- quantitative metre (literature)
quantitative verse, in prosody, a metrical system based on the duration of the syllables that make up the feet, without regard for accents or stresses. Quantitative verse is made up of long and short syllables, the duration of which is determined by the amount of time needed for pronunciation. This
- quantitative research
marketing: Market research firms: Quantitative research is numerically oriented, requires significant attention to the measurement of market phenomena, and often involves statistical analysis. For example, when a restaurant asks its customers to rate different aspects of its service on a scale from 1 (good) to 10 (poor), this provides…
- quantitative theory of pain
human nervous system: Theories of pain: There have always been two theories of the sensation of pain, a quantitative, or intensity, theory and a stimulus-specific theory. According to the former, pain results from excessive stimulation (e.g., excessive heat or cold or excessive damage to the tissues). This theory…
- quantitative variable (statistics)
statistics: Quantitative data measure either how much or how many of something, and qualitative data provide labels, or names, for categories of like items. For example, suppose that a particular study is interested in characteristics such as age, gender, marital status, and annual income for a…
- quantitative variation (genetics)
variation: Variations are classified either as continuous, or quantitative (smoothly grading between two extremes, with the majority of individuals at the centre, as height varies in human populations); or as discontinuous, or qualitative (composed of well-defined classes, as blood groups vary in humans). A discontinuous variation with several classes, none of…
- quantitative verse (literature)
quantitative verse, in prosody, a metrical system based on the duration of the syllables that make up the feet, without regard for accents or stresses. Quantitative verse is made up of long and short syllables, the duration of which is determined by the amount of time needed for pronunciation. This
- Quantities (poetry by Howard)
Richard Howard: Beginning with his first volume, Quantities (1962), much of Howard’s poetry is in the form of dramatic monologues in which historic and literary personages, addressing the reader directly, discuss issues of art and life. Howard’s other volumes of poetry included Two-Part Inventions (1974), Misgivings (1979), Lining Up (1984), No Traveller
- quantity (mathematics)
mechanics: Units and dimensions: Quantities have both dimensions, which are an expression of their fundamental nature, and units, which are chosen by convention to express magnitude or size. For example, a series of events have a certain duration in time. Time is the dimension of the duration. The duration…
- quantity theory of money (economics)
quantity theory of money, economic theory relating changes in the price levels to changes in the quantity of money. In its developed form, it constitutes an analysis of the factors underlying inflation and deflation. (Read Milton Friedman’s Britannica entry on money.) As developed by the English
- quantity, algebraic (mathematics)
elementary algebra: Algebraic quantities: The principal distinguishing characteristic of algebra is the use of simple symbols to represent numerical quantities and mathematical operations. Following a system that originated with the 17th-century French thinker René Descartes, letters near the beginning of the alphabet (a, b, c,…) typically represent…
- quantization (communications)
telecommunication: Quantization: In order for a sampled signal to be stored or transmitted in digital form, each sampled amplitude must be converted to one of a finite number of possible values, or levels. For ease in conversion to binary form, the number of levels is usually…
- quantization (physics)
quantum, in physics, discrete natural unit, or packet, of energy, charge, angular momentum, or other physical property. Light, for example, appearing in some respects as a continuous electromagnetic wave, on the submicroscopic level is emitted and absorbed in discrete amounts, or quanta; and for
- quantization axis (physics)
spectroscopy: Angular momentum quantum numbers: …an axis known as the quantization axis, and the magnitude of the angular momentum is limited to the quantum values l(l + 1) (ℏ), in which l is an integer. The number l, called the orbital quantum number, must be less than the principal quantum number n, which corresponds to…
- quantization of magnetic flux (physics)
superconductivity: Discovery: …values), an effect called the quantization of magnetic flux. This flux quantization, which had been predicted from quantum mechanical principles, was first observed experimentally in 1961.
- quantized level (atomic physics)
hyperfine structure: …and they are then called quantized levels. Thus, when the atoms of an element radiate energy, transitions are made between these quantized energy levels, giving rise to hyperfine structure.
- Quantrill, William C. (American outlaw)
William C. Quantrill was the captain of a guerrilla band irregularly attached to the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, notorious for the sacking of the free-state stronghold of Lawrence, Kan. (Aug. 21, 1863), in which at least 150 people were burned or shot to death. Growing up in
- Quantrill, William Clarke (American outlaw)
William C. Quantrill was the captain of a guerrilla band irregularly attached to the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, notorious for the sacking of the free-state stronghold of Lawrence, Kan. (Aug. 21, 1863), in which at least 150 people were burned or shot to death. Growing up in
- Quantum (novel by Cornwell)
Patricia Cornwell: …Chase series, which began with Quantum (2019), features a female protagonist who is a NASA pilot, quantum physicist, and cybercrime investigator. The second installment, Spin, was published in 2020. Cornwell’s other works included a children’s book (Life’s Little Fable, 1999) and a work of nonfiction (Portrait of a Killer: Jack…
- quantum (physics)
quantum, in physics, discrete natural unit, or packet, of energy, charge, angular momentum, or other physical property. Light, for example, appearing in some respects as a continuous electromagnetic wave, on the submicroscopic level is emitted and absorbed in discrete amounts, or quanta; and for
- quantum bit (physics)
computer: Quantum computing: …particles—known as quantum bits, or qubits—can be “entangled” together, all the possible combinations of their states can be simultaneously used to perform a computation, at least in theory.
- quantum chromodynamics (physics)
quantum chromodynamics (QCD), in physics, the theory that describes the action of the strong force. QCD was constructed in analogy to quantum electrodynamics (QED), the quantum field theory of the electromagnetic force. In QED the electromagnetic interactions of charged particles are described
- quantum computer (computer science)
quantum computer, device that employs properties described by quantum mechanics to enhance computations. As early as 1959 the American physicist and Nobel laureate Richard Feynman noted that, as electronic components begin to reach microscopic scales, effects predicted by quantum mechanics
- Quantum Computer Services (American company)
AOL, one of the largest Internet-access subscription service companies in the United States, providing a range of Web services for users. AOL was one of the first companies to establish a strong sense of community among its users through buddy lists and instant messaging services, which transmit
- quantum cryptography (cryptography)
Charles H. Bennett: …came up with the first quantum cryptography scheme, BB84, the name incorporating their initials and the year the work was published. In BB84, Alice wishes to communicate securely with Bob, for example. To represent bits, she sends him single polarized photons. Half the photons are polarized in a horizontal-vertical basis;…
- quantum dot (physics)
Louis Brus: …work in discovering and producing quantum dots, which are very small particles whose unusual quantum properties depend on their size. He shared the prize with Russian-born American physicist Alexei Ekimov and French-born American chemist Moungi Bawendi.
- quantum efficiency (physics and electronics)
radiation measurement: Scintillators: …fraction is known as the quantum efficiency of the light sensor. In a silicon photodiode, as many as 80 to 90 percent of the light photons are converted to electron-hole pairs, but in a photomultiplier tube, only about 25 percent of the photons are converted to photoelectrons at the wavelength…
- quantum electrodynamics (physics)
quantum electrodynamics (QED), quantum field theory of the interactions of charged particles with the electromagnetic field. It describes mathematically not only all interactions of light with matter but also those of charged particles with one another. QED is a relativistic theory in that Albert
- quantum encryption (computer science)
quantum computer: …of secure communication known as quantum encryption. However, actually building a useful quantum computer has proved difficult. Although the potential of quantum computers is enormous, the requirements are equally stringent. A quantum computer must maintain coherence between its qubits (known as quantum entanglement) long enough to perform an algorithm; because…
- Quantum Endowment Fund (business)
George Soros: Financial career: …established the Soros Fund (later Quantum Endowment Fund), a hedge fund that subsequently spawned a range of associated companies. His daring investment decisions caused the funds to grow rapidly, but not all his gambles succeeded. He correctly foresaw the worldwide stock market crash of October 1987—but wrongly predicted that Japanese…
- quantum entanglement (physics)
quantum computer: …between its qubits (known as quantum entanglement) long enough to perform an algorithm; because of nearly inevitable interactions with the environment (decoherence), practical methods of detecting and correcting errors need to be devised; and, finally, since measuring a quantum system disturbs its state, reliable methods of extracting information must be…
- quantum field theory (physics)
quantum field theory, body of physical principles combining the elements of quantum mechanics with those of relativity to explain the behaviour of subatomic particles and their interactions via a variety of force fields. Two examples of modern quantum field theories are quantum electrodynamics,
- quantum level (atomic physics)
hyperfine structure: …and they are then called quantized levels. Thus, when the atoms of an element radiate energy, transitions are made between these quantized energy levels, giving rise to hyperfine structure.
- quantum liquid (physics)
condensed-matter physics: 67 °F), of the so-called quantum liquids. The latter exhibit a property known as superfluidity (completely frictionless flow), which is an example of macroscopic quantum phenomena. Such phenomena are also exemplified by superconductivity (completely resistance-less flow of electricity), a low-temperature property of certain metallic and ceramic materials. Besides their significance…
- quantum logic (logic)
foundations of mathematics: Other logics: …a precise equality relation); and quantum logic, where conjunction may be only partially defined and implication may not be defined at all. Perhaps more important have been various so-called substructural logics in which the usual properties of the deduction symbol are weakened: relevance logic is studied by philosophers, linear logic…
- quantum mechanics (physics)
quantum mechanics, science dealing with the behaviour of matter and light on the atomic and subatomic scale. It attempts to describe and account for the properties of molecules and atoms and their constituents—electrons, protons, neutrons, and other more esoteric particles such as quarks and
- quantum number (physics)
quantum number, any of several quantities of integral or half-integral value that identify the state of a physical system such as an atom, a nucleus, or a subatomic particle. Quantum numbers refer generally to properties that are discrete (quantized) and conserved, such as energy, momentum, charge,
- quantum of action (physics)
Planck’s constant, (symbol h), fundamental physical constant characteristic of the mathematical formulations of quantum mechanics, which describes the behaviour of particles and waves on the atomic scale, including the particle aspect of light. The German physicist Max Planck introduced the
- Quantum of Solace (film by Forster [2008])
ghost town: …the 2008 James Bond movie Quantum of Solace.
- quantum optics (physics)
light: Quantum optics: Quantum optics, the study and application of the quantum interactions of light with matter, is an active and expanding field of experiment and theory. Progress in the development of light sources and detection techniques since the early 1980s has allowed increasingly sophisticated optical…
- quantum oscillation frequency (physics)
quantum mechanics: The electron: wave or particle?: …from the two slits, the rate of oscillation depending on the wavelength of the light and the separation of the slits. The oscillation creates a fringe pattern of alternating light and dark bands that is modulated by the diffraction pattern from each slit. If one of the slits is covered,…
- quantum speciation (biology)
evolution: Quantum speciation: In some modes of speciation the first stage is achieved in a short period of time. These modes are known by a variety of names, such as quantum, rapid, and saltational speciation, all suggesting the shortening of time involved. They are also known…
- quantum state (atomic physics)
hyperfine structure: …and they are then called quantized levels. Thus, when the atoms of an element radiate energy, transitions are made between these quantized energy levels, giving rise to hyperfine structure.
- quantum statistical mechanics (physics)
physics: Statistical mechanics: Quantum statistical mechanics plays a major role in many other modern fields of science, as, for example, in plasma physics (the study of fully ionized gases), in solid-state physics, and in the study of stellar structure. From a microscopic point of view the laws of…
- quantum teleportation (physics)
Charles H. Bennett: …work in quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.
- quantum theory (physics)
quantum, in physics, discrete natural unit, or packet, of energy, charge, angular momentum, or other physical property. Light, for example, appearing in some respects as a continuous electromagnetic wave, on the submicroscopic level is emitted and absorbed in discrete amounts, or quanta; and for
- quantum unique ergodicity conjecture (mathematics)
Elon Lindenstrauss: …quantum chaos, such as the quantum unique ergodicity conjecture.
- quantum well
nanotechnology: Communications: …dielectric layers as mirrors and quantum wells. Quantum wells allow the charge carriers to be confined in well-defined regions and provide the energy conversion into light at desired wavelengths. They are placed in the laser’s cavity to confine carriers at the nodes of a standing wave and to tailor the…
- quantum yield (physics and electronics)
radiation measurement: Scintillators: …fraction is known as the quantum efficiency of the light sensor. In a silicon photodiode, as many as 80 to 90 percent of the light photons are converted to electron-hole pairs, but in a photomultiplier tube, only about 25 percent of the photons are converted to photoelectrons at the wavelength…
- quantum-mechanical exchange effect (physics)
physical science: Chemistry: …was found to be the quantum-mechanical exchange effect, first described by Heisenberg in 1926–27. Resonance is related to the requirement that the wave function for two or more identical particles must have definite symmetry properties with respect to the coordinates of those particles—it must have plus or minus the same…
- Quantz, Johann Joachim (German musician)
Johann Joachim Quantz was a German composer and flute virtuoso who left an important treatise on the flute and who made mechanical improvements in the instrument. Quantz obtained posts at Radeberg and Dresden and in 1717 studied counterpoint in Vienna with Johann Zelenka and Johann Fux. In 1718 he
- Quanxuepian (work by Zhang Zhidong)
Zhang Zhidong: …1898 he published his famous Quanxuepian (“Exhortation to Learning”), in which he reaffirmed his faith in Confucianism but detailed the measures needed for the acquisition of Western knowledge: study abroad by Chinese students, establishment of a school system, translation of Western and Japanese books, and acquisition of knowledge from foreign…
- Quanza River (river, Angola)
Cuanza River, river in central Angola, rising about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of Chitembo on the Bié Plateau at an elevation of 5,000 feet (1,500 metres). It flows northward for about 320 miles (510 km) and then curves westward to enter the Atlantic Ocean 30 miles (50 km) south of Luanda after a
- Quanzhen (Daoist sect)
Daoism: Internal developments: …Liu Deren (1142); and the Quanzhen (“Perfect Realization”) sect, founded in 1163 by Wang Chongyang (Wang Zhe). This last sect came to the favourable attention of the Mongols, who had taken over in the North, and its second patriarch, Qiu Changqun, was invited into Central Asia to preach to Genghis…
- Quanzhou (China)
Quanzhou, port and city, eastern coastal Fujian sheng (province), China. It is situated on the north bank of the Jin River, at the head of the river’s estuary, facing the Taiwan Strait. Pop. (2002 est.) city, 497,723; (2007 est.) urban agglom., 1,463,000. A Quanzhou prefecture was established there
- Quapaw (people)
Quapaw, North American Indian people of the Dhegiha branch of the Siouan language stock. With the other members of this subgroup (including the Osage, Ponca, Kansa, and Omaha), the Quapaw migrated westward from the Atlantic coast. They settled for a time on the prairies of what is now western
- quarantine (preventive medicine)
quarantine, the separation and restriction of travel of humans or other animals that may have come into contact with an infectious disease. Individuals remain under quarantine until it is deemed certain that they are free of infection. In the vocabulary of disease control, the terms quarantine and
- Quarantine Speech (speech, United States history)
Franklin D. Roosevelt: Foreign policy of Franklin D. Roosevelt: …nations make concerted efforts to quarantine aggressors. Although he seemed to mean nothing more drastic than breaking off diplomatic relations, the proposal created such alarm throughout the country that he quickly backed away from even this modest level of international involvement. Then, in December, the Japanese sank an American gunboat,…
- quarantine station (medicine)
quarantine: Early practices: …Venice set up its first lazaretto, or quarantine station, on an island near the city. The Venetian system became the model for other European countries and the basis for widespread quarantine control for several centuries.
- Quaratesi Polyptych (altarpiece by Gentile da Fabriano)
Gentile da Fabriano: …the altarpiece known as the Quaratesi Polyptych (1425), which show the Mother and Child, regally clad, sitting on the ground in a garden.
- Quare Fellow, The (play by Behan)
The Quare Fellow, play in three acts by Brendan Behan, performed in 1954 and published in 1956. A tragicomedy concerning the reactions of jailers and prisoners to the imminent hanging of a condemned man (the “Quare Fellow”), the play is an explosive statement on capital punishment and prison
- Quare, Daniel (English clockmaker and inventor)
Daniel Quare was a celebrated English clock maker who invented a repeating watch mechanism (1680) that sounded the nearest hour and quarter hour when the owner pushed a pin protruding from the case. He also invented a portable barometer (1695), originally fitted with legs but later designed to hang
- Quarenghi, Giacomo Antonio Domenico (Italian painter and architect)
Giacomo Antonio Domenico Quarenghi was an Italian Neoclassical architect and painter, best known as the builder of numerous works in Russia during and immediately after the reign of Catherine II (the Great). He was named “Grand Architect of all the Russias.” The son of a painter, Quarenghi studied
- quark (subatomic particle)
quark, any member of a group of elementary subatomic particles that interact by means of the strong force and are believed to be among the fundamental constituents of matter. Quarks associate with one another via the strong force to make up protons and neutrons, in much the same way that the latter
- quark-gluon plasma (cosmology)
particle accelerator: Proton storage rings: The aim is to study quark-gluon plasma, a state of matter that is presumed to have existed in the very early universe.
- Quarles, Francis (English poet)
Francis Quarles was a religious poet remembered for his Emblemes, the most notable emblem book in English. The son of a minor court official, Quarles was educated at the University of Cambridge and at Lincoln’s Inn, London. The wealth of Quarles’s family at first allowed him to live a leisured and
- quarrel (weapon)
military technology: The crossbow: This was because crossbow bolts were short and heavy, with a flat base to absorb the initial impact of the string. The flat base and relatively crude leather fins (crossbow bolts were produced in volume and were not as carefully finished as arrows) were aerodynamically inefficient, so that velocity…
- Quarrel & Quandary (essays by Ozick)
Cynthia Ozick: … (1989), Fame & Folly (1996), Quarrel & Quandary (2000), The Din in the Head (2006), and Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and Other Literary Essays (2016).
- Quarropas (New York, United States)
White Plains, city, seat (1778) of Westchester county, New York, U.S. It lies along the Bronx and Hutchinson rivers. Known to the Wappinger Indians as Quarropas (“White Marshes”), probably for the area’s heavy fogs, the site was sold twice (in 1660 and in 1683) by them to different groups, causing
- quarry (mining)
quarry, place where dimension stone or aggregate (sand, gravel, crushed rock) is mined. The products of dimension stone quarries are prismatic blocks of rock such as marble, granite, limestone, sandstone, and slate. After cutting and polishing, these materials are used in the primary construction
- quarry tile (building material)
brick and tile: Quarry tile is a dense pressed fireclay product for floors, patios, and industrial installations in which great resistance to abrasion or acids is required.
- Quarry, Jerry (American boxer)
Jerry Quarry was an American boxer who became a championship heavyweight contender but never a champion. He posted a professional record of 53–9–4 with 33 knockouts and was known as a heavy hitter with a devastating left hook, but some of his biggest fights were lost owing to cuts on his eyebrows.
- quarry-mine shovel (tool)
coal mining: Shovels and trucks: …mines: the stripping shovel, the loading (or quarry-mine) shovel, and the hydraulic shovel. The hydraulic mining shovel has been widely used for coal and rock loading since the 1970s. The hydraulic system of power transmission greatly simplifies the power train, eliminates a number of mechanical components that are present in…
- quarrying (mining)
quarry, place where dimension stone or aggregate (sand, gravel, crushed rock) is mined. The products of dimension stone quarries are prismatic blocks of rock such as marble, granite, limestone, sandstone, and slate. After cutting and polishing, these materials are used in the primary construction
- quarrying, glacial (geology)
glacial landform: Glacial erosion: …generally included under the terms glacial plucking or quarrying. This process involves the removal of larger pieces of rock from the glacier bed. Various explanations for this phenomenon have been proposed. Some of the mechanisms suggested are based on differential stresses in the rock caused by ice being forced to…
- Quarrymen, the (British rock group)
the Beatles, British musical quartet and a global cynosure for the hopes and dreams of a generation that came of age in the 1960s. The principal members were John Lennon (b. October 9, 1940, Liverpool, Merseyside, England—d. December 8, 1980, New York, New York, U.S.), Paul McCartney (in full Sir
- quart (measurement)
quart, unit of capacity in the British Imperial and U.S. Customary systems of measurement. For both liquid and dry measure, the British system uses one standard quart, which is equal to two imperial pints, or one-fourth imperial gallon (69.36 cubic inches, or 1,136.52 cubic cm). The U.S. system has
- Quart livre des faits et dits héroïques du noble Pantagruel (work by Rabelais)
François Rabelais: Le quart livre and final years: …gave his printer his incomplete Quart livre (“Fourth Book”), which, as printed in 1548, finishes in the middle of a sentence but contains some of his most delightful comic storytelling.
- quartan malaria (pathology)
malaria: The course of the disease: …malaria) or 72 hours (quartan malaria), coincide with the synchronized release of each new generation of merozoites into the bloodstream. Often, however, a victim may be infected with different species of parasites at the same time or may have different generations of the same species being released out of…
- quartarus (ancient Roman unit of measurement)
measurement system: Greeks and Romans: … for dry products and the quartarus, sextarius, congius, urna, and amphora for liquids. Since all of these were based on the sextarius and since no two extant sextarii are identical, a mean generally agreed upon today is 35.4 cubic inches, or nearly 1 pint (0.58 litre). The hemina, or half-sextarius,…
- quartation (metallurgy)
parting, in metallurgy, the separation of gold and silver by chemical or electrochemical means. Gold and silver are often extracted together from the same ores or recovered as by-products from the extraction of other metals. A solid mixture of the two, known as bullion, or doré, can be parted by
- quarter (heraldry)
heraldry: Ordinaries: The quarter occupies one-fourth of the shield; the canton, smaller than the quarter, is one-third of the chief. Checky, or chequy, describes the field or charge divided into squares of two tinctures, like a checkerboard. Billets are oblong figures. If their number exceeds 10 and they…
- quarter days (calendar)
quarter days, the days that begin each quarter of the year. In England they are March 25 (Lady Day), June 24 (Midsummer Day), September 29 (Michaelmas Day), and December 25 (Christmas Day). Some local variations of these dates are found. They are the days on which it is usually contracted that
- quarter horse (breed of horse)
American Quarter Horse, one of the oldest recognized breeds of horses in the United States. The breed originated about the 1660s as a cross between native horses of Spanish origin used by the earliest colonists and English horses imported to Virginia from about 1610. By the late 17th century, these
- quarter sessions (law)
quarter sessions, formerly, in England and Wales, sessions of a court held four times a year by a justice of the peace to hear criminal charges as well as civil and criminal appeals. The term also applied to a court held before a recorder, or judge, in a borough having a quarter sessions separate
- quarter tone (music)
Alois Hába: Quarter tones had been used as early as 1849 by the French composer Fromental Halévy, but Hába drew his inspiration from Moravian folk tunes and rhythms, music abounding in microtones. In 1919 he wrote a quarter-tone String Quartet, but his earliest mature work using microtones…
- quarter-horse racing (sport)
quarter-horse racing, in the United States, the racing of horses at great speed for short distances on a straightaway course, originally a quarter of a mile, hence the name. Quarter-horse racing was begun by the early settlers in Virginia shortly after Jamestown was established in 1607.
- quarter-wave plate (instrument)
radiation: Double refraction: …a crystal is called a quarter-wave plate, and the reality of the circular polarization is shown by the fact that, when the quarter-wave plate is suitably suspended and irradiated, a small torque—that is, twisting force—can be shown to be exerted on it. Thus, the action of the crystal on the…
- quarterback (gridiron football)
American football: Tactical developments: …in offenses that featured running quarterbacks—the triple-option schemes such as the wishbone and veer (with the quarterback handing the ball off to a fullback, pitching it to a tailback, or keeping it himself), offenses that were unattractive to the pros because they put quarterbacks at physical risk.
- quarterdeck (ship part)
castle: …aftercastle was superseded by the quarterdeck.
- quartering (heraldry)
heraldry: Quarterings and marshaling: In the quarterings and the marshaling (arrangement of more than one coat of arms on the same shield), the position of heiresses must be considered first. The children of an heraldic heiress are entitled on her death to quarter her arms with…
- quartering (military logistics)
logistics: Facilities: The provision of military facilities, as distinct from fortification, did not become a large and complex sphere of logistic activity until the transformation of warfare in the industrial era. In that transformation the traditional function of providing nightly lodgings or winter quarters for the…
- Quartering Act (Great Britain [1765])
Quartering Act, (1765), in American colonial history, the British parliamentary provision (actually an amendment to the annual Mutiny Act) requiring colonial authorities to provide food, drink, quarters, fuel, and transportation to British forces stationed in their towns or villages. Resentment
- Quarterly earnings and earnings per share: The company profitability snapshot
Peek at a company’s health.Earnings season. That’s the three(ish) week period in mid-to-late January, April, July, and October when the majority of publicly held companies release their revenue, profit, and other financial info. Will the earnings per share (EPS) beat or miss Wall Street analysts’
- Quarterly Pursuit (British periodical)
The Police Gazette, daily publication of the London Metropolitan Police that carries details of stolen property and of persons wanted for crime. It is distributed without charge to British and certain European police forces. The original Gazette, the Quarterly Pursuit, was founded in 1772 by John
- Quarterly Review, The (British periodical)
The Edinburgh Review, or The Critical Journal: …matched only by that of The Quarterly Review.
- quartermaster (army officer)
quartermaster, officer who superintends arrangements for the quartering and movement of troops. In Europe the office dates back at least to the 15th century. During the late 17th century, when the minister of war of King Louis XIV of France reorganized the army, he created a quartermaster general’s
- quarterstaff (weapon)
quarterstaff, a staff of wood from 6 to 9 feet (about 2 to 3 m) long, used for attack and defense. It is probably the cudgel or sapling with which many legendary heroes are described as being armed. The quarterstaff attained great popularity in England during the Middle Ages. It was usually made of
- Quartet (film by Hoffman [2012])
Dustin Hoffman: …as a film director with Quartet, an ensemble comedy about former opera singers residing in an English retirement home. That same year he was named a Kennedy Center honoree.
- quartet (music)
quartet, a musical composition for four instruments or voices; also, the group of four performers. Although any music in four parts can be performed by four individuals, the term has come to be used primarily in referring to the string quartet (two violins, viola, and cello), which has been one of
- quartet (spectroscopy)
chemical compound: Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy: …into four peaks, called a quartet. These multiple peaks are caused by nearby hydrogen atoms through a process termed spin-spin splitting. Each set of equivalent hydrogens on a given carbon is split into an n+1 multiplet by adjacent hydrogen atoms that are nonequivalent to the hydrogens of the given carbon.…