- Squamata (vertebrate)
reptile: Annotated classification: Order Squamata (squamates) Lizards, snakes, and amphisbaenians. Upper Jurassic to present. Two suborders. Parietals fused; Jacobson’s organ with a fungiform projection and separate from nasal cavity, opening only into mouth cavity; paired functional hemipenes. Assorted References
- squamate (vertebrate)
reptile: Annotated classification: Order Squamata (squamates) Lizards, snakes, and amphisbaenians. Upper Jurassic to present. Two suborders. Parietals fused; Jacobson’s organ with a fungiform projection and separate from nasal cavity, opening only into mouth cavity; paired functional hemipenes. Assorted References
- squamous cell carcinoma (pathology)
epithelioma: …include basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma (cancerous epitheliomas are known as carcinomas), two types of skin cancer that involve the inner layers and scalelike outer cells of the skin, respectively; and parathyroid adenoma, a benign tumour of glandular tissue in the parathyroid gland that can cause a condition…
- squamous cell carcinoma in situ (pathology)
skin cancer: Diagnosis and prognosis: …cell carcinoma in situ, or Bowen disease, and is confined to the epidermis. Stage I cancers are 2 cm (approximately 34 inch) or less in size; stage II, more than 2 cm. Neither has spread beyond the skin. Stage III cancers have spread to deeper layers of the skin, underlying…
- squamous epithelium (anatomy)
epithelium: Squamous, or flattened, epithelial cells, very thin and irregular in outline, occur as the covering epithelium of the alveoli of the lung and of the glomeruli and capsule of the kidney. Ciliated epithelium lines the trachea, bronchi of the lungs, parts of the nasal cavities,…
- squamulose thallus (botany)
lichen: Squamulose lichens are small and leafy with loose attachments to the substrate and are usually considered to be a special type of crustose lichen. Foliose lichens are large and leafy, reaching diameters of several feet in some species, and are usually attached to the substrate…
- Squanto (Native American interpreter and guide)
Squanto was a Native American interpreter and guide. Squanto was born into the Pawtuxet people who occupied lands in present-day Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Little is known about his early life. Some authorities believe that he was taken from home to England in 1605 by George Weymouth and
- Squarcione, Francesco (Italian painter)
Francesco Squarcione was an early Renaissance painter who founded the Paduan school and is known for being the teacher of Andrea Mantegna and other noteworthy painters. Squarcione was the son of a notary of Padua. From an early age he began to collect and draw copies of ancient sculptures.
- square (military formation)
Battle of the Pyramids: …tactical innovation, the massive divisional square.
- square (mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: Square and cube roots: In The Nine Chapters, algorithms for finding integral parts of square roots or cube roots on the counting surface are based on the same idea as the arithmetic ones used today. These algorithms are set up on the surface in the…
- square (mathematics)
square, in geometry, a plane figure with four equal sides and four right (90°) angles. A square is a special kind of rectangle (an equilateral one) and a special kind of parallelogram (an equilateral and equiangular one). A square has four axes of symmetry, and its two finite diagonals (as with any
- square (tool)
square, in measurement, device consisting of two straightedges set at right angles to each other. It is used by carpenters and machinists for checking the correctness of right angles, as a guide when drawing lines on materials before cutting, or for locating holes. The tools shown in the Figure are
- square (urban land area)
Western architecture: 17th century: The regularized residential city square received its greatest development in France with the planning of the royal squares. The Parisian Place des Vosges (1605), with its well-proportioned facades, shadowed arcades, and balanced colour scheme, was the beginning of a series that culminated with the circular Place des Victoires (1685)…
- square capital (calligraphy)
majuscule: …in the script known as square capitals and can be seen chiseled in the stone of numerous surviving imperial Roman monuments. Square capitals are distinguished by their slightly heavier downstrokes and lighter upstrokes, and by their use of serifs, i.e., the short lines stemming at right angles from the upper…
- square couplet (poetry)
couplet: A “square” couplet, for example, is a stanza of eight lines, with each line composed of eight syllables. The preeminent English couplet is the heroic couplet, or two rhyming lines of iambic pentameter with a caesura (pause), usually medial, in each line. Introduced by Chaucer in…
- square dance
square dance, dance for four couples (or groups of four couples) standing in square formation, the most popular and widely known type of folk dance in the United States. It was called the square dance to distinguish it from comparable dances called the contra, or longways dance, for a double file
- Square Deal (United States [early 20th century])
Square Deal , description by U.S. Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (served 1901–09) of his personal approach to current social problems and the individual. It embraced Roosevelt’s idealistic view of labour, citizenship, parenthood, and Christian ethics. Roosevelt first used the term following the
- Square Hebrew alphabet
Aramaic alphabet: It is ancestral to Square Hebrew and the modern Hebrew alphabet, the Nabataean and modern Arabic scripts, the Palmyrenian alphabet, and the Syriac, as well as hundreds of other writing systems used
- square Hebrew script (calligraphy)
Hebrew alphabet: …Hebrew and the Classical, or Square, Hebrew. Early Hebrew was the alphabet used by the Jewish nation in the period before the Babylonian Exile—i.e., prior to the 6th century bce—although some inscriptions in this alphabet may be of a later date. Several hundred inscriptions exist. As is usual in early…
- square knot
knot: A square knot is composed of two overhand knots turned in opposite ways. It flattens when pulled tight, making it useful in first aid and for tying packages. A surgeon’s knot is an elaborated form of the square knot; it is composed of two overhand knots…
- square law of attrition (naval warfare)
naval warfare: The age of steam and big gun: …“N-square law” and the “square law of attrition”: success would build on itself, so that any small advantage at the outset of an engagement would compound in favour of the superior force. With long-range gunnery, the advantage accrued fleet-wide, not merely ship by ship as in the days of…
- square matrix (mathematics)
matrix: …n columns is called a square matrix of order n. An ordinary number can be regarded as a 1 × 1 matrix; thus, 3 can be thought of as the matrix [3]. A matrix with only one row and n columns is called a row vector, and a matrix with…
- Square Mile, The (borough, London, United Kingdom)
City of London, municipal corporation and borough, London, England. Sometimes called “the Square Mile,” it is one of the 33 boroughs that make up the large metropolis of Greater London. The borough lies on the north bank of the River Thames between the Temple Bar memorial pillar (commemorating the
- square number (mathematics)
East Asian mathematics: Square and cube roots: In The Nine Chapters, algorithms for finding integral parts of square roots or cube roots on the counting surface are based on the same idea as the arithmetic ones used today. These algorithms are set up on the surface in the…
- Square of Three Powers (square, Brasilia, Brazil)
Brasília: City layout: …and legislative buildings around the Square of Three Powers, the conceptual heart of the city.
- Square One (music group)
soca: …from Barbados, and her band Square One rose to international soca stardom, and they remained perennial performers at Carnival in Trinidad until they broke up in 2004.
- Square Pegs (American television program)
Sarah Jessica Parker: …nerd in the television series Square Pegs. Although the show lasted only one season, it developed a cultlike following and led to several film offers, including Footloose (1984) and Girls Just Want to Have Fun (1985).
- square piano (musical instrument)
square piano, musical instrument that was popular for domestic music-making from the time of its invention in the mid-18th century (possibly by the Saxon organ-builder Ernst Christian Friderici) to about 1860 in Europe and to about 1880 in the United States. This type of piano was introduced in
- square plan (architecture)
architecture: Symbols of function: In Hindu temples, the square (and the cross plans developed from it) expressed celestial harmony. The central-plan Christian church (circle, polygon, Greek cross, ellipse) fascinated the architects of the Renaissance with its symbolic and traditional values, and it is found in their drawings and treatises to the virtual exclusion…
- square planar arrangement (molecular shape)
coordination compound: Geometry: Two common forms are the square planar, in which four ligands are arranged at the corners of a hypothetical square around the central metal atom, and the octahedral, in which six ligands are arranged, four in a plane and one each above and below the plane. Altering the position of…
- square root (mathematics)
square root, in mathematics, a factor of a number that, when multiplied by itself, gives the original number. For example, both 3 and –3 are square roots of 9. As early as the 2nd millennium bc, the Babylonians possessed effective methods for approximating square roots. See
- square root law (mathematics)
probability theory: The central limit theorem: …equation also illustrates clearly the square root law: the accuracy of X̄n as an estimator of μ is inversely proportional to the square root of the sample size n.
- square sail (watercraft part)
square sail, simplest form of rigging and the most ancient. The sails are attached to yards (crossbars) that are hung at their centres from the mast, and there are as many as five yards, one above the other. The characteristic of the square sail, apart from its shape, is that it always presents the
- square script (calligraphy)
Hebrew alphabet: …Hebrew and the Classical, or Square, Hebrew. Early Hebrew was the alphabet used by the Jewish nation in the period before the Babylonian Exile—i.e., prior to the 6th century bce—although some inscriptions in this alphabet may be of a later date. Several hundred inscriptions exist. As is usual in early…
- Square the Circle (album by Armatrading)
Joan Armatrading: Notable later releases included Square the Circle (1992), Lovers Speak (2003), the Grammy Award-nominated Into the Blues (2007), Starlight (2013), Not Too Far Away (2018), and Consequences (2021), all of which she produced herself. Armatrading also wrote the music for Phyllida
- square turret (machinery)
machine tool: Turret lathes: …the turret lathe is the square turret mounted on the cross slide. This turret also can be rotated about its vertical axis and permits the use of a variety of turning tools. A tool post, or tool block, can be clamped to the rear of the cross slide for mounting…
- Square, Inc. (American company)
Jack Dorsey: …cofounded and became CEO of Square, a mobile-payments venture that offered devices and software to facilitate credit card transactions. It launched in 2010 and by 2012 had more than two million users. Square initially was available only in North America, but it expanded to overseas markets in 2013, when its…
- square-flipper (mammal)
bearded seal, (Erignathus barbatus), nonmigratory seal of the family Phocidae, distinguished by the bushy, bristly whiskers for which it is named; it is also known as “squareflipper” after the rectangular shape of the foreflipper. Highly valued by Eskimos for its hide, meat, and blubber, the
- square-lipped rhinoceros (mammal)
northern white rhinoceros, (Ceratotherium simum cottoni), critically endangered subspecies of the white rhinoceros and the most endangered animal on Earth. The northern white rhinoceros formerly inhabited South Sudan and adjacent areas of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with its
- square-lipped rhinoceros (mammal)
southern white rhinoceros, (Ceratotherium simum simum), subspecies of the white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The largest rhinoceros group in terms of population, the southern white rhinoceros is found almost exclusively in southern Africa from Angola and Namibia eastward through Botswana,
- square-lipped rhinoceros (mammal)
perissodactyl: Rhinoceroses: …rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis) and the white or square-lipped rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). The terms black and white are misleading, since both species are grayish to brownish, but the names are well established in common usage.
- squared rectangle (mathematical game)
number game: Geometric dissections: …so-called squaring the square, or squared rectangles. Thus, the problem of subdividing a square into smaller squares, no two of which are alike, which was long thought to be unsolvable, has been solved by the means of network theory. In this connection, a squared rectangle is a rectangle that can…
- squarehead catfish (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Chacidae (squarehead catfishes) Head broad, long, depressed, mouth terminal, wide. Eastern India to Borneo. 1 genus, 3 species. Family Malapteruridae (electric catfishes) Rayed dorsal fin lacking; spines lacking. Electric organs. Food fishes. Size to 1.2 metres (about 4 feet), 23 kg (50 pounds). Africa.
- squaretail (fish, family Tetragonuridae)
perciform: Annotated classification: Ariommidae, Amarsipidae, and Tetragonuridae Eocene to present; slender to ovate, deep-bodied fishes; dorsal fin continuous or spinous portion set off from soft portion by deep notch; in the most generalized species, which resemble Kyphosidae, the soft dorsal is preceded by about 6 low, stoutish spines; other species resemble…
- squaretail (fish)
brook trout, (Salvelinus fontinalis), popular freshwater game fish, a variety of char, regarded for its flavour and its fighting qualities when hooked. The brook trout belongs to the salmon family, Salmonidae. A native of the northeastern United States and Canada, it has been transplanted to many
- squaring (rowing)
rowing: Stroke and style of training: …for the catch is called squaring.
- squaring (art)
squaring, in painting, simple technique for transferring an image from one surface to another (and sometimes converting the image from one scale to another) by nonmechanical means. The original work to be transferred is divided into a given number of squares; the same number of squares is then
- Squaring the Circle (work by Katayev)
Valentin Katayev: …comic play Kvadratura kruga (1928; Squaring the Circle) portrays the effect of the housing shortage on two married couples who share a room. Beleyet parus odinoky (1936; Lonely White Sail, or A White Sail Gleams), another novel, treats the 1905 revolution from the viewpoint of two Odessa schoolboys; it was…
- squaring the circle (geometry)
Quadrature of the Lune: …that someone had accomplished the squaring of the circle. Whether the unknown genius used lunes or some other method is not known, since for lack of space Boethius did not give the demonstration. He thus transmitted the challenge of the quadrature of the circle together with fragments of geometry apparently…
- squaring the square (mathematical game)
number game: Geometric dissections: …deserves brief mention, the so-called squaring the square, or squared rectangles. Thus, the problem of subdividing a square into smaller squares, no two of which are alike, which was long thought to be unsolvable, has been solved by the means of network theory. In this connection, a squared rectangle is…
- squark (physics)
supersymmetry: …the names of selectrons and squarks. Similarly, known bosons such as the photon and the gluon should have fermionic supersymmetric partners, called the photino and the gluino. There has been no experimental evidence that such “superparticles” exist. If they do indeed exist, their masses could be in the range of…
- squash (plant)
squash, (genus Cucurbita), genus of flowering plants in the gourd family (Cucurbitaceae), many of which are widely cultivated as vegetables and for livestock feed. Squashes are native to the New World, where they were cultivated by indigenous peoples before European settlement. The fruit of edible
- squash (game)
squash rackets, singles or doubles game played in a four-walled court with a long-handled strung racket and a small rubber ball. The game is played on exactly the same principle as rackets but in a smaller court. Squash is usually played by two people, but it can be played by four (doubles). Two
- squash beetle (insect)
ladybug: Two of these are the squash beetle (Epilachna borealis) and the Mexican bean beetle (E. varivestis).
- squash bug (insect species)
coreid bug: …in North America is the squash bug (Anasa tristis), an important pest of squash, melon, and pumpkin. It is about 15 mm (0.6 inch) long; and, although its basic colour is dull tan, it is covered with so many dark pits that it appears to be brown or black. Squash…
- squash bug (insect)
coreid bug, (family Coreidae), any of 2,000 widely distributed species of bugs (order Heteroptera), many of which are important plant pests. Coreid bugs are large, usually more than 10 mm (0.4 inch) in length. They occur in a wide range of environments and vary in size, shape, and colour. Their
- squash family (plant family)
Cucurbitaceae, the gourd family of flowering plants, belonging to the order Cucurbitales and containing 98 genera and about 975 species of food and ornamental plants. Members of the family are annual or perennial herbs native to temperate and tropical areas and include cucumbers, gourds, melons,
- squash rackets (game)
squash rackets, singles or doubles game played in a four-walled court with a long-handled strung racket and a small rubber ball. The game is played on exactly the same principle as rackets but in a smaller court. Squash is usually played by two people, but it can be played by four (doubles). Two
- squash racquets (game)
squash rackets, singles or doubles game played in a four-walled court with a long-handled strung racket and a small rubber ball. The game is played on exactly the same principle as rackets but in a smaller court. Squash is usually played by two people, but it can be played by four (doubles). Two
- squash technique (biology)
genetics: Cytogenetics: …the development of the so-called squash technique, in which entire cells are pressed flat on a piece of glass and observed through a microscope; the human chromosomes were numbered using this technique.
- squash tennis (game)
squash tennis, racket game resembling squash rackets played by two people only in a four-walled court using a lively inflated ball that bounces very fast and is the size of a tennis ball. The game requires great speed in anticipation and turning. Squash tennis is played in the same court as squash
- squash vine borer (insect)
clearwing moth: The squash vine borer (Melittia) occurs east of the Rocky Mountains from Canada to South America (as the North American M. cucurbitae and the Colombian M. satyriniformis). It is a serious pest of squash and related plants such as gourds, pumpkins, and cucumbers. Eggs are deposited…
- squash-head shell (ammunition)
artillery: Antitank guns: The squash-head shell used a plastic explosive filling, which, deposited on the armour and then detonated, drove a shock wave through the plate. This resulted in the failure of the inner face and the ejection of a massive slab of metal into the tank.
- squat (weightlifting)
powerlifting: The squat, or deep knee bend, where the top of the lifter’s thighs must drop to or below parallel with the ground, demonstrates leg power. The bench press, done from a prone position and requiring a pause of the barbell at the chest, shows upper-body strength.…
- Squatarola squatarola (bird)
plover: … (Pluvialis species) and black-bellied (Squatarola squatarola), are finely patterned dark and light above and black below in breeding dress. These two genera are sometimes included in Charadrius.
- Squatina (fish genus)
angel shark, (genus Squatina), any of at least 22 species of sharks that constitute a single genus (family Squatinidae, order Squatiniformes) characterized by flattened heads and bodies, with winglike pectoral and pelvic fins that make them resemble rays. The tail bears two dorsal fins and a
- Squatina squatina (fish species)
angel shark: …the common angel shark (Squatina squatina), which resides in the waters bordering northern Europe, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Canary Islands, is popular among recreational anglers.
- Squatinidae (fish family)
chondrichthyan: Annotated classification: Squatinoidei Family Squatinidae (angel sharks) Characterized by flattened body, eyes on upper surface; anterior margin of pectoral fins far overlapping gill openings, which are partly on side of body; no anal fin. Largest up to about 2.4 metres (about 8 feet). Ovoviviparous. 1 genus; possibly as many…
- squatter (Australian history)
squatter, in 19th-century Australian history, an illegal occupier of crown grazing land beyond the prescribed limits of settlement. The inroad of squatters contributed to the growth of the country’s wool industry and to the development of a powerful social class in Australian life. By the late
- squatter sovereignty (historical United States political doctrine)
popular sovereignty, in U.S. history, a controversial political doctrine according to which the people of federal territories should decide for themselves whether their territories would enter the Union as free or slave states. Its enemies, especially in New England, called it “squatter
- squatter’s rights (United States history)
preemption, in U.S. history, policy by which first settlers, or “squatters,” on public lands could purchase the property they had improved. Squatters who settled on and improved unsurveyed land were at risk that when the land was surveyed and put up for auction speculators would capture it.
- squaw grass (plant)
bear grass: Physical description: tenax), is also known as elk grass and fire lily. It is a light green mountain perennial with a stout unbranched stem, 0.6 to 2 metres (2 to 6 feet) high, which rises from a tuberlike rootstock and cordlike roots. The stem bears a dense basal tuft of narrow rough-edged…
- Squaw Man, The (film by DeMille [1914])
Samuel Goldwyn: deMille’s Squaw Man (1913), one of the first full-length feature films made in Hollywood. In 1917 the company merged with Adolph Zukor’s Famous Players Film Company, and Goldwyn became the chairman of the board of the Famous Players–Lasky Company. That same year he established the Goldwyn…
- Squaw Man, The (American play)
William S. Hart: …his role in the play The Squaw Man made him a western hero. After acting in the stage productions of The Virginian (1907) and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1912/14), he went to Hollywood, where his portrayals of stern, taciturn Westerners became enormously successful. He directed and starred in…
- squaw tea (beverage)
ephedra: Major species and uses: …tealike preparation known variously as Mormon tea, Mexican tea, and desert tea.
- squaw vine (plant)
partridgeberry, (Mitchella repens), North American plant of the madder family (Rubiaceae), growing in dry woods from southwestern Newfoundland westward to Minnesota and southward to Florida and Texas. Partridgeberry is a good wild-garden plant for shady places and is popular in winter terrariums
- squawberry (plant)
partridgeberry, (Mitchella repens), North American plant of the madder family (Rubiaceae), growing in dry woods from southwestern Newfoundland westward to Minnesota and southward to Florida and Texas. Partridgeberry is a good wild-garden plant for shady places and is popular in winter terrariums
- squawfish (fish)
squawfish, any of several edible fishes of the genus Ptychocheilus found in the rivers of western North America. They are the largest members of the carp family (Cyprinidae) in North America. Because of the offensive connotation attributed to the word “squaw,” these animals are also referred to as
- Squeers, Wackford (fictional character)
Wackford Squeers, fictional character, the cruel headmaster of Dotheboys Hall in the novel Nicholas Nickleby (1838–39) by Charles
- Squeeze (British rock group)
new wave: Graham Parker, and Elvis Costello; Squeeze and XTC, whose songs were sophisticated and infectious; ska revivalists such as Madness and the Specials; genre-hopping Joe Jackson; synthesizer bands such as Human League, Heaven 17, and A Flock of Seagulls; and the so-called
- squeeze play (baseball)
baseball: Advancing base runners and scoring: Similar to a sacrifice, the squeeze play uses the bunt to score a runner from third base. The runner also may advance on a fly ball or line drive that is caught for an out. The runner may “tag up” (reestablish contact with the base) and, the moment the ball…
- squeeze-bore gun (weaponry)
artillery: Antitank guns: …projectile’s velocity, and the “taper-bore” or “squeeze-bore” gun proved formidable. Guns with tapering calibres of 28/20, 41/29, and 75/55 millimetres were developed, but wartime shortages of tungsten led to their abandonment after 1942. In 1944 Britain perfected “discarding-sabot” projectiles, in which a tungsten core was supported in a conventional…
- Squibb Corporation (American corporation)
E. R. Squibb: Squibb & Sons.
- Squibb, Edward Robinson (American chemist)
E. R. Squibb was a U.S. chemist and pharmaceutical manufacturer who developed methods of making pure and reliable drugs and founded a company to manufacture them. During the four years when Squibb served on various ships as a U.S. Navy medical officer, he observed the poor quality of medicines
- Squibb, Edward Robinson (American chemist)
E. R. Squibb was a U.S. chemist and pharmaceutical manufacturer who developed methods of making pure and reliable drugs and founded a company to manufacture them. During the four years when Squibb served on various ships as a U.S. Navy medical officer, he observed the poor quality of medicines
- squid (cephalopod order)
squid, any of more than 300 species of 10-armed cephalopods classified within the order Teuthoidea (or Teuthida) and found in both coastal and oceanic waters. Squids may be swift swimmers or part of the drifting sea life (plankton). Squids have elongated tubular bodies and short compact heads. Two
- SQUID (sensor)
Josephson effect: …to the operation of the superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID), which is a very sensitive detector of magnetic fields. It is used to measure tiny variations in the magnetic field of the Earth and also of the human body.
- Squid and the Whale, The (film by Baumbach [2005])
Noah Baumbach: Film career: His script for The Squid and the Whale began as a memoir about living through his parents’ divorce. On subsequent drafts, it was transformed into fiction, but heavy elements of autobiography remained, such as his parents’ awkward custody arrangement. Baumbach even used his parents’ book collections as props…
- Squid Game (South Korean television series)
Lee Jung-Jae: …in the hit Netflix series Squid Game (2021– ; Ojing-eo geim). Before joining the cast, Lee built a diverse and award-winning career in Korean television and film.
- Squier, E G (American archaeologist)
E. G. Squier was a U.S. newspaper editor, diplomat, and archaeologist who, with the physician and archaeologist Edwin H. Davis, conducted the first major study of the remains of the pre-Columbian North American Mound Builders. He also carried out explorations in Central America, Peru, and Bolivia
- Squier, Ephraim George (American archaeologist)
E. G. Squier was a U.S. newspaper editor, diplomat, and archaeologist who, with the physician and archaeologist Edwin H. Davis, conducted the first major study of the remains of the pre-Columbian North American Mound Builders. He also carried out explorations in Central America, Peru, and Bolivia
- squill (plant)
squill, (genus Scilla), genus of about 100 species of bulbous plants (family Asparagaceae, formerly Hyacinthaceae) native to temperate Eurasia. Some spring-flowering species are cultivated as garden ornamentals. Siberian squill (Scilla siberica) has escaped cultivation and is considered an invasive
- squill (drug)
pharmaceutical industry: Medicines of ancient civilizations: …for pain relief, and, while squill was used for a time as a cardiac stimulant, it is better known as a rat poison. Although many of the medicinal preparations used by Galen are obsolete, he made many important conceptual contributions to modern medicine. For example, he was among the first…
- Squilla (crustacean genus)
mantis shrimp: …especially members of the genus Squilla. Mantis shrimps are so called because the second pair of limbs are greatly enlarged and shaped like the large grasping forelimbs of the praying mantid, or mantis, an insect. They use these appendages to smash through the shells of bivalved mollusks and other hard-shelled…
- squinch (architecture)
squinch, in architecture, any of several devices by which a square or polygonal room has its upper corners filled in to form a support for a dome: by corbelling out the courses of masonry, each course projecting slightly beyond the one below; by building one or more arches diagonally across the
- squint (architecture)
hagioscope, in architecture, any opening, usually oblique, cut through a wall or a pier in the chancel of a church to enable the congregation—in transepts or chapels, from which the altar would not otherwise be visible—to witness the elevation of the host (the eucharistic bread) during mass.
- squint (physiology)
strabismus, misalignment of the eyes. The deviant eye may be directed inward toward the other eye (cross-eye, or esotropia), outward, away from the other eye (exotropia), upward (hypertropia), or downward (hypotropia). The deviation is called “concomitant” if it remains constant in all directions
- squire (European history)
France: Rural society: …reserving the designation of “squire” (or donzel, in the south) for those of noble birth awaiting or postponing the expensive dubbing (adoubement). At the upper extreme, a noble elite, the barons, achieved recognition in administration and law.
- Squire’s Tale, The (story by Chaucer)
The Squire’s Tale, one of the 24 stories in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. The Squire relates an incomplete tale of the Tartar king Cambyuskan (Cambuscan), who receives four magical gifts: a brass horse that can fly anywhere safely but at astonishing speed, a sword that can penetrate
- Squire, Chris (British musician)
Yes: …25, 1944, Accrington, Lancashire, England), Chris Squire (b. March 4, 1948, London, England—d. June 27, 2015, Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.), Steve Howe (b. April 8, 1947, London), Rick Wakeman (b. May 18, 1949, London), and Alan White (b. June 14, 1949, Pelton, Durham, England—d. May 26, 2022, Newcastle, Washington, U.S.). Other…