- Maryland (tobacco)
tobacco: Cultivation: Burley and Maryland strains, used for the production of light air-cured tobaccos, may be planted 81 to 91 cm (32 to 36 inches) apart or closer. Broadleaf and seed-leaf strains, including the Havana seed, Cuban, and Sumatra varieties, are used for the production of cigars; they are…
- Maryland Agricultural College (university, College Park, Maryland, United States)
College Park: …1916 and merged with the University of Maryland (1807) in 1920, when the university’s main campus was established at College Park. The administrative offices of the Maryland Agricultural Experimental Station (1887) are in College Park. Surrounding institutions include the National Agricultural Research Center and Fort George G. Meade (northeast) and…
- Maryland at Baltimore, University of (university, Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
University of Maryland: The University of Maryland, Baltimore, was founded in 1807 as the College of Medicine of Maryland, the fifth medical school in the United States. Its Health Sciences Library is outstanding. The University of Maryland, College Park, was created in 1856 by Charles Benedict Calvert as Maryland…
- Maryland College Park, University of (university, College Park, Maryland, United States)
College Park: …1916 and merged with the University of Maryland (1807) in 1920, when the university’s main campus was established at College Park. The administrative offices of the Maryland Agricultural Experimental Station (1887) are in College Park. Surrounding institutions include the National Agricultural Research Center and Fort George G. Meade (northeast) and…
- Maryland figwort (plant)
figwort: Maryland figwort (S. marilandica), up to 3 metres (10 feet) tall, has greenish purple flowers; it is also called carpenter’s square because of its four-sided grooved stems. At least one species, S. auriculata, is cultivated as an ornamental.
- Maryland Oil Company (American company)
Conoco: …that year it merged with Marland Oil Company (founded 1917), with wells and marketing operations from Oklahoma to Maryland. After World War II, Conoco acquired fields or refineries in Louisiana, Canada, Libya, Dubai, the North Sea, and Indonesia. In 1966 it acquired Consolidation Coal Company, the second largest coal company…
- Maryland Zoo (zoo, Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Maryland Zoo, zoo in Baltimore, Md., that is the third oldest zoo in the United States (after the zoos in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Philadelphia, Pa., respectively). The site contains more than 1,500 mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians, encompassing nearly 200 species on more than 160 acres (65
- Maryland Zoo in Baltimore (zoo, Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Maryland Zoo, zoo in Baltimore, Md., that is the third oldest zoo in the United States (after the zoos in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Philadelphia, Pa., respectively). The site contains more than 1,500 mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians, encompassing nearly 200 species on more than 160 acres (65
- Maryland, flag of (United States state flag)
U.S. state flag consisting of a quartered design of alternating red-white and black-yellow panels.Alone of the 13 original states, Maryland has a state flag based on a flag flown under British rule. According to the laws of heraldry, the personal banner of the Lords Baltimore, who were the
- Maryland, University of (university system, Maryland, United States)
University of Maryland, state university system consisting of 11 coeducational campuses in eight cities. In 1970 the University of Maryland comprised five campuses. The University of Maryland System was created in 1988 when a merger formed the current 11-campus system. Renamed the University System
- Marylebone (neighborhood, London, United Kingdom)
Saint Marylebone, neighbourhood of the City of Westminster, London. Formerly (until 1965) part of the metropolitan borough of St. Marylebone, it is located to the south and west of Regent’s Park and north of Mayfair. From early times the area consisted of two manors, Lileston (Lisson) and Tyburn.
- Marylebone Cricket Club (British sports organization)
Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), former governing body of cricket, founded in London in 1787. The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) laid down the first set of laws for the game of cricket in 1788 and continued to act as the global governing body for the game until the late 20th century, a role now
- Marymount School (school, Tarrytown, New York, United States)
Mother Marie Joseph Butler: …end, in 1907, she opened Marymount School in Tarrytown, New York. By 1919 the school had developed into a college for Roman Catholic women, and under her guidance it became a leader in Catholic higher education for the modern world. Other Marymount schools were established to spread the work of…
- Marymount schools (schools, Europe and United States)
Mother Marie Joseph Butler: …Catholic nun who founded the Marymount schools in Europe and the United States.
- Maryport (England, United Kingdom)
Allerdale: …of the district, Workington and Maryport, on the coast to the north, have long been associated with the coalfield of Cumbria. Workington, the only deepwater port between Liverpool and Glasgow, has blast furnaces that reduce imported iron ore and metallurgical industries that utilize locally mined anhydrite. Maryport exports footwear, chemicals,…
- Marysville (Oregon, United States)
Corvallis, city, seat (1851) of Benton county, western Oregon, U.S. It lies at the head of navigation of the Willamette River at its confluence with the Mary’s River, 224 feet (68 metres) above sea level and 85 miles (137 km) south of Portland. Laid out in 1851 as Marysville, it was renamed
- Marysville (California, United States)
Marysville, city, seat (1850) of Yuba county, north-central California, U.S. It is situated in the Central Valley, at the junction of the Feather and Yuba rivers, 50 miles (80 km) north of Sacramento. It was established as a trading post in 1842 by Theodore Cordua on land leased from Captain John
- Marytsy (people)
Mari, European people, numbering about 670,000 in the late 20th century, who speak a language of the Finno-Ugric family and live mainly in Mari El, Russia, in the middle Volga River valley. There are also some Mari in adjacent regions and nearly 100,000 in Bashkortostan (Bashkiriya). Mari is their
- Maryūṭ (district, Egypt)
Al-ʿĀmiriyyah, industrial district of Al-Iskandariyyah (Alexandria) muḥāfaẓah (governorate), northern Egypt. The centre of the 913-square-mile (2,365-square-km) district, which adjoins Lake Maryūṭ (Mareotis) on the southwest, is Al-ʿĀmiriyyah town. This town was originally a small gypsum-mining
- Maryūṭ, Buḥayrat (lake, Africa)
Alexandria: City site: …separates the salt lake of Maryūṭ, or Mareotis—now partly drained and cultivated—from the Egyptian mainland. An hourglass-shaped promontory formed by the silting up of a mole (the Heptastadion), which was built soon after Alexandria’s founding, links the island of Pharos with the city centre on the mainland. Its two steeply…
- Maryville (Missouri, United States)
Maryville, city, seat (1845) of Nodaway county, northwestern Missouri, U.S. It lies about 40 miles (65 km) north of St. Joseph. Founded in 1845, it was named for Mary Graham, an early settler. The community’s economy depends on corn (maize), soybeans, and livestock raised in the surrounding area
- Maryville (Tennessee, United States)
Maryville, city, seat (1795) of Blount county, eastern Tennessee, U.S., about 15 miles (25 km) south of Knoxville and a gateway to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The settlement was founded in 1790 around Fort Craig (built in 1785). It was named for the wife of William Blount, governor of the
- Maryville University of Saint Louis (university, St. Louis, Missouri, United States)
St. Louis: The contemporary city: …(1827), Harris-Stowe State College (1857), Maryville University of St. Louis (1872), Webster University (1915), Fontbonne University (1923), and St. Louis Community College (1962).
- Märzbier (alcoholic beverage)
beer: Types of beer: Märzbier (“March beer”) is a lighter brew produced in the spring. While all German lagers are made with malted barley, a special brew called weiss beer (Weissbier; “white beer”) is made from malted wheat. In other countries such as Denmark, the Netherlands, and the United…
- marzipan (confection)
marzipan, a malleable confection of crushed almonds or almond paste, sugar, and whites of eggs. Soft marzipan is used as a filling in a variety of pastries and candies, while marzipan of firmer consistency is traditionally modeled into fanciful shapes, such as miniature fruits, vegetables, and sea
- Marzo 1821 (work by Manzoni)
Alessandro Manzoni: …Piedmontese revolution of 1821, “Marzo 1821”; and two historical tragedies influenced by Shakespeare: Il conte di Carmagnola (1820), a romantic work depicting a 15th-century conflict between Venice and Milan; and Adelchi (performed 1822), a richly poetic drama about Charlemagne’s overthrow of the
- Marzobān I (Mosāferīd ruler)
Mosāferīd Dynasty: …divided between his two sons, Marzobān I (ruled 941–957) and Vahsūdān (ruled 941–957). Vahsūdān ruled over the fortresses of Ṭārom and Samīrān. Marzobān I expanded northward and westward and captured Azerbaijan and east Transcaucasia; these territories, however, were lost by the Mosāferīds by 984.
- Marzouki, Moncef (president of Tunisia)
Tunisia: Transition: The assembly also elected Moncef Marzouki, a human rights activist and former opponent of the Ben Ali regime, as president of Tunisia. Marzouki then appointed Hamadi Jebali, a member of Ennahda, to the post of prime minister.
- marzpān (Persian governor)
Armenia: The Arsacids: …his replacement by a Persian marzpān (governor) at the request of the nakharars (428). Although the Armenian nobles had thus destroyed their country’s sovereignty, a sense of national unity was furthered by the development of an Armenian alphabet and a national Christian literature; culturally, if not politically, the 5th century…
- Marzūq (oasis, Libya)
Murzuk, oasis, southwestern Libya. It lies on the northern edge of the Murzuk Sand Sea (Idhān Murzuk). An ancient assembly place for caravans to Lake Chad and the Niger River, it was the traditional capital of the Fezzan province (16th–19th century) and a centre of the Arab slave and arms trade.
- MAS (political party, Venezuela)
Movement Toward Socialism (MAS), leftist Venezuelan political party. (Read George Bernard Shaw’s 1926 Britannica essay on socialism.) The MAS was formed in 1971 following a split the previous year in the Venezuelan Communist Party over the dismissal of its leader, Teodoro Petkoff, for remarks
- Más (album by Sanz)
Alejandro Sanz: …next album was the record-breaking Más (1997; “More”), which showcased a maturity in lyrical content and sensibility that appealed to a broader audience. Básico (“Basic”), which had previously been released in a limited edition and featured selected songs from his past albums, followed a year later. The eagerly anticipated El…
- mas (French farmstead)
Côte d’Azur: The mas is the traditional farmstead of the plains and houses living quarters and sheds under one roof; windows are narrow to admit little summer heat. Farmsteads in the plains tend to be dispersed. Retirees have immigrated to the coast of Alpes-Maritimes, with the result that…
- MAS (political party, Bolivia)
Luis Arce: Arce was the candidate of Movement Toward Socialism (Movimiento al Socialismo; MAS), the leftist party that Morales had helped to found. He had been the architect of the economic transformation during Morales’s presidency, which renationalized Bolivia’s thriving petroleum industry, redistributed agricultural land, increased taxes on the wealthy, and lifted countless…
- Más Afuera, Isla (island, South Pacific Ocean)
Juan Fernández Islands: …Isla Alejandro Selkirk (also called Isla Más Afuera), 100 miles to the west; and an islet, Isla Santa Clara, southwest of Isla Robinson Crusoe.
- Más allá del invierno (novel by Allende)
Isabel Allende: …Más allá del invierno (2017; In the Midst of Winter), about the friendships that form after a car accident in Brooklyn, New York, during a blizzard. In Largo pétalo de mar (2019; A Long Petal of the Sea), a man and a woman become exiles following the Spanish Civil War…
- Más futuro que pasado (album by Juanes)
Juanes: Más futuro que pasado (2019; “More Future Than Past”) mixed traditional forms with rock and hip-hop. Juanes won the 2019 Latin Grammy for person of the year. His 10th studio album, Origen (2021), was a tribute to his musical roots; a companion documentary was also…
- Mas, Artur (Catalan politician)
Catalonia: The Catalonian independence movement in the 21st century: Convergence and Union leader Artur Mas called for the long-promised, albeit nonbinding, independence referendum to be held on November 9, 2014. The move was immediately challenged by Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, and the independence campaign was suspended while the Constitutional Court considered the legality of the vote. Ultimately,…
- Mas, Le (opera by Canteloube)
Joseph Canteloube: …works, which include the operas Le Mas and Vercingétorix (performed at the Paris Opéra in 1929 and 1933, respectively), have been neglected. He also edited the Anthologie des chants populaires français (1939–44).
- masa (dough)
tamale: In the preparation of tamales, masa harina, fine-ground corn treated with slaked lime (calcium hydroxide), is made into a thick paste. For each tamale, the masa is spread on a corn husk, a small amount of filling is added, and the whole is wrapped into a package and tied with…
- Masaccio (Italian painter)
Masaccio was an important Florentine painter of the early Renaissance whose frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel of the Church of Santa Maria del Carmine in Florence (c. 1427) remained influential throughout the Renaissance. In the span of only six years, Masaccio radically transformed Florentine
- Masada (ancient fortress, Israel)
Masada, ancient mountaintop fortress in southeastern Israel, site of the Jews’ last stand against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70 ce. It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2001. Masada occupies the entire top of an isolated mesa near the southwest coast of the Dead Sea. The
- Masada, Siege of ([73 ce])
Siege of Masada, (73 ce). After the fall of Jerusalem Emperor Titus returned to Rome and received a triumphant welcome. At the same time, the Romans began to restore order in Judaea by putting down any final resistance and regaining control of the last few strongholds held by Zealots. The last and
- Masaddiq, Mohammad (premier of Iran)
Mohammad Mosaddegh was an Iranian political leader who nationalized the huge British oil holdings in Iran and, as premier in 1951–53, almost succeeded in deposing the shah. The son of an Iranian public official, Mosaddegh grew up as a member of Iran’s ruling elite. He received a Doctor of Law
- Masahito (emperor of Japan)
Go-Shirakawa was the 77th emperor of Japan, during whose reign political power was transferred from the imperial court to the provincial warrior class. He ascended the throne in 1155, taking the reign name Go-Shirakawa, after the death of his brother, the emperor Konoe. When his father, the former
- Masai (people)
Maasai, nomadic pastoralists of East Africa. Maasai is essentially a linguistic term, referring to speakers of this Eastern Sudanic language (usually called Maa) of the Nilo-Saharan language family. These include the pastoral Maasai who range along the Great Rift Valley of Kenya and Tanzania, the
- Masai Amboseli Game Reserve (national park, Kenya)
Amboseli National Park, national park, southern Kenya, eastern Africa. Amboseli was originally established as a game reserve in 1948 and covered 1,259 square miles (3,261 square km) northwest of Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. Within it were distinguished seven habitats: open plains, acacia woodland,
- Masai giraffe (mammal)
giraffe: giraffa), the Masai giraffe (G. tippelskirchi), and the reticulated giraffe (G. reticulata).
- Masai language
Nilo-Saharan languages: Gender: …this so-called “Hamitic component” in Masai and other Nilotic languages was to become a major taxonomic issue at the beginning of the 20th century. The concept of language mixture (as an alternative to a uniform genetic classification into distinct language families) was defended most vigorously by the Africanist Carl Meinhof,…
- Masai Mara National Reserve (reserve, Kenya)
Kenya: Cultural institutions: …is best observed at the Maasai Mara National Reserve, which also includes a Maasai village. Amboseli National Park, a former home of the Maasai, lies at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro. Marsabit National Park and Reserve in the north is noted for its populations of large mammals such as lions,…
- Masaka (Uganda)
Masaka, town located in southern Uganda, situated about 80 miles (130 km) southwest of Kampala at an elevation of 4,300 feet (1,310 metres). Roads connect it with Mbirizi, Lyantonde, and Mbarara. It is a market town and an important commercial centre for the surrounding rich coffee-growing area.
- Masākin (town, Tunisia)
Masākin, town located in eastern Tunisia, on Al-Sāḥil (Sahel), the coastal strip, 7 miles (11 km) from the Mediterranean Sea. A road and rail junction, the town is also a centre for olive growing and processing, flour milling, and weaving. Its buildings, typical of the area, are constructed mostly
- Masako (empress of Japan)
Masako is a Japanese diplomat who became the crown princess of Japan when she married Crown Prince Naruhito in 1993. She became empress of Japan in May 2019. Owada Masako was the daughter of Owada Hisashi, a high-ranking official of the Japanese government’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. As a child
- masala (spice mixture)
curry: …the spice mixtures are called masala and are prepared in the home. Some masala are blended with a liquid, such as water or vinegar, to make a curry paste. The primarily vegetarian curries of southern India, seasoned with sambar podi and other traditional blends, are the most pungent, often containing…
- Masālik al-abṣār fī mamālik al-amṣār (work by ʿUmarī)
al-ʿUmarī: …principles of Mamlūk administration, and Masālik al-abṣār fī mamālik al-amṣār, an encyclopaedic compendium also relating to administrative practices.
- Masālik al-mamālik wa suwar al-akālīm (translation by Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū)
Ḥāfiẓ-i Abrū: …geographic work from Arabic, the Masālik al-mamālik wa suwar al-akālīm (“The Roads of the Kingdoms and the Forms of the Climes”), in which he included historical sections on various provinces of Iran.
- Masamune (Japanese swordsmith)
Masamune was a Japanese swordsmith. He was appointed chief swordsmith by the emperor Fushimi in 1287. He founded the Sōshū school of swordmaking, in which blades were made entirely of steel and hardened throughout. It marked an important advance in metallurgical technique that was significantly
- Masamune Hakuchō (Japanese author)
Masamune Hakuchō was a writer and critic who was one of the great masters of Japanese naturalist literature. Unlike others of that school, he seems to have had a basically unsentimental and skeptical view of human society that gave a notably disinterested tone to his writing. Early influenced by
- Masamune Tadao (Japanese author)
Masamune Hakuchō was a writer and critic who was one of the great masters of Japanese naturalist literature. Unlike others of that school, he seems to have had a basically unsentimental and skeptical view of human society that gave a notably disinterested tone to his writing. Early influenced by
- Masan (district, Changwon, South Korea)
Masan, former city, South Gyeongsang do (province), southeastern South Korea, now a district of the city of Changwon. It is located on Masan Bay, across from Jinhae Bay, 22 miles (35 km) west of Busan, with which it is connected by rail and road. After 1899 Masan developed as an open port, but it
- masand (Sikh religious official)
Sikhism: Guru Ram Das: …also replaced the manjis with masands (vicars), who were charged with the care of defined sangats (congregations) and who at least once a year presented the Guru with reports on and gifts from the Sikh community. Particularly skilled in hymn singing, Guru Ram Das stressed the importance of this practice,…
- Masaniello (opera by Auber)
Daniel-François-Esprit Auber: …spectacular Muette de Portici (1828; Mute Girl of Portici, also known as Masaniello) has been regarded as an archetype of French grand opera. It greatly impressed Richard Wagner, who modeled his Rienzi (1840) after it. In addition to anticipating the works of Giacomo Meyerbeer, Auber’s Le Philtre (1831) provided the…
- Masaniello (Italian agitator)
Masaniello was a leader of a popular insurrection in Naples against Spanish rule and oppression by the nobles. Masaniello was a young fisherman in 1647 when he was chosen to lead a protest against a new tax on fruit, levied by the nobility to raise money to pay the tribute demanded by Spain. The
- Masanori Murakami (Japanese baseball player)
Nomo Hideo: …the United States, however, was Masanori Murakami, who played in the minor leagues in Japan before pitching for the San Francisco Giants in 1964 and ’65.)
- Masaoka Shiki (Japanese author)
Masaoka Shiki was a poet, essayist, and critic who revived the haiku and tanka, traditional Japanese poetic forms. Masaoka was born into a samurai (warrior) family. He went to Tokyo to study in 1883 and began to write poetry in 1885. After studying at Tokyo Imperial University from 1890 to 1892, he
- Masaoka Tsunenori (Japanese author)
Masaoka Shiki was a poet, essayist, and critic who revived the haiku and tanka, traditional Japanese poetic forms. Masaoka was born into a samurai (warrior) family. He went to Tokyo to study in 1883 and began to write poetry in 1885. After studying at Tokyo Imperial University from 1890 to 1892, he
- Masarwa (people)
San, an indigenous people of southern Africa, related to the Khoekhoe (Khoikhoi). They live chiefly in Botswana, Namibia, and southeastern Angola. Bushmen is an Anglicization of boesman, the Dutch and Afrikaner name for them; saan (plural) or saa (singular) is the Nama word for “bush dweller(s),”
- Masaryk, Jan (Czech statesman)
Jan Masaryk was a statesman and diplomat who served as foreign minister in both the Czechoslovak émigré government in London during World War II and the postwar coalition government of Czechoslovakia. The son of the statesman Tomáš Masaryk, Jan served in a Hungarian regiment during World War I,
- Masaryk, Jan Garrigue (Czech statesman)
Jan Masaryk was a statesman and diplomat who served as foreign minister in both the Czechoslovak émigré government in London during World War II and the postwar coalition government of Czechoslovakia. The son of the statesman Tomáš Masaryk, Jan served in a Hungarian regiment during World War I,
- Masaryk, Tomáš (president of Czechoslovakia)
Tomáš Masaryk was the chief founder and first president (1918–35) of Czechoslovakia. Masaryk’s father was a Slovak coachman; his mother, a maid, came from a Germanized Moravian family. Though he was trained to be a teacher, he briefly became a locksmith’s apprentice but then entered the German
- Masaryk, Tomáš Garrigue (president of Czechoslovakia)
Tomáš Masaryk was the chief founder and first president (1918–35) of Czechoslovakia. Masaryk’s father was a Slovak coachman; his mother, a maid, came from a Germanized Moravian family. Though he was trained to be a teacher, he briefly became a locksmith’s apprentice but then entered the German
- Masaya (Nicaragua)
Masaya, city, southwestern Nicaragua, at the eastern foot of Masaya Volcano, just east of the small Lake Masaya in the rift valley between Lakes Nicaragua and Managua. Masaya serves as a commercial and manufacturing centre for the rich agricultural hinterland. Within the city, the indigenous
- Masaya, Lake (lake, Nicaragua)
Nicaragua: Drainage: Lake Masaya is prized for its swimming and fishing facilities; the sulfurous waters of Lake Nejapa have medicinal properties ascribed to them; and Lake Tiscapa is located in the capital city.
- Masbate (Philippines)
Masbate: Masbate town, located on the northeastern coast of the island, is the commercial centre, with trade in copra, corn, fish, and cattle; the town has an airport. Cataingan, Placer, Milagros, and Dimasalang are other important towns. Area 1,262 square miles (3,269 square km). Pop. (2000)…
- Masbate (island, Philippines)
Masbate, island and town, central Philippines. Masbate island is part of the Visayan island group, bordered by the Sibuyan (west), Visayan (south), and Samar (east) seas. The island lies 30 miles (48 km) southwest of the southern tip of Luzon and is V-shaped, with the open end of the V forming the
- Mascagni, Pietro (Italian composer)
Pietro Mascagni was an Italian operatic composer, one of the principal exponents of verismo, a style of opera writing marked by melodramatic, often violent plots with characters drawn from everyday life. Mascagni studied at the conservatory at Milan, but, unable to submit to the discipline of his
- Mascali (Italy)
Mount Etna: Geology: …and buried the village of Mascali. The eruption of 1971 threatened several villages with its lava flow and destroyed some orchards and vineyards. Activity was almost continuous in the decade following 1971, and in 1983 an eruption that lasted four months prompted authorities to explode dynamite in an attempt to…
- mascara (cosmetic)
cosmetic: Eye makeup: …complete maquillage (full makeup), includes mascara to emphasize the eyelashes; eye shadow for the eyelids, available in many shades; and eyebrow pencils and eyeliner to pick out the edges of the lids. Because eye cosmetics are used adjacent to a very sensitive area, innocuity of ingredients is essential.
- Mascara (Algeria)
Mascara, town, northwestern Algeria, situated about 40 miles (60 km) south of the Mediterranean Sea coast. Spread across two hills separated by the Wadi Toudman, it lies on the southern slope of the Beni Chougran Range of the Atlas Mountains. Mascara (“Mother of Soldiers”) was founded as a Turkish
- Mascareignes, Îles (islands, Indian Ocean)
Mascarene Islands, collectively, the islands of Réunion, Mauritius, and Rodrigues, which are situated in a line along a submarine ridge, the Seychelles-Mauritius Plateau, 400 to 500 miles (640 to 800 km) northeast from southern Madagascar in the western Indian Ocean. All are volcanic in origin. The
- Mascarene Current (ocean current)
equatorial current: …as the Mozambique (west) and Mascarene currents, which become the Agulhas Current. At the Cape of Good Hope this feeds east into the South Indian Current, which supplies the West Australian Current. The latter is a source of the Indian South Equatorial Current.
- Mascarene grass (plant)
zoysiagrass: matrella), and Mascarene grass (Z. tenuifolia) were introduced into North America as turf and lawn grasses and tolerate a variety of growing conditions. The leaves are fine-bladed in both the Manila and Mascarene grasses.
- Mascarene Islands (islands, Indian Ocean)
Mascarene Islands, collectively, the islands of Réunion, Mauritius, and Rodrigues, which are situated in a line along a submarine ridge, the Seychelles-Mauritius Plateau, 400 to 500 miles (640 to 800 km) northeast from southern Madagascar in the western Indian Ocean. All are volcanic in origin. The
- Mascarene Plateau (submarine plateau, Indian Ocean)
Seychelles-Mauritius Plateau, submarine plateau, made up of a very shallow, extensive ridge in the Indian Ocean that forms a crescent through the Seychelles and Amirante islands. The ridge extends from latitude 4° to 21° S and from longitude 54° to 63° E. It is believed to be a small continental
- Mascarene raspy cricket (insect)
raspy cricket: The Mascarene raspy cricket carries pollinia of A. cadetii on its head, transferring the pollen grains to neighbouring flowers as it feeds.
- Mascaret (bore, Seine River, France)
tidal bore: In France the mascaret is a large bore on the Seine River, which forms on spring tides and reaches as far upriver as Rouen. Other rivers containing well-known bores include the Severn, in England, and the Petitcodiac River, which empties into the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick,…
- Mascaret ou le livre de la mer et de la mort (work by Maunick)
Édouard Maunick: Mascaret ou le livre de la mer et de la mort (1966; “Mascaret or The Book of the Sea and of Death”) reiterated his sense of isolation. Outraged by blacks killing blacks in Nigeria, Maunick published Fusillez-moi (1970; “Shoot Me”), a cry of anguish at…
- mascarpone (food)
mascarpone, an Italian cream cheese. Mascarpone is one of Italy’s most distinguished cheeses. Some believe its name originates from the Spanish words for “better than good,” though it more likely derives from the Lombard word for ricotta, mascherpo; the cheese’s name is locally spelled mascherpone.
- Mascates, War of the (Brazilian history)
Recife: …what is now called the War of the Mascates (i.e., peddlers) because the small tradesmen of Recife tried to organize a municipality of their own. In 1827 Recife became the official capital of the province of Pernambuco.
- Mascezel (Roman general)
Flavius Stilicho: …year he sent Gildo’s brother, Mascezel, to Africa with an army, and he easily overthrew Gildo and put him to death; but Mascezel died soon afterward, and Stilicho was suspected of having had him murdered so that he might not become a rival. In 398 Stilicho’s daughter Maria was married…
- maschere, Le (work by Mascagni)
Pietro Mascagni: Le maschere (1901), reviving the commedia dell’arte, is musically superior, though it had little success. Mascagni succeeded Arturo Toscanini as musical director of La Scala, Milan, in 1929. Among Mascagni’s other operas are L’amico Fritz (1891), Iris (1898), and Nerone (1935), the last glorifying Benito…
- Maschinen Pistole 1918 Bergmann (firearm)
submachine gun: …true submachine gun, as the MP18, or the Bergmann Muskete. This weapon was first issued in 1918, the last year of World War I. In Britain submachine guns came to be called machine carbines; in Germany, machine pistols; in the United States, submachine guns. The Thompson submachine gun (q.v.), or…
- Maschinengewehr 1934 (machine gun)
small arm: Light machine guns: …guns was introduced by the Maschinengewehr 1934 and 1942. Recoil-operated and fed 7.92-mm rifle ammunition on belts, these were equally effective when fired from bipods or when mounted on tripods for sustained fire. Firing at an extremely high rate (as high as 1,000 rounds per minute), they dealt with the…
- Maschinengewehr 1942 (machine gun)
MG42, German general-purpose machine gun, used as a standard weapon by many armies around the world. The MG42 was designed in Germany in 1938, and it was placed in action on all fronts by mid-1942. Its original calibre was 7.92 mm, but when West Germany entered the North Atlantic Treaty
- Maschinenpistole 40 (weapon)
small arm: The submachine gun: …way with the MP38 and MP40. Known to the Allies as “burp guns,” these weapons operated at 450 to 550 rounds per minute, the optimal rate for controlled fire. Also, they were fed by a box magazine, which did not jam as often as a drum, and had a wire…
- mascon (astrophysics)
mascon, a region of excess gravitational attraction on the surface of the Moon. The word is a contraction of mass concentration. Mascons were first identified by the observation of small anomalies in the orbits of Lunar Orbiter spacecraft launched in 1966–67. NASA scientists Paul Muller and William
- mascot (symbol)
Olympic Games: Mascots: The organizers of the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France, devised as an emblem of their Games a cartoonlike figure of a skiing man and called him Schuss. The 1972 Games in Munich, West Germany, adopted the idea and produced the first “official mascot,”…
- MASCOT (asteroid rover)
asteroid: Spacecraft exploration: …a small lander, MASCOT (Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout), which had been developed by the German and French space programs. Hayabusa2 arrived at Ryugu on June 27, 2018. Rovers 1A and 1B landed on Ryugu on September 22 and were the first rovers to land on an asteroid’s surface. MASCOT…
- Mascots, the (American musical group)
the O’Jays, American vocal group that rose to the forefront of the Philadelphia soul movement of the 1970s. The O’Jays’ origins date to the late 1950s, when childhood friends Eddie Levert (b. June 16, 1942, Canton, Ohio, U.S.) and Walter Williams (b. August 25, 1942, Canton) began performing gospel
- Masculin-Féminin (film by Godard [1966])
Brigitte Bardot: …Brigitte (1965), and Masculin-Féminin (1966; Masculine Feminine). With her career waning, Bardot appeared in her final films in 1973 and subsequently retired.