- Pavle Karaðorðević, Knez (regent of Yugoslavia)
Prince Paul Karadjordjević was the regent of Yugoslavia in the period leading into World War II. Paul’s uncle was King Peter I of Serbia, and Paul’s mother was a Russian princess of the Demidov family. He was educated in Geneva and Belgrade, and in 1910 he moved to Britain to attend the University
- Pavličić, Pavao (Croatian author)
Croatian literature: …genre novels by the popular Pavao Pavličić; prose by a prolific Croatian-Bosnian writer of the younger generation, Miljenko Jergović, and, at the turn of the 21st century, by Zoran Ferić, Ante Tomić, and Julijana Matanović.
- Pavlik, Kelly (American boxer)
Bernard Hopkins: …unanimous decision over previously undefeated Kelly Pavlik, who was 17 years his junior. Hopkins followed that victory with one against Enrique Ornelas in December 2009 and another against Roy Jones, Jr., in April 2010.
- Pavlodar (Kazakhstan)
Pavlodar, city, northeastern Kazakhstan. It is a port on the Irtysh (Ertis) River. The community was founded in 1720 as Koryakovsky outpost on the Russian Irtysh fortified line, near salt lakes. It became the town of Pavlodar in 1861, but, although it did a substantial trade in salt and
- Pavlof Sister (volcano, Alaska, United States)
Pavlof Volcano: …“twin,” a volcano known as Pavlof Sister (7,028 feet [2,142 metres]). Pavlof Sister is also active, but no eruptions have been reported there since 1762. Built high on a base of older volcanic rock, the two symmetrical, cone-shaped peaks are a prominent feature of the landscape.
- Pavlof Volcano (volcano, Alaska, United States)
Pavlof Volcano, volcanic peak of the Aleutian Range, southwestern Alaska, U.S. Situated about 580 miles (930 km) southwest of Anchorage, on the west side of Pavlof Bay, it lies near the southwestern tip of the Alaska Peninsula. Rising to more than 8,260 feet (2,518 metres), Pavlof is one of the
- Pavlograd (Ukraine)
Pavlohrad, city, south-central Ukraine. It was a minor trading centre before the October Revolution (1917) and was incorporated in 1797, and it later became a major railway junction and centre of the west Donets Basin. Its varied industrial base has included the manufacture of machinery for the
- Pavlohrad (Ukraine)
Pavlohrad, city, south-central Ukraine. It was a minor trading centre before the October Revolution (1917) and was incorporated in 1797, and it later became a major railway junction and centre of the west Donets Basin. Its varied industrial base has included the manufacture of machinery for the
- Pavlov, Ivan (Russian physiologist)
Ivan Pavlov was a Russian physiologist known chiefly for his development of the concept of the conditioned reflex. In a now-classic experiment, he trained a hungry dog to salivate at the sound of a metronome or buzzer, which was previously associated with the sight of food. He developed a similar
- Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich (Russian physiologist)
Ivan Pavlov was a Russian physiologist known chiefly for his development of the concept of the conditioned reflex. In a now-classic experiment, he trained a hungry dog to salivate at the sound of a metronome or buzzer, which was previously associated with the sight of food. He developed a similar
- pavlova (food)
pavlova, meringue-based dessert of Australian and New Zealand origin that is commonly topped with whipped cream and fruit and served at holidays. New Zealanders and Australians compete for ownership of pavlova, which in both countries is an iconic national delicacy. Perhaps the most misused of all
- Pavlova, Anna (Russian ballerina)
Anna Pavlova was a Russian ballerina, the most-celebrated dancer of her time. Pavlova studied at the Imperial School of Ballet at the Mariinsky Theatre from 1891, joined the Imperial Ballet in 1899, and became a prima ballerina in 1906. In 1909 she went to Paris on the historic tour of the Ballets
- Pavlova, Anna Pavlovna (Russian ballerina)
Anna Pavlova was a Russian ballerina, the most-celebrated dancer of her time. Pavlova studied at the Imperial School of Ballet at the Mariinsky Theatre from 1891, joined the Imperial Ballet in 1899, and became a prima ballerina in 1906. In 1909 she went to Paris on the historic tour of the Ballets
- Pavlovian conditioning (behavioral psychology)
Pavlovian conditioning, a type of conditioned learning which occurs because of the subject’s instinctive responses, as opposed to operant conditioning, which is contingent on the willful actions of the subject. It was developed by the Russian physiologist Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (q.v.). See also
- Pavlovich, Dmitry (Russian noble)
Grigori Rasputin: …the Duma), and Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich (the tsar’s cousin), formed a conspiracy to eliminate Rasputin and save the monarchy from further scandal. On the night of December 29–30 (December 16–17, Old Style), Rasputin was invited to visit Yusupov’s home, and, according to legend, once there, he was given poisoned…
- Pavlovich, Konstantin (Russian grand duke)
Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich was the son of the Russian emperor Paul I (reigned 1796–1801), younger brother of Alexander I (reigned 1801–25), and elder brother of Nicholas I (reigned 1825–55); he was the virtual ruler of the Congress Kingdom of Poland (1815–30). Educated by a Swiss tutor under
- Pavlovo (Russia)
Pavlovo, city and administrative centre of Pavlovo rayon (sector), Nizhegorod oblast (region), western Russia, on the Oka River. Its metalworking industries are continuations of what was a long handicraft tradition in metal goods, though now the industry produces buses and tractor and automobile
- Pavlovsk (Russia)
Pavlovsk, city, Leningrad oblast (region), northwestern Russia. Founded in 1777 as Pavlovskoye, it became a city and was renamed Pavlovsk in 1796. The site, on the Slavyanka River, was a gift from Catherine II the Great to her son and heir, Paul. She commissioned the Scottish architect Charles
- Pavlovsk (Ukraine)
Mariupol, city, southeastern Ukraine. It lies along the estuary of the Kalmius and Kalchik rivers, 6 miles (10 km) from the Sea of Azov. The city was founded in 1778 as Pavlovsk, on the site of a former Cossack encampment. It was renamed Mariupol in 1779 to honour Maria Fyodorovna, the second wife
- Pavlovsk Gavan (Alaska, United States)
Kodiak, city, Kodiak Island, southern Alaska, U.S. It is situated on Chiniak Bay, on the northeastern coast of Kodiak Island. Founded in 1792 by Aleksandr Andreyevich Baranov, manager in America for the Northeastern Company (later the Russian-American Company), it was first known as Pavlovsk Gavan,
- Pavlovsky Posad (Russia)
Pavlovsky Posad, city, Moscow oblast (region), western Russia, on the Klyazma River. It grew from a monastic village and, in the 18th century, was a centre of peasant silk weaving. In 1844 it became an industrial centre (posad) with other villages and had nine silk and three paper factories,
- PAVN (Vietnamese army)
20th-century international relations: Cold War assumptions and the quagmire: …units, and units of the People’s Army of North Vietnam (PAVN) entering the South along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. U.S. Special Forces tried to counter Communist control of the countryside with a “strategic hamlet” program, a tactic used with success by the British in Malaya. Diem instituted a policy…
- Pavo (astronomy)
Pavo, constellation in the southern sky at about 20 hours right ascension and 65° south in declination. Its brightest star is Alpha Pavonis, sometimes known as Peacock, with a magnitude of 1.9. This constellation was invented by Pieter Dircksz Keyser, a navigator who joined the first Dutch
- Pavo cristatus (bird)
peacock: …species of peafowl are the blue, or Indian, peacock (Pavo cristatus), of India and Sri Lanka, and the green, or Javanese, peacock (P. muticus), found from Myanmar (Burma) to Java. The Congo peacock (Afropavo congensis), which inhabits the forested interior of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was discovered in…
- Pavo muticus (bird)
peacock: …and Sri Lanka, and the green, or Javanese, peacock (P. muticus), found from Myanmar (Burma) to Java. The Congo peacock (Afropavo congensis), which inhabits the forested interior of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was discovered in 1936 after a search that began in 1913 with the finding of a…
- Pavón, Battle of (Argentine history)
Battle of Pavón, (Sept. 17, 1861), in Argentine history, military clash at Pavón in Sante Fe province between the forces of the Argentine Confederation, commanded by Justo José de Urquiza, and those of Buenos Aires province, led by the governor, Bartolomé Mitre. Mitre’s victory there marked the end
- pavonine quetzal (bird)
quetzal: mocinno), and the pavonine quetzal (P. pavoninus)—reside in the neotropics (Central America and South America).
- pavor nocturnus (mental disorder)
mental disorder: Other childhood disorders: inappropriate places), sleepwalking, and night terror. These symptoms are not necessarily evidence of emotional disturbance or of some other mental illness. Behavioral methods of treatment are usually effective.
- Pawar, Sharad (Indian politician)
Sharad Pawar is an Indian politician and government official, who in 1999 helped found the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and served as its president. Pawar was one of 10 children born to a middle-class agricultural family in Baramati, southeast of Pune, in what is now Maharashtra state. He went
- Pawar, Sharad Chandra Govindrao (Indian politician)
Sharad Pawar is an Indian politician and government official, who in 1999 helped found the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and served as its president. Pawar was one of 10 children born to a middle-class agricultural family in Baramati, southeast of Pune, in what is now Maharashtra state. He went
- Pawar, Sharadchandra Govindrao (Indian politician)
Sharad Pawar is an Indian politician and government official, who in 1999 helped found the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and served as its president. Pawar was one of 10 children born to a middle-class agricultural family in Baramati, southeast of Pune, in what is now Maharashtra state. He went
- Pawcatuck River (river, United States)
Pawcatuck River, river rising in Worden Pond and Great Swamp, South Kingstown, R.I., U.S. It flows generally southwestward, emptying into Little Narragansett Bay after a course of about 30 miles (50 km). The river passes Shannock, Carolina, Bradford, Potter Hill, and Westerly and forms part of the
- Pawhuska (Oklahoma, United States)
Pawhuska, city, seat (1907) of Osage county, northeastern Oklahoma, U.S. It was settled in 1872 and named for an Osage chief, Paw-Hiu-Skah (“White Hair”), and the first buildings were those of the Indian Agency (established 1873). Cattle and oil (discovered in 1897) provide the basis of the
- Pawi (people)
Mizo: …to the entire Mizo community), Pawi (Lai), Lakher (Mara), and Hmar. In the early 21st century the Mizo numbered about one million.
- Pawla (Malta)
Paola, town, eastern Malta, just south of Valletta and adjacent to Tarxien to the southeast. It was founded in 1626 by the grand master of the Hospitallers (Knights of Malta), Antoine de Paule, and it remained a small village until the late 19th century, when it grew rapidly as a residential
- Pawlenty, Tim (American politician)
Tim Pawlenty is an American politician who served as governor of Minnesota (2003–11). He sought the Republican presidential nomination in 2012. Pawlenty grew up in South St. Paul, Minnesota, the youngest of five children in a working-class family. His mother passed away when he was young. Pawlenty,
- Pawlenty, Timothy James (American politician)
Tim Pawlenty is an American politician who served as governor of Minnesota (2003–11). He sought the Republican presidential nomination in 2012. Pawlenty grew up in South St. Paul, Minnesota, the youngest of five children in a working-class family. His mother passed away when he was young. Pawlenty,
- Pawlett, Anthony Ashley Cooper, Baron Cooper of (English politician [1621–1683])
Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st earl of Shaftesbury was an English politician, a member of the Council of State (1653–54; 1659) during the Commonwealth, and a member of Charles II’s “Cabinet Council” and lord chancellor (1672–73). Seeking to exclude the Roman Catholic duke of York (the future James II)
- Pawlett, Anthony Ashley Cooper, Baron Cooper of (British industrial reformer [1801–1885])
Anthony Ashley Cooper, 7th earl of Shaftesbury was one of the most effective social and industrial reformers in 19th-century England. He was also the acknowledged leader of the evangelical movement within the Church of England. He was the eldest son of Cropley Cooper (a younger brother of the 5th
- Pawlett, Anthony Ashley Cooper, Baron Cooper of (English politician and philosopher [1671-1713])
Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury was an English politician and philosopher, grandson of the famous 1st earl and one of the principal English Deists. His early education was directed by John Locke, and he attended Winchester College. He entered Parliament in 1695 and, succeeding as 3rd
- Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska, Maria (Polish poet)
Maria Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska was a Polish poet whose work is representative of modern lyrical poetry. She is particularly notable for the urbane sensitivity of her poems. As a daughter of the well-known painter Wojciech Kossak, Pawlikowska-Jasnorzewska grew up in an artistic and intellectual
- Pawlikowski, Pawel (Polish-born British film director and screenwriter)
Pawel Pawlikowski is a Polish-born British film director and screenwriter whose acclaimed works notably included Ida (2013), which won an Academy Award for best foreign-language film. Pawlikowski, who was baptized as a Roman Catholic but whose family was partly Jewish (his paternal grandmother died
- Pawłowska, Eliza (Polish writer)
Eliza Orzeszkowa was a Polish novelist and a leading writer of the Positivist period (the Polish Positivists took their name from Auguste Comte’s philosophy but were themselves mainly utilitarians). Questions of education, independence, and marriage in Orzeszkowa’s works were eventually
- pawn (chess)
chess: Hypermodernism: …invited their opponents to advance pawns in the centre and in some cases tried to provoke them. For example, Alexander Alekhine, a future world champion who explored Hypermodern ideas in the 1920s, developed an opening that consisted of meeting 1 e4 with 1…Nf6 in order to tempt White to advance…
- pawn (social class)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Social and political organization: …the Aztec social system were pawns and slaves. The former were poor men who could sell themselves or members of their household for a specified period of time. Their rights were carefully defended by Aztec law, and they were not slaves but more like indentured servants. True slaves did exist…
- pawn promotion (chess)
chess: Pawns: Only pawns can be captured en passant. The last unique feature of the pawn occurs if it reaches the end of a file; it must then be promoted to—that is, exchanged for—a queen, rook, bishop, or knight.
- Pawnbroker, The (film by Lumet [1964])
The Pawnbroker, American film drama, released in 1965, about the life of a Holocaust survivor. It shocked audiences with its subject matter and scenes of partial nudity. Rod Steiger played Sol Nazerman, a cynical, introverted concentration camp survivor who is now emotionally dead and who ekes out
- pawnbroking (business)
pawnbroking, business of advancing loans to customers who have pledged household goods or personal effects as security on the loans. The trade of the pawnbroker is one of the oldest known to humanity; it existed in China 2,000 to 3,000 years ago. Ancient Greece and Rome were familiar with its
- Pawnee (people)
Pawnee, North American Indian people of Caddoan linguistic stock who lived on the Platte River in what is now Nebraska, U.S., from before the 16th century to the latter part of the 19th century. In the 19th century the Pawnee tribe was composed of relatively independent bands: the Kitkehahki,
- Pawol, Jen (American baseball umpire)
As a girl growing up on Long Island, New York, Jen Pawol wanted to play Little League, but that wasn’t what girls in the 1980s did, so she played softball instead. In the spring of 2024 Pawol umpired her first Major League Baseball (MLB) spring training game and seemed on the verge of doing what no
- Pawol, Jennifer (American baseball umpire)
As a girl growing up on Long Island, New York, Jen Pawol wanted to play Little League, but that wasn’t what girls in the 1980s did, so she played softball instead. In the spring of 2024 Pawol umpired her first Major League Baseball (MLB) spring training game and seemed on the verge of doing what no
- pawpaw (tree and fruit)
papaya, (Carica papaya), succulent fruit of a large plant of the family Caricaceae. Though its origin is rather obscure, the papaya may represent the fusion of two or more species of Carica native to Mexico and Central America. Today it is cultivated throughout the tropical world and into the
- pawpaw (fruit and tree, Asimina species)
pawpaw, (Asimina triloba), deciduous tree or shrub of the custard apple family (Annonaceae) and its edible fruit. The pawpaw—native to the United States from the Atlantic coast north to New York state and west to Michigan and Kansas—boasts the largest tree-borne fruit native to North America. The
- Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank (film by Minkoff, Koetsier, and Bailey [2022])
Michael Cera: Later credits and voice work: …Movie (2017), Cryptozoo (2021), and Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank (2022). He also directed, wrote or cowrote, and starred in such short films as Brazzaville Teen-Ager and Failure (both 2013).
- Pawtucket (Rhode Island, United States)
Pawtucket, city, Providence county, northeastern Rhode Island, U.S., on the Blackstone River (there bridged and known locally as the Pawtucket or the Seekonk) just northeast of Providence city and adjoining the city of Central Falls to the northwest. In the heart of the business district, the river
- Pawtucket Falls (waterfall, Lowell, Middlesex county, Massachusetts, United States)
Lowell: …of waterpower from the Merrimack’s Pawtucket Falls (32 feet [10 metres]) and the completion of the Middlesex Canal link to Boston in 1803. By 1824 the locality was crisscrossed by a canal system that served numerous cotton textile mills along the Merrimack River. The community was incorporated as a town…
- Pawtucket River (river, United States)
Blackstone River, river rising in south-central Worcester county, Massachusetts, U.S., and flowing generally southeast past Worcester city and Northbridge, Massachusetts; it continues across the northeast corner of Rhode Island, past Woonsocket, Central Falls, and Pawtucket, where it becomes the
- Pawtuxet River (river, Rhode Island, United States)
Narragansett Bay: …wide and receives the Blackstone, Pawtuxet, Taunton, and Woonasquatucket rivers. It includes Rhode (Aquidneck), Prudence, and Conanicut islands as well as Mount Hope Bay (a northeastern arm), the Providence River (a northwestern arm), and the Sakonnet River
- Pawumwa (people)
South American forest Indian: Belief and aesthetic systems: …as that used by the Pawumwa of the Guaporé River, prevents sickness. The hunter or fisherman, in order to be successful and not to be panema (unlucky), as they say in many Amazonian regions, takes precautions such as scarring his arms or abstaining from certain foods. The magical devices of…
- Pax (Roman religion)
Pax, in Roman religion, personification of peace, probably recognized as a deity for the first time by the emperor Augustus, in whose reign much was made of the establishment of political calm. An altar of Pax Augusta (the Ara Pacis) was dedicated in 9 bc and a great temple of Pax completed by the
- Pax Augusta (Spain)
Badajoz, city, capital of Badajoz provincia (province), in the Extremadura comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southwestern Spain. Situated on the south bank of the Guadiana River near the Portuguese frontier, it occupies a low range of hills crowned by a ruined Moorish castle. It originated
- Pax Britannica (European history)
20th-century international relations: Industry, technology, and trade: …(with some exaggeration) as the Pax Britannica. The pound sterling became the preferred reserve currency of the world and the Bank of England the hub of international finance. British textiles, machinery, and shipping dominated the markets of Asia, South America, and much of Europe. The British Isles (again with some…
- Pax Dei (ecclesiastical decree)
Peace of God, a movement led by the medieval church, and later by civil authorities, to protect ecclesiastical property and women, priests, pilgrims, merchants, and other noncombatants from violence from the 10th to the 12th century. The Peace of God arose in southern France, in particular
- Pax Hispanica (Spanish history)
Spain: Spain and Europe: …Europe enjoyed a kind of Pax Hispanica. Spanish armies controlled Italy, Flanders, and parts of the Rhineland. Spanish and Spanish-inclined Jesuits were confessors at the courts of the Austrian Habsburgs, Poland, Bavaria, and some of the minor German and Italian princes. Spanish subsidies, pensions, and bribes made clients even of…
- Pax Julia (Portugal)
Afonso I: …beyond the Tagus River, annexing Beja in 1162 and Évora in 1165; in attacking Badajoz, he was taken prisoner but then released. He married Mafalda of Savoy and associated his son, Sancho I, with his power. By the time of his death he had created a stable and independent monarchy.
- Pax Romana (Roman history)
Pax Romana, a state of comparative tranquillity throughout Classical antiquity and the Mediterranean world from the reign of Augustus (27 bce–14 ce) to the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161 –180 ce). Augustus laid the foundation for this period of concord, which also extended to North Africa and
- Pax Romana Christiana (Roman history)
eschatology: The early church: This theocratic identification of the pax romana Christiana (Latin: “peace of the Christian Roman Empire”) with Isaiah’s vision of the peace of the nations (2:1–3) would become one of the most important elements of political Christianity until the end of the Wars of Religion (late 16th century). In the 4th…
- Pax, Mount (mountain, Ecuador)
Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Northern Andes: …del Cóndor (13,000 feet) and Mount Pax (11,000 feet).
- Paxinou, Katina (Greek actress)
Katina Paxinou was an internationally recognized Greek actress known for her tragic roles in both modern and classic drama. With her second husband, the Greek actor-producer Alexis Minotis, she produced revivals of classic plays in ancient outdoor Greek theatres and translated modern plays into
- Paxistima canbyi (plant)
Celastraceae: Paxistima (or Pachystima), five species of low, often creeping, North American shrubs, includes P. canbyi, with evergreen leaves and small, greenish flowers.
- Paxoí (island, Greece)
Paxos, island, Corfu (Modern Greek: Kérkyra) nomós (department), the smallest of the seven major Ionian Islands (Iónia Nisiá) of Greece, about 12 miles (19 km) southwest of Párga on the coast of Epirus (Ípeiros). A hilly mass of limestone covered with olive groves, Paxos rises to about 750 feet
- Paxos (island, Greece)
Paxos, island, Corfu (Modern Greek: Kérkyra) nomós (department), the smallest of the seven major Ionian Islands (Iónia Nisiá) of Greece, about 12 miles (19 km) southwest of Párga on the coast of Epirus (Ípeiros). A hilly mass of limestone covered with olive groves, Paxos rises to about 750 feet
- Paxson, Christina H. (American economist)
Christina H. Paxson is an American economist who made substantial contributions to the fields of health economics and public policy. Paxson grew up in Forest Hills, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh. She earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Swarthmore College in 1982 and master’s and
- Paxson, Christina Hull (American economist)
Christina H. Paxson is an American economist who made substantial contributions to the fields of health economics and public policy. Paxson grew up in Forest Hills, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh. She earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Swarthmore College in 1982 and master’s and
- Paxton Boys uprising (United States history)
Paxton Boys uprising, attack in 1763 by Pennsylvania frontiersmen upon an Indian settlement during the Pontiac Indian uprising and the subsequent events related to the attack. On December 14, 1763, about 57 drunken settlers from Paxton, Pennsylvania, slaughtered 20 innocent and defenseless
- Paxton gutter (construction)
construction: Development of iron technology: …the trusses were ingenious “Paxton gutters” made of wooden compression members above iron tension rods that prestressed the wood to reduce deflection. All these prefabricated elements were simply bolted or clipped together on the site to enclose a space of 90,000 square metres (1,000,000 square feet) in only six…
- Paxton, Bill (American actor)
Bill Paxton was an American actor who was an exceptionally versatile artist; he played a wide variety of roles in films and on television, conveying in each part an essential and believable humanity. Paxton moved to Los Angeles when he was 18 years old and entered the film industry as a set dresser
- Paxton, Sir Joseph (British architect and botanist)
Sir Joseph Paxton was an English landscape gardener and designer of hothouses, who was the architect of the Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition of 1851 in London. He was originally a gardener employed by the duke of Devonshire, whose friend, factotum, and adviser he became. From 1826 he was
- Paxton, Thomas Richard (American folk singer-songwriter)
Tom Paxton is an American folk singer-songwriter who was especially prominent in the folk music revival of the 1960s. After studying drama at the University of Oklahoma and serving in the U.S. Army, Paxton joined the folk music scene in New York City, singing and playing acoustic guitar in small
- Paxton, Tom (American folk singer-songwriter)
Tom Paxton is an American folk singer-songwriter who was especially prominent in the folk music revival of the 1960s. After studying drama at the University of Oklahoma and serving in the U.S. Army, Paxton joined the folk music scene in New York City, singing and playing acoustic guitar in small
- Paxton, William Archibald (American actor)
Bill Paxton was an American actor who was an exceptionally versatile artist; he played a wide variety of roles in films and on television, conveying in each part an essential and believable humanity. Paxton moved to Los Angeles when he was 18 years old and entered the film industry as a set dresser
- pay equity (economics)
comparable worth, in economics, the principle that men and women should be compensated equally for work requiring comparable skills, responsibilities, and effort. In the United States the concept of comparable worth was introduced in the 1970s by reformers seeking to correct inequities in pay for
- pay gap, gender (economics and society)
gender wage gap, in many industrialized countries, systemic differences between the average wages or salaries of men and those of women. One of the most important economic trends of the late 20th century was the dramatic increase in the number of women entering the paid labour force. As more women
- Pay It Forward (film by Leder [2000])
Kevin Spacey: Later credits and House of Cards: … and Haley Joel Osment in Pay It Forward (2000) and appeared as a newspaper reporter in The Shipping News (2001), a film adaptation of E. Annie Proulx’s award-winning novel. In 2003 Spacey was appointed artistic director of the Old Vic in London. He was the first American to serve as…
- Pay off your mortgage or invest: A homeowner’s dilemma
Pros, cons, and opportunity costs.A mortgage is a big expense, but it’s only one part of your family’s budget. Decisions about it need to be made in the context of your entire situation. For some of us, it makes sense to pay down the mortgage as soon as possible and live debt free. For others, that
- Pay-Khoy Ridge (ridge, Russia)
Ural Mountains: …to the low, severely eroded Pay-Khoy Ridge, which forms a 250-mile (400-km) fingerlike extension to the northern tip of the Urals proper, the mountains constitute the major portion of the Uralian orogenic belt, which stretches 2,175 miles (3,500 km) from the Aral Sea to the northernmost tip of Novaya Zemlya.
- pay-related social insurance (Irish insurance)
Ireland: Health and welfare: Pay-related social insurance is paid by most employees age 16 and over. Benefits include widows’ and orphans’ pensions, unemployment and disability benefits, deserted wives’ allowances, and old-age pensions. The indigent receive certain benefits on a noncontributory basis. These include widows’ and orphans’ pensions, old-age pensions,…
- Paya (people)
Central American and northern Andean Indian: Modern developments: …and the Jicaque, Miskito (Mosquito), Paya, and Sumo Indians, as well as many former and runaway African slaves, collaborated with them. These groups, however, at the end of the 20th century, were again relegated to an economically and politically marginal position.
- Paya language
Mesoamerican Indian languages: The classification and status of Mesoamerican languages:
- Paya Tak (king of Siam)
Taksin was a Thai general, conqueror, and later king (1767–82) who reunited Thailand, or Siam, after its defeat at the hands of the Myanmar (Burmese) in 1767. Of Chinese-Thai parentage, Taksin became the protégé of a Thai nobleman who enrolled him in the royal service. In 1764 he gained the rank of
- payada (Uruguayan music contest)
Uruguay: The arts: …a popular contest called the payada, two singers, each with a guitar, take turns improvising verses to the same tune. Numerous radio stations and musical events reflect the popularity of rock music (mainly imported from the United States and Europe, though some Uruguayan bands enjoy wide followings) and Caribbean genres…
- payada (Spanish-American ballad)
gaucho literature: …poetic genre that imitates the payadas (“ballads”) traditionally sung to guitar accompaniment by the wandering gaucho minstrels of Argentina and Uruguay. By extension, the term includes the body of South American literature that treats the way of life and philosophy of the itinerant gauchos. Long a part of South American…
- Payām-e Mashriq (work by Iqbal)
Muhammad Iqbal: Early life and career: Payām-e Mashriq (1923; “Message of the East”), written in response to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s West-östlicher Divan (1819; “Divan of West and East”), affirmed the universal validity of Islam. In 1927 Zabūr-e ʿAjam (“Persian Psalms”) appeared, about which A.J. Arberry, its translator into English, wrote…
- Payao (Thailand)
Phayao, town, northern Thailand, lying in a mountainous region on the watershed between the Mekong and Chao Phraya river systems. Phayao is located on a scenic mountain lake that empties into the Ing River, a Mekong tributary. The town was the capital of a principality in the 13th and 14th
- payasam (South Asian dessert)
kheer, a chilled South Asian dessert made from slow-cooked rice, milk, and sugar, much like a rice pudding. It is typically flavoured with saffron, cardamom, raisins, and/or various nuts, notably pistachios, cashews, and almonds. The dish can also be made by using cracked wheat, tapioca, or
- Payback (novel by Gordon)
Mary Gordon: …Your Heart Lies (2017), and Payback (2020). The Rest of Life (1993) and The Liar’s Wife (2014) are collections of novellas. Among Gordon’s works of nonfiction are Spiritual Quests: The Art and Craft of Religious Writing (1988) and Good Boys and Dead Girls and Other Essays (1991). She also wrote…
- Payback (essay by Atwood)
Margaret Atwood: …at the University of Cambridge; Payback (2008; film 2012), an impassioned essay that treats debt—both personal and governmental—as a cultural issue rather than as a political or an economic one; In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination (2011), in which she illuminates her relationship to science fiction; and Burning…
- payback time (solar power)
thin-film solar cell: Types of thin-film solar cells: smallest carbon footprint and quickest payback time of any thin-film solar cell technology on the market (payback time being the time it takes for the solar panel’s electricity generation to cover the cost of purchase and installation).
- Paycheck (film by Woo [2003])
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?: …You Wholesale”), Minority Report (2002), Paycheck (2003), and A Scanner Darkly (2006) have all graced blockbuster screens. The complexities of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? inspired Ridley Scott’s groundbreaking Blade Runner (1982), but, as extraordinary as the movie is, it remains a pale shade of the text.
- Paycheck, Johnny (American musician)
Faron Young: …went on to fame included Johnny Paycheck, the Wilburn Brothers, Roger Miller, Lloyd Green, and Darrell McCall.