) was published in 1771. In 1770 he retired to Hamburg, where the last five cantos of Der Messias were…
- Møller, Poul Martin (Danish author)
Poul Martin Møller was a Danish author whose novel of student life, the first in his country’s literature that dealt with the contemporary scene, marked an important stage in the history of Danish literature. His aphorism, “All poetry that does not come from life is a lie,” sums up his realistic
- Mollet, Guy (premier of France)
Guy Mollet was a Socialist politician who served as premier of France from January 1956 to May 1957. His premiership failed to deal successfully with the pressing issue of the day, the Algerian rebellion. A teacher of English at the Arras lycée, Mollet joined the Socialist Party in 1921. In 1939 he
- Mollien, Gaspard-Théodore (French explorer)
Gaspard-Théodore Mollien was a French explorer and diplomat who was one of the earliest European explorers of the West African interior; his reports revealed an unimagined variety of geography and cultures to Europe. Mollien reached the French colonial station of Saint-Louis, Senegal, in 1817 and
- Mollien, Nicolas-François, Count (French statesman)
Nicolas-François, Count Mollien was a French statesman and one of Napoleon’s chief financial advisers. Mollien worked in the office that controlled the activities of the farmers general (private contractors who collected oppressive taxes from the peasants, often by harsh measures) from 1781, and in
- Mollins, Priscilla (English colonist)
John Alden and Priscilla Alden: Priscilla Mullins went to America with her parents and younger brother. The other three members of her family died during the terrible first winter of the Plymouth Colony. Probably in 1623 she and John were married. They lived in Plymouth until about 1631, when they…
- Mollisol (soil type)
Mollisol, one of the 12 soil orders in the U.S. Soil Taxonomy. Mollisols are characterized by a significant accumulation of humus in the surface horizon, or uppermost layer, which is almost always formed under native grass vegetation. They are highly arable soils used principally for growing grain
- Mollisquama (fish)
pocket shark, (genus Mollisquama), either of two species of enigmatic small deepwater sharks known for the presence of internal pockets located near their pectoral fins. Pocket sharks are known from only two specimens, collected in 1979 and 2010 from different marine environments. The pocket shark
- Mollisquama mississippiensis (fish)
pocket shark: Classification and distribution: …as a separate species, the American pocket shark (M. mississippiensis). Both species were collected from mid-water trawls at depths between 330 and 580 metres (approximately 1,100 and 1,900 feet), with the actual seafloor depth in each habitat being considerably deeper (2,000–3,000 metres [roughly 6,600–9,800 feet]).
- Mollisquama parini (shark)
pocket shark: Classification and distribution: The pocket shark (Mollisquama parini) was described in 1984 from a single specimen of a large female collected near the Nazca Ridge in the southeast Pacific Ocean in 1979. A second specimen, a juvenile male, was collected in 2010 in the northern Gulf of Mexico and first described…
- Mollo, Andrew (British filmmaker)
It Happened Here: …years by Kevin Brownlow and Andrew Mollo, who were the movie’s directors, producers, and writers. Both were teenagers when they began working on the movie. Operating on a shoestring budget—the film reportedly cost approximately $20,000—Brownlow and Mollo used mostly amateur actors and were forced to forgo shooting for extended periods…
- Molloy (novel by Beckett)
Molloy, French prose work by Irish writer Samuel Beckett, published in 1951. It was the first book in a trilogy written in French that included Malone meurt (1951; Malone Dies) and L’Innommable (1953; The Unnamable). Molloy is less a novel than a set of two monologues, the first narrated by Molloy
- mollusc (animal phylum)
mollusk, any soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, usually wholly or partly enclosed in a calcium carbonate shell secreted by a soft mantle covering the body. Along with the insects and vertebrates, it is one of the most diverse groups in the animal kingdom, with nearly 100,000 (possibly
- Mollusca (animal phylum)
mollusk, any soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, usually wholly or partly enclosed in a calcium carbonate shell secreted by a soft mantle covering the body. Along with the insects and vertebrates, it is one of the most diverse groups in the animal kingdom, with nearly 100,000 (possibly
- mollusk (animal phylum)
mollusk, any soft-bodied invertebrate of the phylum Mollusca, usually wholly or partly enclosed in a calcium carbonate shell secreted by a soft mantle covering the body. Along with the insects and vertebrates, it is one of the most diverse groups in the animal kingdom, with nearly 100,000 (possibly
- Mollwitz, Battle of (European history)
Austria: War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–48: …defeat in the Battle of Mollwitz in April 1741. This defeat prompted the formation of an alliance of France, Bavaria, and Spain, joined later by Saxony and eventually by Prussia itself, to dismember the Habsburg monarchy. Faced by this serious threat, Maria Theresa called together her father’s experienced advisers and…
- molly (fish)
molly, any of several species of tropical fish of the genus Poecilia, in the live-bearer family, Poeciliidae (order Cyprinodontiformes). Hardy and attractive, mollies are popular aquarium fish ranging from about 5 to 13 cm (2 to 5 inches) long. Well-known species include the molly (P. sphenops),
- Molly (drug)
Ecstasy: …powdered form of Ecstasy, “Molly” (so called because it was a pure “molecular” state of MDMA), emerged in the early 21st century. However, similarly with Ecstasy in its pill form, Molly is often adulterated with methylone.
- Molly Hatchet (American musical group)
Southern rock: 38 Special, Molly Hatchet, and the Outlaws, amplified and fetishized the boogie-guitar approach of bluesmen Elmore James and John Lee Hooker. The Marshall Tucker Band drew from western swing, Wet Willie borrowed from soul, and the Atlanta Rhythm Section leaned toward country. A few acts, such as…
- Molly Maguires (American labor organization)
Molly Maguires, secret organization of coal miners supposedly responsible for acts of terrorism in the coalfields of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, U.S., in the period from 1862 to 1876. The group named itself after a widow who led a group of Irish antilandlord agitators in the 1840s. When poor
- Molly Maguires, The (film by Ritt [1970])
Martin Ritt: Films of the 1970s: Based in fact, The Molly Maguires (1970) is set in 19th-century Pennsylvania and depicts the attempt of a Pinkerton agent (Richard Harris) to infiltrate the Molly Maguires, a group of coal miners who have responded to the exploitation they are suffering with acts of terrorism. Sean Connery played…
- Molly’s Game (film by Sorkin [2017])
Michael Cera: Later credits and voice work: …celebrity gambler in Aaron Sorkin’s Molly’s Game (2017), a biopic about a woman who runs a high-stakes poker game. In 2022 Cera began appearing on the dramedy series Life & Beth, playing the love interest of star Amy Schumer.
- mollymawk (bird)
albatross, (family Diomedeidae), any of more than a dozen species of large seabirds that collectively make up the family Diomedeidae (order Procellariiformes). Because of their tameness on land, many albatrosses are known by the common names mollymawk (from the Dutch for “foolish gull”) and gooney.
- Mölna-elegi, En (work by Ekelöf)
Gunnar Ekelöf: Central to Ekelöf’s work is En Mölna-elegi (1960; “A Mölna Elegy”), published in several earlier versions from the mid-1940s. Its starting point is within the mind of the poet, sitting at Mölna dock on a summer day in 1940. Memories from his individual past intermingle with those of history in…
- Molnár, Ferenc (Hungarian author)
Ferenc Molnár was a Hungarian playwright and novelist who was known for his plays about the contemporary salon life of Budapest and for his moving short stories. Molnár published his first stories at the age of 19 and achieved his first great success with the play Az ördög (1907; The Devil).
- Molniya (satellites)
satellite communication: Development of satellite communication: …of satellite technology with the Molniya series of satellites, which were launched in a highly elliptical orbit to enable them to reach the far northern regions of the country. The first satellite in this series, Molniya 1, was launched on April 23, 1965. By 1967 six Molniya satellites provided coverage…
- Molo (monument, Venice, Italy)
Venice: The Molo: At the water entrance to the piazzetta is the Molo, a broad stone quay that was once the ceremonial landing spot for great officials and distinguished visitors. This “front door” to Venice is marked by two massive granite columns brought from the Orient in…
- Molo (people)
Aleta Baun: …sacred bond that the indigenous Molo people had with nature, from the elders and women in the village. Sharing that knowledge with others initiated her role as community leader, and she was given the nickname “Mama Aleta.”
- Moloch (ancient deity)
Moloch, a Canaanite deity associated in biblical sources with the practice of child sacrifice. The name derives from combining the consonants of the Hebrew melech (“king”) with the vowels of boshet (“shame”), the latter often being used in the Old Testament as a variant name for the popular god
- moloch (lizard species)
moloch, small (20-centimetre- [8-inch-] long), squat, orange and brown Australian lizard of the Old World family Agamidae. Moloch is entirely covered with thornlike spines, the largest projecting from the snout and over each eye. The shape of its body and many of its habits are similar to those of
- Moloch horridus (lizard species)
moloch, small (20-centimetre- [8-inch-] long), squat, orange and brown Australian lizard of the Old World family Agamidae. Moloch is entirely covered with thornlike spines, the largest projecting from the snout and over each eye. The shape of its body and many of its habits are similar to those of
- Molodaya gvardiya (work by Fadeyev)
Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Fadeyev: 1951; The Young Guard), dealing with youthful guerrilla fighters in German-occupied Ukraine. It was at first highly praised but was later denounced for omitting the role played by party members in the Resistance, and Fadeyev rewrote it. The extent to which Fadeyev was responsible for the…
- Molodechno (Belarus)
Maladzyechna, city, northwestern Belarus, northwest of Minsk. The city achieved eminence after becoming a railway junction at the end of the 19th century, and from 1939 until 1960 it served as a provincial centre (except during World War II, when much of it was destroyed). It is a centre of diverse
- Molodečno (Belarus)
Maladzyechna, city, northwestern Belarus, northwest of Minsk. The city achieved eminence after becoming a railway junction at the end of the 19th century, and from 1939 until 1960 it served as a provincial centre (except during World War II, when much of it was destroyed). It is a centre of diverse
- Molodowsky, Kadia (American poet)
Yiddish literature: Yiddish women writers: Kadia Molodowsky moved from Belorussia to Odessa and then Kiev, where she published her first poetry and was influenced by David Bergelson and his circle. From 1922 to 1935 she lived in Warsaw and published her important collections of poems Kheshvndike nekht (1927; “Nights of…
- Molody, Konon Trofimovich (Soviet spy)
Gordon Arnold Lonsdale was a spy for the U.S.S.R. who in March 1961 was sentenced to 25 years in prison by a British court. Lonsdale’s family moved to Poland in 1932, where he served, under various aliases, in the underground during World War II. He served in the Soviet military administration in
- Moloka‘i (island, Hawaii, United States)
Molokai, volcanic island, Maui county, Hawaii, U.S. It lies east of Oahu across the Kaiwi Channel and northwest of Maui across the Pailolo Channel. Molokai occupies 261 square miles (676 square km) and is about 38 miles (61 km) long and 10 miles (16 km) wide at its widest point. Its western and
- Molokai (island, Hawaii, United States)
Molokai, volcanic island, Maui county, Hawaii, U.S. It lies east of Oahu across the Kaiwi Channel and northwest of Maui across the Pailolo Channel. Molokai occupies 261 square miles (676 square km) and is about 38 miles (61 km) long and 10 miles (16 km) wide at its widest point. Its western and
- molokhia (food)
tossa jute: …a soup-based dish known as molokhia, or mulukhiyyah. Jute, obtained from the bast fibres, is used to make low-cost fabrics such as burlap and twine, though the fibres of the tossa jute are considered to be somewhat inferior to those of the white jute (Corchorus capsularis). The plant is often…
- Molon (governor of Media)
Antiochus III the Great: …governor of Asia Minor, and Molon and his brother Alexander as governors of the eastern provinces, Media and Persis. In the following year, when Molon rebelled and assumed the title of king, Antiochus abandoned a campaign against Egypt for the conquest of southern Syria, on the advice of Hermias, and…
- Molon of Rhodes (orator)
Cicero: Oratory: He was trained by Molon of Rhodes, whose own tendencies were eclectic, and he believed that an orator should command and blend a variety of styles. He made a close study of the rhythms that were likely to appeal to an audience, especially in the closing cadences of a…
- Molonglo River (river, Australia)
Australian Capital Territory: Drainage and soils: Another major tributary is the Molonglo River, which runs through the centre of the city, where it is dammed to form Lake Burley Griffin, one of the major landscape design features in the centre of Canberra. Smaller tributaries have been dammed to form ornamental lakes that serve also as basins…
- Molopo River (river, Africa)
Molopo River, river in southern Africa. It rises east of Mafikeng (formerly Mafeking) in North-West province, South Africa, and flows generally west for about 600 miles (1,000 km) to join the Orange River near the southeastern border of Namibia. Intermittent and usually dry, the Molopo also marks
- Molossidae (mammal)
free-tailed bat, (family Molossidae), any of 100 species of bats, so called for the way in which part of the tail extends somewhat beyond the membrane connecting the hind legs. Some free-tailed bats are also known as mastiff bats because their faces bear a superficial resemblance to those dogs.