- Lord, Otis Phillips (American jurist)
Emily Dickinson: Mature career of Emily Dickinson: …conducted a passionate romance with Otis Phillips Lord, an elderly judge on the supreme court of Massachusetts. The letters she apparently sent Lord reveal her at her most playful, alternately teasing and confiding. In declining an erotic advance or his proposal of marriage, she asked, “Dont you know you are…
- Lord, Phillips H. (American director and producer)
radio: Police and detective dramas: By June 1935 producer-writer-director Phillips H. Lord had conceived a series based on the exploits of FBI agents. His new show went on the air as G-Men, but, as FBI head J. Edgar Hoover showed increasing disapproval of the series, the show was revamped as Gangbusters. Like Calling All…
- Lord, Presentation of the (religious festival)
Candlemas, Christian festival on February 2 commemorating the occasion when the Virgin Mary, in obedience to Jewish law, went to the Temple in Jerusalem both to be purified 40 days after the birth of her son, Jesus, and to present him to God as her firstborn (Luke 2:22–38). The festival was
- Lord, Stanley (British Captain)
Titanic: U.S. inquiry: Stanley Lord, who had retired for the night. Instead of ordering the ship’s wireless operator to turn on the radio, Lord instead told the men to continue to use the Morse lamp. By 2:00 am the nearby ship had reportedly sailed away.
- Lord, The (religion)
Jesus: The Lord: As passages like the fourth verse of the first chapter of Romans show, the phrase “Jesus Christ our Lord” was one of the ways the apostolic church expressed its understanding of what he had been and done. Luke even put the title into…
- Lord, Tracy (American singer)
Little Anthony and the Imperials: 24, 1941, Brooklyn), Tracy Lord, and Nat Rogers (byname of Glouster Rogers).
- Lördagssällskapet (Finnish cultural organization)
Finnish literature: Literature in Swedish: …centred on the Lördagssällskapet (Saturday Society), a group of young men that counted among its members, in addition to Runeberg, Johan Vilhelm Snellman, Zacharias Topelius, and, as an occasional guest, Elias Lönnrot. Although writing in Swedish, members of the Saturday Society were conscious of creating a culture and a…
- Lorde (New Zealand singer)
Lorde is a New Zealand singer-songwriter known for lyrics that exhibit a mature, jaded worldview. Yelich-O’Connor was raised in the suburbs of Auckland and demonstrated a knack for public performance at an early age. At age 12 she was signed to a development contract with the Universal Music Group
- Lorde, Audre (American poet and author)
Audre Lorde was an American poet, essayist, and autobiographer known for her passionate writings on lesbian feminism and racial issues. The daughter of Grenadan parents, Lorde attended Hunter College and received a B.A. in 1959 and a master’s degree in library science in 1961. She married in 1962
- Lorde, Audre Geraldine (American poet and author)
Audre Lorde was an American poet, essayist, and autobiographer known for her passionate writings on lesbian feminism and racial issues. The daughter of Grenadan parents, Lorde attended Hunter College and received a B.A. in 1959 and a master’s degree in library science in 1961. She married in 1962
- lordosis (pathology)
curvature of the spine: Lordosis, or swayback, is an increased curvature in the lumbar (middle-to-lower) region of the vertebral column, and it may be associated with spondylolisthesis, inflammation of the intervertebral disk, or obesity. Kyphosis, commonly called roundback, humpback, or hunchback, is an increased curvature of the thoracic (upper)…
- lords appellants (English history)
Richard II: Early years: The Lords Appellant, as they were now called—the duke of Gloucester and the earls of Warwick, Arundel, Nottingham, and Derby—mobilized their retinues in self-defense. Richard dispatched his friend Robert de Vere southward with an armed force, but de Vere was defeated at Radcot Bridge on December…
- Lords Commissioners of Trade and Plantations (historical English governmental advisory body)
Board of Trade, English governmental advisory body established by William III in May 1696 to replace the Lords of Trade (1675) in the supervision of colonial affairs. The board was to examine colonial legislation and to recommend disallowance of those laws that conflicted with imperial trade
- Lords of Discipline, The (film by Roddam [1983])
Bill Paxton: …studio films Stripes [1981] and The Lords of Discipline [1983]), Paxton was cast by James Cameron in his sci-fi films The Terminator (1984) and Aliens (1986). Paxton’s portrayal of an unnerved redneck marine in the latter won him favourable notice. He was also memorable as an obnoxious older brother in…
- Lords of Dogtown (film by Hardwicke)
Heath Ledger: …pioneering skateboarder Skip Engblom in Lords of Dogtown and as the legendary title character in the comedy Casanova. Ledger drew further praise as a heroin addict in Candy (2006). His sympathetic turn as the taciturn and tormented cowboy Ennis Del Mar in director Ang Lee’s Brokeback Mountain (2005) won him…
- Lords, House of (British government)
House of Lords, the upper chamber of Great Britain’s bicameral legislature. Originated in the 11th century, when the Anglo-Saxon kings consulted witans (councils) composed of religious leaders and the monarch’s ministers, it emerged as a distinct element of Parliament in the 13th and 14th
- lords-and-ladies (plant)
cuckoopint, (Arum maculatum), tuberous herb of the arum family (Araceae), native to southern Europe and northern Africa. Like many other aroids, cuckoopint contains a bitter, sometimes poisonous, sap; the red berries are particularly toxic. In England, where it is common in woods and hedgerows, it
- lordship (social class)
feudal land tenure: …was held by tenants from lords. As developed in medieval England and France, the king was lord paramount with numerous levels of lesser lords down to the occupying tenant.
- lordship, marcher (British history)
Monmouthshire: …area as one of the marcher lordships. These landed estates in eastern Wales and western England were independent of the English crown’s direct legal control, which gave rise to much lawlessness in the region.
- Lore, Francesco della (Italian architect)
Western architecture: Eastern Europe: … was begun by the Italian Francesco della Lore and continued by Bartolommeo Berecci of Florence. It presents a blend of local Gothic and 15th-century Italian architecture. The great courtyard has three stories of loggias; the two lower ones, with semicircular arches on squat Ionic columns, suggest the new style, but…
- loreal pit (anatomy)
snake: Form and function: …of a heat-sensitive depression, the loreal pit, located between the eye and the nostril, and the venom apparatus, which enabled them to stay in one place and wait for their prey, rather than engaging in a continuous active search for food. Similarly, some of the largest nonvenomous snakes (boas, anacondas,…
- Loredan, Pietro (Venetian admiral)
Pietro Loredan was a Venetian nobleman and admiral who became one of the city’s popular heroes. His naval achievements ensured Venice’s supremacy over its trading rivals in the Mediterranean and made it the dominant power in northeast Italy in the 15th century. As captain of the Venetian fleet he
- Loreev XR (drug)
lorazepam, drug used in the treatment of anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, and epilepsy, as a sedative, and to induce amnesia, generally in the context of surgical procedures. Lorazepam was approved for these uses by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1977. It is marketed under
- Lorelei (German legend)
Lorelei, German legend of a beautiful maiden who threw herself into the Rhine River in despair over a faithless lover and was transformed into a siren who lured fishermen to destruction. The myth is associated with a large rock named Lorelei, which stands on the bank of the Rhine River near Sankt
- Lorelei (rock, Germany)
Lorelei, large rock on the bank at a narrows of the Rhine River near Sankt Goarshausen, Germany. The rock produces an echo and is associated with the legend of a beautiful maiden who threw herself into the Rhine in despair over a faithless lover and was transformed into a siren who lured fishermen
- Loreley (rock, Germany)
Lorelei, large rock on the bank at a narrows of the Rhine River near Sankt Goarshausen, Germany. The rock produces an echo and is associated with the legend of a beautiful maiden who threw herself into the Rhine in despair over a faithless lover and was transformed into a siren who lured fishermen
- Loreley (German legend)
Lorelei, German legend of a beautiful maiden who threw herself into the Rhine River in despair over a faithless lover and was transformed into a siren who lured fishermen to destruction. The myth is associated with a large rock named Lorelei, which stands on the bank of the Rhine River near Sankt
- Lorem ipsum (publishing)
Lorem ipsum, placeholder or dummy text used in typesetting and graphic design for previewing layouts. It features scrambled Latin text, which emphasizes the design over content of the layout. It is the standard placeholder text of the printing and publishing industries. Its name derives from the
- Loren, Sophia (Italian actress)
Sophia Loren is an Italian film actress who rose above her poverty-stricken origins in postwar Naples to become universally recognized as one of Italy’s most beautiful women and its most famous movie star. Before working in the cinema, Sofia Scicolone changed her last name to Lazzaro for work in
- Lorengau (Papua New Guinea)
Lorengau, town, northeastern Manus Island, Papua New Guinea, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It lies on Seeadler Harbour. Captured by the Japanese in 1942, the settlement was retaken by Allied forces in 1944 and eventually became part of a large U.S. naval and air base. As a port, the town handles the
- Lorengel (epic poem)
Lohengrin: …an anonymous 15th-century epic called Lorengel. The latter was the chief source used by the 19th-century composer and librettist Richard Wagner for his opera Lohengrin (first performed on Aug. 28, 1850, at Weimar, Ger.).
- Lorentz force (physics)
Lorentz force, the force exerted on a charged particle q moving with velocity v through an electric field E and magnetic field B. The entire electromagnetic force F on the charged particle is called the Lorentz force (after the Dutch physicist Hendrik A. Lorentz) and is given by F = qE + qv × B.
- Lorentz transformations (physics)
Lorentz transformations, set of equations in relativity physics that relate the space and time coordinates of two systems moving at a constant velocity relative to each other. Required to describe high-speed phenomena approaching the speed of light, Lorentz transformations formally express the
- Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon (Dutch physicist)
Hendrik Antoon Lorentz was a Dutch physicist and joint winner (with Pieter Zeeman) of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1902 for his theory of electromagnetic radiation, which, confirmed by findings of Zeeman, gave rise to Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity. In his doctoral thesis at the
- Lorentz, Pare (American filmmaker)
Pare Lorentz was an American filmmaker whose government-sponsored documentaries focused attention on the waste of human and natural resources in the United States in the 1930s. Lorentz was a well-known movie critic in New York City when, in 1935, he was requested to set up a federal government film
- Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction (physics)
Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction, in relativity physics, the shortening of an object along the direction of its motion relative to an observer. Dimensions in other directions are not contracted. The concept of the contraction was proposed by the Irish physicist George FitzGerald in 1889, and it was
- Lorenz, Edward (American meteorologist and mathematician)
Edward Lorenz was an American meteorologist and discoverer of the underlying mechanism of deterministic chaos, one of the principles of complexity. After receiving degrees from Dartmouth College and Harvard University in mathematics, Lorenz turned to weather forecasting in 1942 with the U.S. Army
- Lorenz, Edward Norton (American meteorologist and mathematician)
Edward Lorenz was an American meteorologist and discoverer of the underlying mechanism of deterministic chaos, one of the principles of complexity. After receiving degrees from Dartmouth College and Harvard University in mathematics, Lorenz turned to weather forecasting in 1942 with the U.S. Army
- Lorenz, George (American disc jockey)
George (“Hound Dog”) Lorenz: Music lovers in more than a dozen states along the Eastern Seaboard in the 1950s tuned in to “the Sound of the Hound,” George (“Hound Dog”) Lorenz, who broadcast on 50,000-watt WKBW in Buffalo, New York. Lorenz began in Buffalo radio in the late 1940s;…
- Lorenz, Konrad (Austrian zoologist)
Konrad Lorenz was an Austrian zoologist and the founder of modern ethology, the study of animal behaviour by means of comparative zoological methods. His ideas contributed to an understanding of how behavioral patterns may be traced to an evolutionary past, and he was also known for his work on the
- Lorenzaccio (Italian writer and assassin)
Lorenzino de’ Medici was the assassin of Alessandro, duke of Florence. Lorenzino was one of the more-noted writers of the Medici family; he was the son of one Pierfrancesco of a younger, cadet branch of the Medici. Lorenzino was a writer of considerable elegance, the author of several plays, one of
- Lorenzaccio (work by Musset)
French literature: Musset: Lorenzaccio) is the one indisputable masterpiece of Romantic theatre. A drama set in Renaissance Florence but with clear links to the disillusionment of post-1830 France is combined with a brilliant psychological study of a once pure but now debauched hero almost paralyzed by doubt. The…
- Lorenzetti, Ambrogio (Italian painter)
Ambrogio Lorenzetti was an Italian artist who ranks in importance with the greatest of the Italian Sienese painters, Duccio and Simone Martini. He is also the younger brother of painter Pietro Lorenzetti. Only six documented works of Ambrogio, apparently covering a period of merely 13 years, have
- Lorenzetti, Pietro (Italian painter)
Pietro Lorenzetti was an Italian Gothic painter of the Sienese school who, with his brother Ambrogio, was the principal exponent of Sienese secular art in the years before the Black Death. Little is known of Lorenzetti’s life, and the attribution and dating of many of the works associated with him
- Lorenzini, ampulla of (anatomy)
lateral line system: …modified to become electroreceptors called ampullae of Lorenzini. These receptors are concentrated on the heads of sharks and can detect the minute electrical potentials generated by the muscle contractions of prey. Ampullae of Lorenzini can also detect Earth’s electromagnetic field, and sharks apparently use these electroreceptors for homing and migration.
- Lorenzini, Carlo (Italian author)
C. Collodi was an Italian author and journalist, best known as the creator of Pinocchio, the childlike puppet whose adventures delight children around the world. As a young man Collodi joined the seminary. The cause of Italian national unification usurped his calling, however, as he took to
- Lorenzo (pope)
Clement XIV was the pope from 1769 to 1774. Educated by the Jesuits at Rimini, he joined the Conventual Franciscans at Mondaino, taking the religious name of Lorenzo. After holding various academic offices, he was made cardinal in 1759 by Pope Clement XIII because he was supposed to be friendly
- Lorenzo da Brindisi, San (Christian saint)
St. Lawrence of Brindisi ; canonized 1881; feast day July 21) was a doctor of the church and one of the leading polemicists of the Counter-Reformation in Germany. He joined the Capuchin Friars Minor, a strict offshoot of the Franciscans, at Verona, Italy, in 1575, taking the name Lorenzo
- Lorenzo di Credi (Italian artist)
Andrea del Verrocchio: Medici patronage: …directed by his favourite student, Lorenzo di Credi. Di Credi was also the administrator and principal heir of Verrocchio’s estate.
- Lorenzo il Magnifico (Italian statesman)
Lorenzo de’ Medici was a Florentine statesman, ruler, and patron of arts and letters, the most brilliant of the Medici. He ruled Florence with his younger brother, Giuliano (1453–78), from 1469 to 1478 and, after the latter’s assassination, was the sole ruler from 1478 to 1492. Upon the death of
- Lorenzo Monaco (Italian painter)
Lorenzo Monaco was an artist who was the last great exponent of late Gothic painting in what is now Italy. Lorenzo Monaco’s output and stylistic interests (incorporating the gold-leaf background typical of Byzantine art) represent the final gasp of gold-ground brilliance in Florentine art. Lorenzo
- Lorenzo Pagans and Auguste De Gas (painting by Edgar Degas)
Edgar Degas: Early life and education: …in Degas’s painting of 1871–72, Lorenzo Pagans and Auguste De Gas. The artist’s mother died when he was 13 years old, leaving three sons and two daughters to be brought up by his father, a banker by profession. Knowledgeable about art but conservative in his preferences, Degas’s father helped to…
- Lorenzo the Magnificent (Italian statesman)
Lorenzo de’ Medici was a Florentine statesman, ruler, and patron of arts and letters, the most brilliant of the Medici. He ruled Florence with his younger brother, Giuliano (1453–78), from 1469 to 1478 and, after the latter’s assassination, was the sole ruler from 1478 to 1492. Upon the death of
- Lorenzo the Monk (Italian painter)
Lorenzo Monaco was an artist who was the last great exponent of late Gothic painting in what is now Italy. Lorenzo Monaco’s output and stylistic interests (incorporating the gold-leaf background typical of Byzantine art) represent the final gasp of gold-ground brilliance in Florentine art. Lorenzo
- Lorenzo’s oil (medicine)
metabolic disease: Peroxisomal disorders: Lorenzo’s oil (named after the patient who inspired its development), a mixture of trioleate and trierucate oils, improves or completely corrects the elevation of very-long-chain fatty acids in blood, but it does not have an effect on the neurological progression of the disease because it…
- Lorenzo’s Oil (film by Miller [1992])
George Miller: Shifting gears again, Miller made Lorenzo’s Oil (1992), a fact-based drama that starred Nick Nolte and Sarandon as parents of a child with a rare disease. Miller subsequently earned his first Academy Award nomination, for cowriting the script. Continuing to explore different genres, Miller then worked on a series of…
- Lorenzo, Frank (American businessman)
Continental Airlines, Inc.: …corporate management (headed by chairman Frank Lorenzo until August 1990) tended to aggravate operations. Continental filed for bankruptcy in December 1990. The airline emerged from bankruptcy in 1993 after being acquired by Air Canada and a group of private investors.
- Lorenzoni, Michele (Italian inventor)
repeating rifle: …repeater has been attributed to Michele Lorenzoni, a Florentine gunmaker. In the same period, the faster and safer Kalthoff system—designed by a family of German gunmakers—introduced a ball magazine located under the barrel and a powder magazine in the butt. By the 18th century the Cookson repeating rifle was in…
- Lorestān (region, Iran)
Lorestān, geographic and historic region, western Iran. Its name means Land of the Lurs and it extends from the Iraqi frontier and Kermānshāh and separates the Khūzestān lowland from interior uplands. Extensive mountains stretch northwest–southeast; between the higher ranges are well-watered
- Lorestān Bronze (decorative arts)
Luristan Bronze, any of the horse trappings, utensils, weapons, jewelry, belt buckles, and ritual and votive objects of bronze probably dating from roughly 1500–500 bce that have been excavated since the late 1920s in the Harsin, Khorramābād, and Alishtar valleys of the Zagros Mountains in the
- Lorestān, Great (region, Iran)
Lorestān: …southern part of Lorestān, or Great Lorestān, was independent under the Faḍlawayh (Fazlaveye) atabegs from 1160 until 1424; its capital was Idaj, now only mounds and ruins at Malamir (modern Izeh).
- Lorestān, Little (region, Iran)
Lorestān: Little Lorestān, the northern part, was governed by independent princes of the Khorshīdī dynasty, called atabegs, from 1155 to the beginning of the 17th century, when the last atabeg, Shāh Vardī Khān, was removed by the Ṣafavid ʿAbbās I the Great and government of the…
- Loretan, Erhard (Swiss mountaineer)
Mount Everest: Further exploration from Tibet: …Swiss climbers Jean Troillet and Erhard Loretan. Like Messner, they snatched a clear-weather window toward the end of the monsoon for a lightning dash up and down the mountain. Unlike Messner, they did not even carry a tent and sleeping bags. Climbing by night, resting during the comparative warmth of…
- Loreto (Italy)
Loreto, town and episcopal see, Marche region, central Italy, on the Musone River just south of Ancona and near the Adriatic coast. It is a noted pilgrimage resort famous for the Santa Casa, or Holy House of the Virgin. According to tradition, the Santa Casa, threatened with destruction by the
- Loretta Young Show, The (American television show)
Norman Foster: …such popular series as Zorro, The Loretta Young Show, and Batman. Although he made a handful of pictures in the 1960s and ’70s, such as the coming-of-age saga Indian Paint (1965), few received national theatrical release. He received posthumous acclaim for his return to acting as Billy Boyle, the beleaguered…
- Lorgnette (American magazine)
Donald Grant Mitchell: …pseudonym Ik Marvel, also editing Lorgnette (1850), a satirical magazine that mocked cultivated New York society. His earliest books, Fresh Gleanings (1847) and The Battle Summer (1850), record incidents of his travels in Europe and the French revolution of 1848. With the publication of Reveries of a Bachelor he gained…
- Loria loriae (bird)
bird-of-paradise: …golden-silky, bird-of-paradise (Loboparadisea sericea); and Loria’s, or Lady Macgregor’s, bird-of-paradise (Loria loriae)—three species formerly classified as bowerbirds.
- Loria’s bird-of-paradise (bird)
bird-of-paradise: …golden-silky, bird-of-paradise (Loboparadisea sericea); and Loria’s, or Lady Macgregor’s, bird-of-paradise (Loria loriae)—three species formerly classified as bowerbirds.
- Loria, Ruggiero di (Italian admiral)
Ruggiero di Lauria was an Italian admiral in the service of Aragon and Sicily who won important naval victories over the French Angevins (house of Anjou) in the war between France and Aragon over the possession of Sicily in the 1280s. Lauria, who was taken from Italy about 1262, grew up at the
- lorica (biology)
lorica, a tubular, conical, or vaselike structure secreted by some protozoans (e.g., Stentor) and many rotifers. Many species incorporate sand grains and other particles into the lorica for reinforcement. The loose-fitting case, closed at one end, has a large opening at the anterior end through
- lorica hamata (armor)
military technology: Mail: …legionnaire was equipped with a lorica hamata, a mail shirt, from a very early date. Mail was extremely flexible and provided good protection against cutting and piercing weapons. Its main disadvantage was its weight, which tended to hang from the shoulders and waist. In addition, strips of mail tended to…
- lorica segmentata (armor)
military technology: Mail: …segmented iron torso defense, the lorica segmentata.
- Loricariidae (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Loricariidae (suckermouth armoured catfishes) Sucking mouth; 3 or 4 rows of bony scutes. Herbivorous aquarium fishes. Central and South America. About 42 genera, 230 species. Family Scoloplacidae (spiny dwarf catfishes) Body with 2 bilateral series of teethlike-bearing plates, 1 midventral series of plates. Maximum length about…
- Loricata (mollusk)
chiton, any of numerous flattened, bilaterally symmetrical marine mollusks, worldwide in distribution but most abundant in warm regions. The approximately 600 species are usually placed in the class Placophora, Polyplacophora, or Loricata (phylum Mollusca). Chitons are usually oval in shape. On the
- Loriculus (bird)
parakeet: …short, blunt tails, as the hanging parrots, or bat parrotlets, Loriculus species, popular cage birds in their native area, India to Malaya and the Philippines.
- Loridae (primate family)
loris: …together they constitute the family Lorisidae.
- Lorient (France)
Lorient, maritime town, Morbihan département, Brittany région, western France. It lies southeast of Quimper and west-southwest of Paris and is situated on the right bank of the Scorff River at its confluence with the Blavet on the Bay of Biscay. Almost completely destroyed by bombing in 1944, the
- Loriinae (bird family)
parrot: …make up the Psittacidae subfamily Loriinae. The 53 species in 12 genera are found in Australia, New Guinea, and some Pacific islands. All have a slender, wavy-edged beak and a brush-tipped tongue for extracting nectar from flowers and juices from fruits.
- lorikeet (bird)
lorikeet, (subfamily Loriinae), any of 53 species of medium-sized vocal and exceptionally colourful parrots of Australia and New Guinea that feed on pollen and nectar. They have brush-tipped tongues that help sweep food into the mouth. They also eat small insects and are important pollinators of
- Lorillard (American company)
Lorillard, oldest tobacco manufacturer in the United States, dating to 1760, when a French immigrant, Pierre Lorillard, opened a “manufactory” in New York City. It originally made pipe tobacco, cigars, plug chewing tobacco, and snuff. Tobacco for “roll-your-own” cigarettes was introduced in 1860,
- Lorillard, Pierre (American philanthropist)
Claude-Joseph-Désiré Charnay: …by the New York philanthropist Pierre Lorillard. Charnay developed a theory of Toltec migrations in which he argued that certain prehistoric peoples of Central America were of Asian origin. His major work on the subject was Les Anciennes Villes du Nouveau Monde (1885; The Ancient Cities of the New World).
- Lorimer, George Horace (American editor)
George Horace Lorimer was an American editor of The Saturday Evening Post, during whose long tenure (May 17, 1899–January 1, 1937) the magazine attained its greatest success, partly because of his astute judgment of popular American tastes in literature. After working for Philip D. Armour’s
- Lorimer, James (Scottish legal philosopher)
James Lorimer was a legal philosopher, proponent of a doctrine of natural law that was opposed to the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham, the positivism of John Austin, and the legal historicism of Sir Henry Maine. More influential in France and Germany than in Great Britain, Lorimer’s theory held
- Loring, Eugene (American choreographer)
dance notation: Twentieth-century developments: …by the dancer and choreographer Eugene Loring with D.J. Canna, incorporated an unusual movement analysis. This system used a vertical staff and simple signs to record four categories of movement: Emotion, Direction, Degree, and Special. It was used to record Loring’s signature ballet, Billy the Kid (1938).
- Loris (Austrian author)
Hugo von Hofmannsthal was an Austrian poet, dramatist, and essayist. He made his reputation with his lyrical poems and plays and became internationally famous for his collaboration with the German operatic composer Richard Strauss. The only child of a bank director, Hofmannsthal studied law at
- loris (primate subfamily)
loris, (subfamily Lorisinae), any of about 11 species of tail-less or short-tailed South and Southeast Asian forest primates. Lorises are arboreal and nocturnal, curling up to sleep by day. They have soft gray or brown fur and can be recognized by their huge eyes encircled by dark patches and by
- Loris lydekkerianus (primate)
loris: …loris [Loris tardigradus] and the gray slender loris [L. lydekkerianus]) of India and Sri Lanka are about 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) long and have long slender limbs, small hands, a rounded head, and a pointed muzzle. Slender lorises feed mostly on insects (predominantly ants) and are solitary. The female usually…
- Loris tardigradus (primate)
loris: …species of slender lorises (the red slender loris [Loris tardigradus] and the gray slender loris [L. lydekkerianus]) of India and Sri Lanka are about 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) long and have long slender limbs, small hands, a rounded head, and a pointed muzzle. Slender lorises feed mostly on insects (predominantly…
- Loris tardigradus nycticeboides (primate)
loris: …of the red slender loris—(L. tardigradus nycticeboides and L. tardigradus tardigradus)—have been classified as endangered since 2004. Several species of slow loris are also threatened. The IUCN has listed the Philippine slow loris (N. menagensis) as a vulnerable species and the Sunda slow loris and the Bengal slow loris…
- Loris tardigradus tardigradus (primate)
loris: tardigradus nycticeboides and L. tardigradus tardigradus)—have been classified as endangered since 2004. Several species of slow loris are also threatened. The IUCN has listed the Philippine slow loris (N. menagensis) as a vulnerable species and the Sunda slow loris and the Bengal slow loris (N. bengalensis) as endangered…
- Loris, Heinrich (Swiss music theorist)
Henricus Glareanus was a Swiss Humanist, poet, teacher, and music theorist, known especially for his publication Dodecachordon (Basel, 1547). Crowned poet laureate by the Habsburg emperor Maximilian at Cologne (1512), Glareanus established himself briefly at Basel in 1514, where he came under the
- Loris-Melikov Constitution (Russian history)
Alexander II: Life: This so-called Loris-Melikov Constitution, if implemented, might possibly have become the germ of constitutional development in Russia. But on the day when, after much hesitation, the tsar finally signed the proclamation announcing his intentions (March 1, 1881), he was mortally wounded by bombs in a plot sponsored…
- Loris-Melikov, Mikhail Tariyelovich, Graf (Russian statesman)
Mikhail Tariyelovich, Graf Loris-Melikov was a military officer and statesman who, as minister of the interior at the end of the reign of the emperor Alexander II (ruled 1855–81), formulated reforms designed to liberalize the Russian autocracy. Loris-Melikov was the son of an Armenian merchant. He
- Lorisidae (primate family)
loris: …together they constitute the family Lorisidae.
- Lorisiformes (primate infraorder)
lemur: …excludes the last three (the Lorisiformes).
- Lorisinae (primate subfamily)
loris, (subfamily Lorisinae), any of about 11 species of tail-less or short-tailed South and Southeast Asian forest primates. Lorises are arboreal and nocturnal, curling up to sleep by day. They have soft gray or brown fur and can be recognized by their huge eyes encircled by dark patches and by
- Lorius roratus (bird)
psittaciform: Skin and plumage: One, the eclectus parrot (Eclectus roratus), was for many years thought to be two separate species until it was noted that only males were known for the predominantly green “species” and only females for the wine-red “species.” The head is crested in a few parrots, especially among…
- Lorna Doone (work by Blackmore)
Lorna Doone, historical romance by R.D. Blackmore, published in 1869. Set in the wilds of Exmoor (northern Devonshire, Eng.) during the late 17th century, the novel concerns the adventurous life of the yeoman John Ridd and the circuitous course of his love for Lorna Doone, a beautiful maiden.
- Lorna Doone (film by Dean [1934])
Margaret Lockwood: …made her film debut in Lorna Doone (1935). A vivacious brunette with a beauty spot on her left cheek, she starred in a wide variety of films, notably the wartime thriller Night Train to Munich (1940), the romantic comedy Quiet Wedding (1941), as the husband-stealing murderess in the period melodrama…
- Lorna Mott Comes Home (novel by Johnson)
Diane Johnson: In Lorna Mott Comes Home (2021), a woman returns to the United States after living in France for a number of years.