- masculine caesura (prosody)
caesura: …in modern prosody are the masculine caesura, a caesura that follows a stressed or long syllable, and the feminine caesura, which follows an unstressed or short syllable. The feminine caesura is further divided into the epic caesura and the lyric caesura. An epic caesura is a feminine caesura that follows…
- Masculine Feminine (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.
- masculine gender (grammar)
gender: …are classified into two genders, masculine and feminine. Russian and German nouns are grouped into three genders, the third being neuter. While nouns referring to masculine or feminine beings almost always take the logical gender in these languages, for most other nouns the gender is arbitrary.
- masculine rhyme (linguistics)
masculine rhyme, in verse, a monosyllabic rhyme or a rhyme that occurs only in stressed final syllables (such as claims, flames or rare, despair). Compare feminine rhyme. Emily Dickinson used the masculine rhyme to great effect in the last stanza of “After great pain, a formal feeling
- masculinity
gender role: …characteristics based on concepts of masculinity and femininity. A gender role should not be confused with gender identity, which refers to an individual’s internal sense of being masculine, feminine, on a spectrum between the two, a gender unrelated to that binary, or no gender at all.
- masculinization (medical condition)
anabolic steroid: It also leads to virilization—the development of masculine traits, including increased libido and deepening of the voice.
- Masdevallia (plant genus)
Masdevallia, genus of more than 500 species of tropical American orchids (family Orchidaceae). Some species are cultivated for their attractive flowers, but the plants require cool humid conditions and can be challenging to grow. Most species are epiphytes, though some grow in soil or attached to
- Masefield, John (British poet)
John Masefield was a poet, best known for his poems of the sea, Salt-Water Ballads (1902, including “Sea Fever” and “Cargoes”), and for his long narrative poems, such as The Everlasting Mercy (1911), which shocked literary orthodoxy with its phrases of a colloquial coarseness hitherto unknown in
- Masek Beds (archaeological site, Tanzania)
Olduvai Gorge: …to 800,000 years old), the Masek Beds (400,000 to 600,000 years old), the Ndutu Beds (32,000 to 400,000 years old), and the Naisiusiu Beds (15,000 to 22,000 years old).
- Masekela, Hugh (South African musician)
Hugh Masekela was a South African trumpeter who was one of his country’s most popular instrumentalists. An outspoken opponent of apartheid, he lived in the United States, Europe, and Africa while bringing his own country’s unique rhythms and harmonies to international stages. Masekela was the son
- masenqo (musical instrument)
African music: Fiddles: …Nigeria and the spike fiddles masenqo of Ethiopia and Eritrea and endingidi of Uganda—the last being a 20th-century invention.
- maser (physics)
maser, device that produces and amplifies electromagnetic radiation in the microwave range of the spectrum. The first maser was built by the American physicist Charles H. Townes. Its name is an acronym for “microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation.” The wavelength produced by a
- Maserati (Italian company)
Maserati, Italian automobile manufacturer known for racing, sports, and GT (Grand Touring) cars. It is a subsidiary of Stellantis NV and is based in Modena, Italy. Officine Alfieri Maserati SA was founded in Bologna, Italy, in December 1914 by the brothers Alfieri, Ettore, and Ernesto Maserati. The
- Maserati SpA (Italian company)
Maserati, Italian automobile manufacturer known for racing, sports, and GT (Grand Touring) cars. It is a subsidiary of Stellantis NV and is based in Modena, Italy. Officine Alfieri Maserati SA was founded in Bologna, Italy, in December 1914 by the brothers Alfieri, Ettore, and Ernesto Maserati. The
- Masereel, Frans (Flemish artist)
graphic novel: The academic study of comics: …novels by the likes of Frans Masereel and Lynd Ward (themselves partially influenced by German Expressionist cinema, and perhaps vice versa) were precursors of the graphic novel.
- Maseru (national capital, Lesotho)
Maseru, capital and largest urban centre of Lesotho. It is on the left bank of the Caledon River near the border with Free State province, South Africa. In 1869 the chief of the Sotho (Basotho) nation, Moshoeshoe, founded the town near his mountain stronghold of Thaba Bosiu; few of the 19th-century
- Maṣfūṭ (region, United Arab Emirates)
ʿAjmān: …east-southeast of ʿAjmān city, and Maṣfūṭ, 56 miles (90 km) southeast of ʿAjmān city, in the Wadi Ḥattá at the promontory’s base.
- Masgay, Louis (American murder victim)
Richard Kuklinski: The second, Louis Masgay, also sought a videotape deal. He was last seen in 1981, and his partially decomposed body was discovered some 15 months later. The medical examiner found ice crystals in the body’s tissues and determined that it had been kept frozen; this led to…
- MASH (hospital)
battlefield medicine: The mobile army surgical hospital (MASH) was used by U.S. forces during the Korean War in the 1950s and was still in service during the Persian Gulf War (1990–91). MASH units—which had 60 beds, required 50 large trucks to move, and took 24 hours to set…
- mash (brewing)
beer: Mixing the mash: The milled malt, called grist, is mixed with water, providing conditions in which starch, other molecules, and enzymes are dissolved and rapid enzyme action takes place. The solute-rich liquid produced in mashing is called the wort. Traditionally, mashing may be one of two distinct…
- mash tun (vessel)
beer: Mixing the mash: …a single vessel (called a mash tun), and a single temperature in the range of 62 to 67 °C (144 to 153 °F). With well-modified malt, breakdown of proteins and glucans has already occurred at the malting stage, and at 65 °C (149 °F) the starch readily gelatinizes and the…
- Mashad (Iran)
Mashhad, city, capital of Khorāsān-e Razavī ostān (province), northeastern Iran. It is located in the Kashaf River valley at an elevation of about 1,000 metres. As the burial place of ʿAlī al-Riḍā, the eighth imam in Twelver Shiʿism (Ithnā ʿAshariyyah), Mashhad is an important pilgrimage site.
- Maṣḥaf rash (Arabic literature)
Yazīdī: …al-jilwah (“Book of Revelation”) and Maṣḥafrash (“Black Book”), form the sacred scriptures of the Yazīdīs. It is now widely suspected that both volumes were compiled by non-Yazīdīs in the 19th century and then were passed off as ancient manuscripts but that their contents do in fact reflect authentic Yazīdī oral…
- mashal (Hebrew literature)
biblical literature: Proverbs: …at the court, was the mashal (Hebrew: “comparison” or “parable,” although frequently translated “proverb”). Typically a pithy, easily memorized aphoristic saying based on experience and universal in application, the mashal in its simplest and oldest form was a couplet in which a definition was given in two parallel lines related…
- Mashal, Khaled (Palestinian politician)
Khaled Meshaal exiled Palestinian politician who served as the head of the political bureau of the Palestinian Islamist movement Ḥamās from 1996 until 2017. Meshaal was born in the town of Silwad in the West Bank, then under Jordanian administration, and spent the first 11 years of his life there
- Masham of Swinton, Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 1st Baron (British inventor)
Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 1st Baron Masham was an English inventor whose contributions included a wool-combing machine that helped to lower the price of clothing and a silk-combing machine that utilized silk waste. In 1838 Samuel and his brother John opened a worsted mill in Manningham. He had worked
- Masham, Abigail, Baroness Masham Of Otes (British lady-in-waiting)
Abigail Masham, Baroness Masham of Otes was a favorite of Queen Anne of England. That she turned against both her patrons—Sarah Jennings, Duchess of Marlborough, and Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford—has led historians to speak harshly of her, but Jonathan Swift, who knew her intimately, spoke highly
- Masham, Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 1st Baron (British inventor)
Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 1st Baron Masham was an English inventor whose contributions included a wool-combing machine that helped to lower the price of clothing and a silk-combing machine that utilized silk waste. In 1838 Samuel and his brother John opened a worsted mill in Manningham. He had worked
- mashamboy (African mask)
African art: Kuba cultural area: Mashamboy and other masks—made of raffia and decorated with shells, beads, and even bells and feathers—were traditionally used to dramatize the founding of the royal dynasty and its matrilineal system of descent.
- mashed potato
vegetable processing: Dehydration: Almost all the mashed potato dishes served in restaurants and institutions are rehydrated instant potatoes. In restaurants and institutions dehydrated potato granules are used, while dehydrated flakes are preferred for home cooking. Potato granules have high bulk density and are easy to handle in large quantity. However, they…
- Mashenka (novel by Nabokov)
Vladimir Nabokov: Novels: The Defense, Lolita, and The Gift: His first novel, Mashenka (Mary), appeared in 1926; it was avowedly autobiographical and contains descriptions of the young Nabokov’s first serious romance as well as of the Nabokov family estate, both of which are also described in Speak, Memory. Nabokov did not again draw so heavily upon his personal…
- Mashhad (Iran)
Mashhad, city, capital of Khorāsān-e Razavī ostān (province), northeastern Iran. It is located in the Kashaf River valley at an elevation of about 1,000 metres. As the burial place of ʿAlī al-Riḍā, the eighth imam in Twelver Shiʿism (Ithnā ʿAshariyyah), Mashhad is an important pilgrimage site.
- Mashhad ʿAlī (Iraq)
Najaf, city, capital of Najaf muḥāfaẓah (governorate), central Iraq. Located about 100 miles (160 km) south of Baghdad, Najaf lies on a ridge just west of the Euphrates River. It is one of Shiʿi Islam’s two foremost holy cities (the other is Karbalāʾ, also in Iraq) and is widely held to be the
- Mashi River (river, Namibia)
Namibia: the Okavango (Cubango), the Mashi (Kwando), and the Zambezi on the northern border and the Orange on the southern. Only the northern frontier—and not all of it—is readily passable. The coastal Namib desert, the treacherous reefs and shoals of the coast (half aptly named the “Skeleton Coast”), the near…
- mashing (beverage production)
beer: Mashing: After kilning, the malt is mixed with water at 62 to 72 °C (144 to 162 °F), and the enzymatic conversion of starch into fermentable sugar is completed. The aqueous extract (wort) is then separated from the residual “spent” grain.
- mashinno-traktornaya stantsiya (Soviet institution)
machine-tractor station, in the Soviet Union, state-owned institution that rented heavy agricultural machinery (e.g., tractors and combines) to a group of neighbouring kolkhozy (collective farms) and supplied skilled personnel to operate and repair the equipment. The stations, which became
- Mashita, Ichiro (chef)
California roll: …in the 1960s by chef Ichiro Mashita at Tokyo Kaikan, a restaurant in the Little Tokyo area of Los Angeles. Seeking a replacement for tuna, he used avocado and added crab to give the dish a seafood flavour. To further the appeal of the new dish to Americans, Tokyo Kaikan…
- Mashona (people)
Shona, group of culturally similar Bantu-speaking peoples living chiefly in the eastern half of Zimbabwe, north of the Lundi River. The main groupings are the Zezuru, Karanga, Manyika, Tonga-Korekore, and Ndau. The Shona are farmers of millet, sorghum, and corn (maize), the last being the primary
- Mashonaland (region, Zimbabwe)
Mashonaland, traditional region in northeastern Zimbabwe, bordering Zambia to the north and Mozambique to the northeast and east. It is the traditional homeland of the Shona (q.v.), a Bantu-speaking people who are subsistence farmers, live in villages, and raise some cattle. Mashonaland consists
- Mashpee Wampanoag (people)
Northeast Indian: Cultural continuity and change: …(1973) after termination, while the Mashpee Wampanoag of Massachusetts, long declared “extinct,” were granted federal acknowledgement of tribal status in 2007. See also Native American: History; Native American: Developments in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
- mashrabiyyah (architecture)
moucharaby, in Islamic or Islamic-influenced architecture, an oriel, or projecting second-story window of latticework. The moucharaby is a familiar feature of residences in cities of North Africa and the Middle East; in France, where it was introduced from colonial sources, it is known as
- Mashrafah, al- (ancient city, Syria)
Katna, ancient Syrian city, Syria. It prospered especially during the 2nd millennium bc and was frequently named as Qatanum in the royal archives of Mari on the Euphrates. Excavations there in 1924–29 revealed a temple dedicated to the Sumerian goddess Nin-E-Gal. Foreign trade and influence were
- Mashriq (geographical region, Middle East)
Mashriq, geographic region extending from the western border of Egypt to the eastern border of Iraq. It includes the modern states of Egypt, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq and covers an area of approximately 2.7 million
- mashriq al-adhkār (Bahāʾī temple)
mashriq al-adhkār, temple or house of worship in the Bahāʾī faith. The mashriq is characterized by a nine-sided construction, in keeping with the Bahāʾī belief in the mystical properties of the number nine. Free of ritual and clergy, the mashriq is open to adherents of all religions and offers a
- Mashriq Yunus Oghli (Uzbek poet)
Uzbekistan: Cultural life: …Cholpán (Abdulhamid Sulayman Yunús), and Elbek (Mashriq Yunus Oghli) offered metres and rhyme schemes quite different from the verse composed in the traditions long employed by the poets of the region. Fitrat gained fame and popularity for such prose and poetic dialogues as Munazara (1909; The Dispute), and Mahmud Khoja…
- mashup (computing)
mashup, the combination of music from two or more different songs to form a new song. It can also refer to a combination of multiple data formats or sources, such as maps, music, photographs, video, and animations, into one digital
- masi (landholding)
Italy: Rural areas: …of primogeniture survived, producing the masi, family holdings that are passed on to the eldest son intact. These rural areas now also include an increasing number of skiing and tourist centres, such as Courmayeur and Cortina d’Ampezzo. In the band of Alpine and Apennine foothills, the villages, often situated on…
- masi (art)
bark painting, nonwoven fabric decorated with figurative and abstract designs usually applied by scratching or by painting. The basic clothlike material, produced from the inner bark, or bast, of certain trees (see bast fibre), is made by stripping off the bast, soaking it, and beating it to make
- Masina (region, Africa)
Macina, region, the middle course of the Niger River in Mali, between Ségou and Timbuktu (Tombouctou), where its braided channels form a vast inland delta extending 300 mi (480 km) northeast–southwest. The depression is covered by a network of lakes, swamps, and channels and is flooded during the
- Masina, Giulia Anna (Italian actress)
Giulietta Masina was an Italian motion-picture actress and the wife of Italian film director Federico Fellini. Her portrayal of waiflike innocents served as the emotional focal point for some of Fellini’s best films. Masina began acting in student theatre productions when she was in her teens.
- Masina, Giulietta (Italian actress)
Giulietta Masina was an Italian motion-picture actress and the wife of Italian film director Federico Fellini. Her portrayal of waiflike innocents served as the emotional focal point for some of Fellini’s best films. Masina began acting in student theatre productions when she was in her teens.
- Masinissa (king of Numidia)
Masinissa was the ruler of the North African kingdom of Numidia and an ally of Rome in the last years of the Second Punic War (218–201). His influence was lasting because the economic and political development that took place in Numidia under his rule provided the base for later development of the
- Masira (island, Oman)
Maṣīrah, island of Oman, in the Arabian Sea, off the country’s southeastern coast. The island is separated from the mainland by the narrow Turʿat (channel) Maṣīrah. There is an airfield, occupied by the British until the late 1970s, at the northern tip. The Gulf of Masira lies between the island
- Maṣīrah (island, Oman)
Maṣīrah, island of Oman, in the Arabian Sea, off the country’s southeastern coast. The island is separated from the mainland by the narrow Turʿat (channel) Maṣīrah. There is an airfield, occupied by the British until the late 1970s, at the northern tip. The Gulf of Masira lies between the island
- Maṣīrah Island, Al- (island, Oman)
Maṣīrah, island of Oman, in the Arabian Sea, off the country’s southeastern coast. The island is separated from the mainland by the narrow Turʿat (channel) Maṣīrah. There is an airfield, occupied by the British until the late 1970s, at the northern tip. The Gulf of Masira lies between the island
- Masire, Quett (president of Botswana)
Festus Mogae: Quett Ketumile Joni Masire and became a key figure in Botswana’s remarkable rise to economic prosperity, heading (1975–76) that ministry’s permanent staff.
- Masire, Quett Ketumile Joni (president of Botswana)
Festus Mogae: Quett Ketumile Joni Masire and became a key figure in Botswana’s remarkable rise to economic prosperity, heading (1975–76) that ministry’s permanent staff.
- Masisi, Mokgweetsi (president of Botswana)
Botswana: Botswana since independence: …president and fellow BDP member Mokgweetsi Masisi, who was inaugurated on April 1. Relations soon soured between Khama and Masisi, however. A month after he was inaugurated, Masisi dismissed Isaac Kgosi, the intelligence chief and Khama’s ally, which angered the former president. This would be the first of several of…
- Masitala (Malawi)
William Kamkwamba: …family and the residents of Masitala, the rural village in Malawi where he grew up. As a teenager, he made a windmill out of scrap materials that provided electricity to his family’s house. He wrote a memoir about that accomplishment titled The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind (2009; with Bryan…
- Masjed Soleymān (Iran)
Masjed Soleymān, town, southwestern Iran. Oil was discovered at Masjed Soleymān in 1908, and the town early became one of Iran’s leading oil centres. Pipelines, built in 1909–10, link the town with Abadan, 125 miles (200 km) southwest. Pop. (2006)
- Masjed-e Emām (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Masjed-e Emām, celebrated 17th-century mosque in Eṣfahān, Iran. The mosque, part of the rebuilding effort of the Safavid shah ʿAbbās I, was located at the centre of Eṣfahān, along a great central mall (city square or courtyard) called the Maydān-e Emām (since 1979 a World Heritage site). Along with
- Masjed-e Jāmeʿ (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Great Mosque of Eṣfahān, complex of buildings in Eṣfahān, Iran, that centres on the 11th-century domed sanctuary and includes a second smaller domed chamber, built in 1088, known for its beauty of proportion and design. The central sanctuary was built under the direction of Niẓām al-Mulk, vizier to
- Masjed-e Jomʿeh (mosque, Yazd, Iran)
Yazd: The Masjed-e Jomʿeh (Friday Mosque) is distinguished by the highest minarets in Iran, mosaic faience (earthenware ceramics), a superb mihrab (pulpit) dated 1375, and two oratories that are Gothic in appearance. Some of the other mosques and mausoleums in the city are decorated with delicate and…
- Masjed-e Shāh (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Masjed-e Emām, celebrated 17th-century mosque in Eṣfahān, Iran. The mosque, part of the rebuilding effort of the Safavid shah ʿAbbās I, was located at the centre of Eṣfahān, along a great central mall (city square or courtyard) called the Maydān-e Emām (since 1979 a World Heritage site). Along with
- Masjed-e Shaykh Luṭf Allāh (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Eṣfahān: Historical city: …the eastern side stands the Masjed-e Shaykh Luṭf Allāh (“Sheikh Loṭfollāh Mosque”), the mosque used by ʿAbbās for his private devotions. On the western side of the square is the ʿAlī Qāpū (“Lofty Gate”), a high building in the form of an archway that is crowned in the forepart by…
- masjid (place of worship)
mosque, any house or open area of prayer in Islam. The Arabic word masjid means “a place of prostration” to God, and the same word is used in Persian, Urdu, and Turkish. Two main types of mosques can be distinguished: the masjid jāmiʿ, or “collective mosque,” a large state-controlled mosque that is
- Masjid al-Ḥarām, al- (mosque, Mecca, Saudi Arabia)
Great Mosque of Mecca, mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, built to enclose the Kaʿbah, the holiest shrine in Islam. As one of the destinations of the hajj and ʿumrah pilgrimages, it receives millions of worshippers each year. The oldest parts of the modern structure date to the 16th century. The
- Masjid-i Jahānnumā (mosque, Old Delhi, India)
Jama Masjid of Delhi, mosque in Old Delhi, India, constructed in 1650–56 by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahān, a noted patron of Islamic architecture whose most famous work is the Taj Mahal, in Agra. Jama Masjid, now the second largest mosque on the Indian subcontinent, is also an impressive example of
- Masjid-i Janmasthan (mosque, Ayodhya, India)
Babri Masjid, mosque in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, India. According to inscriptions on the site, it was built in the year 935 of the Islamic calendar (September 1528–September 1529 ce) by Mīr Bāqī, possibly a bey serving under the Mughal emperor Bābur. Along with the mosques at Sambhal and Panipat, it
- Masjid-i Sheykh Loṭfollāh (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Islamic arts: Architecture: …sides were the small funerary mosque of Shaykh Luṭf Allāh (Sheikh Lotfollāh) and, facing it, the ʿAlī Qāpū, the “Lofty Gate,” the first unit of a succession of palaces and gardens that extended beyond the maydān, most of which have now disappeared except for the Chehel Sotūn (“Forty Columns”), a…
- Masjid-i-Jami (mosque, Eṣfahān, Iran)
Great Mosque of Eṣfahān, complex of buildings in Eṣfahān, Iran, that centres on the 11th-century domed sanctuary and includes a second smaller domed chamber, built in 1088, known for its beauty of proportion and design. The central sanctuary was built under the direction of Niẓām al-Mulk, vizier to
- Masjumi (political party, Indonesia)
Indonesia: The years of constitutional democracy: …were the major Muslim party, Masyumi (Masjumi); the Muslim theologians’ party, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), which seceded from Masyumi in 1952; the Nationalist Party (PNI); the Communist Party (PKI); the “national communist” party, Murba; the lesser Muslim parties, Perti and Partai Sarekat Islam Indonesia (PSII); and the Socialist Party (PSI). Until…
- mask (insect anatomy)
dragonfly: Life cycle and reproduction: Called the “mask,” it is a fusion of the larva’s third pair of mouthparts. Disproportionately large, the mask folds beneath both the head and thorax when it is not in use. At the end of the mask is a set of fanglike pincers used to seize prey…
- mask (photographic printing device)
integrated circuit: Photolithography: …is controlled by using a mask. A mask is made by applying a thick deposit of chrome in a particular pattern to a glass plate. The chrome provides a shadow over most of the wafer, allowing “light” to shine through only in desired locations. This enables the creation of extremely…
- mask (entertainment)
masque, festival or entertainment in which disguised participants offer gifts to their host and then join together for a ceremonial dance. A typical masque consisted of a band of costumed and masked persons of the same sex who, accompanied by torchbearers, arrived at a social gathering to dance and
- mask (face covering)
mask, a form of disguise or concealment usually worn over or in front of the face to hide the identity of a person and by its own features to establish another being. This essential characteristic of hiding and revealing personalities or moods is common to all masks. As cultural objects they have
- Mask (film by Bogdanovich [1985])
Peter Bogdanovich: The 1980s and beyond: …break from directing, Bogdanovich made Mask (1985), a drama based on a true story. The film was a critical and commercial hit, with Cher giving a memorable performance as the tough but loving mother of a teenage boy (Eric Stoltz) afflicted with a disease that causes severe facial disfigurement. Bogdanovich…
- Mask for Janus, A (poetry by Merwin)
W.S. Merwin: …his first collection of poetry, A Mask for Janus (1952), which was selected for publication by W.H. Auden for the Yale Series of Younger Poets award. His early poems included both lyrical works and philosophical narratives based on myths and folk tales. His subsequent collections included Green with Beasts (1956),…
- Mask of Benevolence: Disabling the Deaf Community (work by Lane)
audism: …1990s, beginning with the work Mask of Benevolence: Disabling the Deaf Community (1992) by American psychologist and speech researcher Harlan L. Lane. Lane described audism as a way for the hearing to dominate the deaf community. This notion was supported by the fact that environments tailored for deaf persons were…
- Mask of Dimitrios, The (novel by Ambler)
Jean Negulesco: Film noirs and Johnny Belinda: …adaptation of an Eric Ambler novel about a mystery writer who becomes involved in a murder investigation. Also from 1944 was The Conspirators, a spy thriller that starred Lorre, Greenstreet, Hedy Lamarr, and Paul Henreid. In 1946 Negulesco directed Nobody Lives Forever, a noir that featured John Garfield as a…
- Mask of Dimitrios, The (film by Negulesco [1944])
Jean Negulesco: Film noirs and Johnny Belinda: …was the acclaimed film noir The Mask of Dimitrios (1944), starring Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet, and Zachary Scott. The movie was a stylish adaptation of an Eric Ambler novel about a mystery writer who becomes involved in a murder investigation. Also from 1944 was The Conspirators, a spy thriller that…
- Mask of Fu Manchu, The (film by Brabin [1932])
Charles Vidor: Early work: …to direct, the camp classic The Mask of Fu Manchu, with Boris Karloff as the evil Dr. Fu Manchu, who is searching for relics of Genghis Khan that allegedly have special powers; Myrna Loy appeared as his depraved daughter. Several weeks into shooting, however, Vidor was fired and replaced by…
- Mask of Zorro, The (film by Campbell [1998])
Zorro: In The Mask of Zorro (1998), Anthony Hopkins played an aging Don Diego, who emerges from retirement to train Antonio Banderas’s character to be his successor as Zorro. Banderas reprised that role in The Legend of Zorro in 2005. Zorro’s television appearances included Walt Disney’s Zorro
- Mask, A (work by Milton)
Comus, masque by John Milton, presented on Sept. 29, 1634, before John Egerton, earl of Bridgewater, at Ludlow Castle in Shropshire, and published anonymously in 1637. Milton wrote the text in honour of the earl becoming lord president of Wales and the Marches at the suggestion of the composer
- Mask, Lough (lake, Ireland)
Lough Mask, lake, in Counties Mayo and Galway, Ireland. It covers an area of 32 sq miles (83 sq km) and is connected with Lough Corrib by an underground river. Lough Mask is noted for its brown trout. The island of Inishmaan in Lough Mask contains the remains of a Celtic church of St. Cormac, built
- Mask, The (theatrical journal)
Edward Gordon Craig: Early life: …and edited his international review, The Mask (1908–29), which helped to make his theatrical ideals widely known and in which many of his articles—notably “The Actor and the Übermarionette” (1907)—were published. In Florence he published the etchings illustrating his scenographic concepts in A Portfolio of Etchings (1908) and also wrote…
- Mask, the (comic-book character)
Dark Horse Comics: Dark Horse’s first company-created superhero—the Mask—debuted in Dark Horse Presents no. 10 (September 1987). Mild-mannered Stanley Ipkiss buys a bizarre ancient mask and gains Looney Tunes-inspired superpowers, which are then used to violently comedic effect.
- Mask, The (film by Russell [1994])
Jim Carrey: …with Dumb and Dumber and The Mask (all 1994). In the latter film Carrey played a timid bank clerk who becomes a hip wisecracking green-faced dandy when he dons a magical mask. His performance earned Carrey the first of several Golden Globe Award nominations. He subsequently starred in Ace Ventura:…
- Maskara (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
- Maskarad (drama by Lermontov)
Mikhail Lermontov: Life: …the basis of his play Maskarad (“Masquerade”). During this period his deep—but unreciprocated—attachment to Varvara Lopukhina, a sentiment that never left him, was reflected in Knyaginya Ligovskaya (“Duchess Ligovskaya”) and other works.
- Maskawa Toshihide (Japanese physicist)
Maskawa Toshihide was a Japanese physicist who was a corecipient, with Yoichiro Nambu and Kobayashi Makoto, of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Physics. Maskawa and Kobayashi shared half the prize for their discovery of the origin of broken symmetry, which created at least six quarks moments after the big
- Maske Presented at Ludlow Castle, A (work by Milton)
Comus, masque by John Milton, presented on Sept. 29, 1634, before John Egerton, earl of Bridgewater, at Ludlow Castle in Shropshire, and published anonymously in 1637. Milton wrote the text in honour of the earl becoming lord president of Wales and the Marches at the suggestion of the composer
- Masked and Anonymous (film by Charles [2003])
Bob Dylan: …and starred in the film Masked & Anonymous and began favouring keyboards over guitar in live appearances. The next year he released what portended to be the first in a series of autobiographies, Chronicles: Volume 1. In 2005 No Direction Home, a documentary directed by Martin Scorsese, appeared on television.…
- Masked Ball, A (opera by Verdi)
Un ballo in maschera, opera in three acts by Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi (Italian libretto by Antonio Somma) that premiered at the Teatro Apollo in Rome on February 17, 1859. The Italian libretto was hastily adapted from French dramatist Eugène Scribe’s libretto Gustave III; ou, le bal masqué,
- masked bedbug hunter (insect)
assassin bug: Predatory behaviour: The masked hunter (or masked bedbug hunter; Reduvius personatus), when threatened, will also bite humans, causing pain and localized swelling. The masked hunter is widely known for its ability to camouflage itself as a ball of dust during the immature stages, when the body, legs, and…
- masked birch caterpillar (insect larva)
caterpillar: The masked birch caterpillar (Drepana arcuata) produces vibratory signals in order to defend its territory against intruders of the same species; it produces the vibrations by drumming its mandibles on the leaf surface and by scratching its legs, which are covered by hairlike structures, against the…
- masked booby (seabird)
pelecaniform: Reproduction: The masked booby (Sula dactylatra), for example, breeds in dense colonies on islets off Ascension Island but in dispersed patterns on Christmas Island (Pacific). Breeding in a number of species is normally dispersed; the red-footed cormorant (Phalacrocorax gaimardi) of South America, for instance, often nests on…
- masked chimpanzee (primate)
chimpanzee: Taxonomy: …Europe; the West African, or masked, chimpanzee (P. troglodytes verus), known as the common chimpanzee in Great Britain; the East African, or long-haired, chimpanzee (P. troglodytes schweinfurthii); and the Nigerian-Cameroon chimpanzee (P. troglodytes ellioti, which was formerly classified as P. troglodytes vellerosus).
- masked duck (bird)
stifftail: In the masked duck (O. dominica), of the West Indies and tropical America, the drake is white-bellied and entirely reddish above, with a black face. Other stifftails are the musk duck (Biziura lobata), of southern Australia and Tasmania, and the parasitic black-headed duck (Heteronetta atricapilla), of southern…
- masked hunter (insect)
assassin bug: Predatory behaviour: The masked hunter (or masked bedbug hunter; Reduvius personatus), when threatened, will also bite humans, causing pain and localized swelling. The masked hunter is widely known for its ability to camouflage itself as a ball of dust during the immature stages, when the body, legs, and…