- lemma (plant anatomy)
Poaceae: Characteristic morphological features: The other scales, the lemma and the palea, occur in pairs. Generally the lemma is larger than the palea, which is hidden between the lemma and the spikelet axis. The lemma and palea surround and protect the flower, and all three of these structures form the floret. Grass spikelets…
- lemming (rodent)
lemming, any of 20 species of small rodents, some of which undertake large, swarming migrations. Lemmings are found only in the Northern Hemisphere. They have short, stocky bodies with short legs and stumpy tails, a bluntly rounded muzzle, small eyes, and small ears that are nearly hidden in their
- Lemming, Eric (Swedish athlete)
Eric Lemming was a Swedish track-and-field athlete who was the first great javelin thrower of the modern era. He won gold medals in the first two Olympic javelin contests. Lemming was the finest of the Scandinavian athletes who dominated the javelin throw in the early 20th century. A very strong
- Lemming, Eric Otto Valdemar (Swedish athlete)
Eric Lemming was a Swedish track-and-field athlete who was the first great javelin thrower of the modern era. He won gold medals in the first two Olympic javelin contests. Lemming was the finest of the Scandinavian athletes who dominated the javelin throw in the early 20th century. A very strong
- Lemming, Erik (Swedish athlete)
Eric Lemming was a Swedish track-and-field athlete who was the first great javelin thrower of the modern era. He won gold medals in the first two Olympic javelin contests. Lemming was the finest of the Scandinavian athletes who dominated the javelin throw in the early 20th century. A very strong
- Lemminkäinen (Finnish epic character)
Lemminkäinen, hero of Finnish traditional songs. In these songs, Lemminkäinen travels to an otherworldly place where he overcomes many obstacles, such as a ditch full of burning rocks and a fence made of snakes. When he reaches his goal, he must also succeed at a series of tests and best his host
- Lemmon, Jack (American actor)
Jack Lemmon was an American screen and stage actor who was adept at both comedy and drama and was noted for his portrayals of high-strung or neurotic characters in American films from the 1950s onward. Lemmon attended Harvard University and was president of the school’s Hasty Pudding Club, an
- Lemmon, John Uhler, III (American actor)
Jack Lemmon was an American screen and stage actor who was adept at both comedy and drama and was noted for his portrayals of high-strung or neurotic characters in American films from the 1950s onward. Lemmon attended Harvard University and was president of the school’s Hasty Pudding Club, an
- Lemmus (rodent)
lemming: Natural history: Collared and brown lemmings (Dicrostonyx and Lemmus) make nests on the tundra surface or beneath the snow. Breeding from spring to fall, females can produce up to 13 young after a gestation period of about 20 to 30 days.
- Lemmus lemmus (rodent)
lemming: Natural history: …only short distances, but the Norway lemmings (Lemmus lemmus) in Scandinavia are a dramatic exception. From a central point, they move in growing numbers outward in all directions, at first erratically and under cover of darkness but later in bold groups that may travel in daylight. Huge hordes overrun broad…
- Lemnia sphragis (medicine)
Lemnos: In Classical times Lemnian earth (Lemnia sphragis) was used as an astringent for snakebites and wounds and in the 16th century for the plague. This medicinal soil was dug ceremonially once a year from a mound near Hephaestia. Pop. (2001) 17,545; (2011) 16,992.
- Lemnian Athena (sculpture by Phidias)
Phidias: The so-called Lemnian Athena was dedicated as an offering by Athenian colonists who were sent to Lemnos between 451 and 448. A head of Athena in Bologna and two statues of Athena in Dresden are thought to be copies, in marble, of Phidias’s original work in bronze.
- Lemnian earth (medicine)
Lemnos: In Classical times Lemnian earth (Lemnia sphragis) was used as an astringent for snakebites and wounds and in the 16th century for the plague. This medicinal soil was dug ceremonially once a year from a mound near Hephaestia. Pop. (2001) 17,545; (2011) 16,992.
- lemniscate of Bernoulli (mathematics)
mathematics: History of analysis: …of the rectification of the lemniscate, a ribbon-shaped curve discovered by Jakob Bernoulli in 1694, Giulio Carlo Fagnano (1682–1766) introduced ingenious analytic transformations that laid the foundation for the theory of elliptic integrals. Nikolaus I Bernoulli (1687–1759), the nephew of Johann and Jakob, proved the equality of mixed second-order partial…
- lemniscus (anatomy)
human ear: Ascending pathways: The lemniscus is a major tract, most of the fibres of which end in the inferior colliculus, the auditory centre of the midbrain, although some fibres may bypass the colliculus and end, together with the fibres from the colliculus, at the next higher level, the medial…
- Lemnitzer, Lyman (United States general)
Lyman Lemnitzer was a U.S. Army general, commander of the United Nations forces in the Korean War (1955–57), chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1960–62), and supreme allied commander in Europe (1963–69). Lemnitzer was a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, N.Y. (1920), the Command
- Lemnos (island, Greece)
Lemnos, isolated Greek island and dímos (municipality), North Aegean (Modern Greek: Vóreio Aigaío) periféreia (region), Greece. It is situated in the Aegean Sea, midway between Mount Áthos (Ágio) in northeastern mainland Greece and the Turkish coast. Composed mainly of volcanic rock, its western
- Lemoigne, Maurice (French researcher)
bioplastic: …1926 by a French researcher, Maurice Lemoigne, from his work with the bacterium Bacillus megaterium. The significance of Lemoigne’s discovery was overlooked for many decades, in large part because, at the time, petroleum was inexpensive and abundant. The petroleum crisis of the mid-1970s brought renewed interest in finding alternatives to…
- Lemoine, Georges (French chemist)
catalysis: History: In 1877 Georges Lemoine had shown that the decomposition of hydriodic acid to hydrogen and iodine reached the same equilibrium point at 350 °C (660 °F), 19 percent, whether the reaction was carried out rapidly in the presence of platinum sponge or slowly in the gas phase.…
- lemon (fruit)
lemon, (Citrus ×limon), small tree or spreading bush of the rue family (Rutaceae) and its edible fruit. Lemon juice is a characteristic ingredient in many pastries and desserts, such as tarts and the traditional American lemon meringue pie. The distinctive astringent flavour of the fruit, either
- lemon balm (herb, Melissa officinalis)
lemon balm, (Melissa officinalis), aromatic herb of the mint family (Lamiaceae), grown for its lemon-scented fragrant leaves. Lemon balm is native to the Mediterranean region and Central Asia and has naturalized in parts of North America and elsewhere. It is widely cultivated in temperate climates
- lemon basil (herb)
basil: Species: tenuiflorum) and lemon basil (O. ×citriodorum) are common in Asian cuisine. The dried large-leaf varieties have a fragrant aroma faintly reminiscent of anise and a warm, sweet, aromatic, mildly pungent flavour. The dried leaves of the common basil are less fragrant and more pungent in flavour.
- lemon bee balm (plant)
bergamot: Lemon bergamot, or lemon bee balm (M. citriodora), and wild bergamot (M. fistulosa) are also used as flavourings and in teas.
- lemon bergamot (plant)
bergamot: Lemon bergamot, or lemon bee balm (M. citriodora), and wild bergamot (M. fistulosa) are also used as flavourings and in teas.
- Lemon Drop Kid (racehorse)
Charismatic: …two long shots, the 29–1 Lemon Drop Kid and the 54–1 Vision and Verse. Jockey Chris Antley got little response from Charismatic and felt the colt drop and dip underneath him—a sign that the horse was in pain. Charismatic finished the race in third place; Lemon Drop Kid was the…
- lemon leaf (plant)
Gaultheria: Major species: Salal (G. shallon), or lemonleaf in the floral industry, is a diffuse slender shrub of the Pacific Northwest; it grows 0.3–1.8 metres (1–6 feet) tall and has dark purple edible fruits.
- lemon orchid (plant)
sun orchid: The lemon orchid (Thelymitra antennifera), the twisted sun orchid (T. flexuosa), the custard orchid (T. violosa), and the scented sun orchid (T. avistata) are common Australian species.
- lemon shark (fish)
lemon shark, species of shark in the family Carcharhinidae. See
- lemon sumac (plant)
sumac: copallinum) and the lemon, or fragrant, sumac (R. aromatica). The former is often grown for its shiny leaves, the leaflets of which are connected by ribs along the axis, and showy reddish fruits. The fragrant sumac has three-parted leaves, scented when bruised; it forms a dense low shrub…
- Lemon Table, The (short stories by Barnes)
Julian Barnes: …new depth of emotion in The Lemon Table (2004), a collection of short stories in which most of the characters are consumed by thoughts of death. He explored why some people are remembered after their death and others are not in the historical novel Arthur & George (2005), in which…
- Lemon test (law case)
Agostini v. Felton: Background: In Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), the Supreme Court had incorporated that excessive-entanglement standard into a test for establishment-clause violation, which was later known as the Lemon test.
- Lemon v. Kurtzman (law case)
Agostini v. Felton: Background: In Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), the Supreme Court had incorporated that excessive-entanglement standard into a test for establishment-clause violation, which was later known as the Lemon test.
- lemon verbena (plant)
lemon verbena, (Aloysia citriodora or Lippia citriodora), tropical perennial shrub belonging to the family Verbenaceae, originating in Argentina and Chile. Growing more than 3 metres (10 feet) high in warm climates, it is also grown as a potted plant reaching a height of about 25.4 cm (10 inches).
- Lemon, George Meadow (American basketball player)
Harlem Globetrotters: …Tatum, Marques Haynes, Clarence Wilson, “Meadowlark” Lemon, Wilt “the Stilt” Chamberlain, Herb “Geese” Ausbie, and Lynette Woodard, the first woman to play for the team.
- Lemon, Meadow George (American basketball player)
Harlem Globetrotters: …Tatum, Marques Haynes, Clarence Wilson, “Meadowlark” Lemon, Wilt “the Stilt” Chamberlain, Herb “Geese” Ausbie, and Lynette Woodard, the first woman to play for the team.
- Lemon, Meadow, III (American basketball player)
Harlem Globetrotters: …Tatum, Marques Haynes, Clarence Wilson, “Meadowlark” Lemon, Wilt “the Stilt” Chamberlain, Herb “Geese” Ausbie, and Lynette Woodard, the first woman to play for the team.
- Lemon, Meadowlark (American basketball player)
Harlem Globetrotters: …Tatum, Marques Haynes, Clarence Wilson, “Meadowlark” Lemon, Wilt “the Stilt” Chamberlain, Herb “Geese” Ausbie, and Lynette Woodard, the first woman to play for the team.
- lemon-drop mangosteen (plant)
Clusiaceae: Waika plum, or lemon drop mangosteen (G. intermedia), native to Central America, has a small, oval, yellow fruit. There are about 250 species in the tropics, especially common in Indo-Malesia.
- lemonade (beverage)
lemon: Lemonade, made with lemon, sugar, and water, is a popular warm-weather beverage, and the juice itself is commonly added to tea. Citric acid may amount to 5 percent or more by weight of the lemon’s juice, which is also rich in vitamin C and contains…
- Lemonade (album by Beyonce)
Kendrick Lamar: …from her popular 2016 album Lemonade. In 2017 Lamar released another album, titled DAMN., which featured the hit song “HUMBLE.” and was well received by fans and critics alike. He won Grammys for best rap album (DAMN.), best rap song, rap performance, and music video (all for “HUMBLE.”), and best…
- LeMond, Greg (American athlete)
Greg LeMond is an American bicycle racer who was the first non-European rider to win the Tour de France, the most celebrated and challenging event in cycling. In his career he won the Tour de France three times (1986, 1989, 1990) and twice won the World Road Race Championship (1983, 1989). As a
- LeMond, Gregory James (American athlete)
Greg LeMond is an American bicycle racer who was the first non-European rider to win the Tour de France, the most celebrated and challenging event in cycling. In his career he won the Tour de France three times (1986, 1989, 1990) and twice won the World Road Race Championship (1983, 1989). As a
- lemongrass (plant)
lemongrass, (Cymbopogon citratus), perennial species of oil grass in the family Poaceae, often used in cooking. At a distance, clusters of lemongrass in their native habitat look deceptively plain. Long skinny leaves of an unassuming green fan out from the stem, yet they release at a single touch a
- lemonleaf (plant)
Gaultheria: Major species: Salal (G. shallon), or lemonleaf in the floral industry, is a diffuse slender shrub of the Pacific Northwest; it grows 0.3–1.8 metres (1–6 feet) tall and has dark purple edible fruits.
- Lemonnier, Antoine-Louis-Camille (Belgian writer)
Camille Lemonnier was a novelist, short-story writer, and art critic, one of the outstanding personalities of the 19th-century French literary renaissance in Belgium. Lemonnier wrote his first outstanding novel, Un Mâle (1881; “A Male”), under the influence of the naturalism of Émile Zola. Like his
- Lemonnier, Camille (Belgian writer)
Camille Lemonnier was a novelist, short-story writer, and art critic, one of the outstanding personalities of the 19th-century French literary renaissance in Belgium. Lemonnier wrote his first outstanding novel, Un Mâle (1881; “A Male”), under the influence of the naturalism of Émile Zola. Like his
- Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events (film by Silberling [2004])
Daniel Handler: …contributed to the screenplay for Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004). He later adapted the novels for the Netflix show A Series of Unfortunate Events (2017–19), starring Neil Patrick Harris.
- Lemosí language
Occitan language: …the area itself, the names Lemosí (Limousin) and Proensal (Provençal) were formerly used, but those names were too localized to designate the whole range of dialects. The name Provençal originally referred to the Occitan dialects of the Provence region and is used also to refer to the standardized medieval literary…
- Lemoyne, Jean-Baptiste (French sculptor)
Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne was a French sculptor chiefly important for his portrait busts. The pupil of his father, Jean-Louis Lemoyne, and of Robert Le Lorrain, he was appointed sculptor to Louis XV. Lemoyne executed many likenesses of the king, either as large sculptures—the statues in the royal
- Lempa River (river, Central America)
Lempa River, river in Central America. It rises in Guatemala near Esquipulas, crosses a corner of Honduras, and enters El Salvador at Citalá. After cutting across El Salvador’s northern mountain range, it flows eastward for over 80 miles (130 km) and then southward for 65 miles (105 km) across the
- Lempel, Abraham (Israeli mathematician)
telecommunication: The Lempel-Ziv algorithm: …the 1970s by the Israelis Abraham Lempel and Jacob Ziv. The Lempel-Ziv algorithm works by constructing a codebook out of sequences encountered previously. For example, the codebook might begin with a set of four 12-bit code words representing four possible signal levels. If two of those levels arrived in sequence,…
- Lempel-Ziv algorithm (communications)
data compression: The Lempel-Ziv algorithm, invented by Israeli computer scientists Abraham Lempel and Jacob Ziv, uses the text itself as the dictionary, replacing later occurrences of a string by numbers indicating where it occurred before and its length. Zip and gzip use variations of the Lempel-Ziv algorithm.
- Lempel-Ziv-Welch (data compression algorithm)
GIF: …algorithm commonly referred to as LZW, named after its inventors, Abraham Lempel and Jacob Ziv of Israel and Terry Welch of the United States. LZW was the source of a controversy started by the American Unisys Corporation in 1994, when it was revealed that they owned a patent for LZW…
- Lemper, Ute (German singer and actress)
Ute Lemper is a German singer, composer, and actress considered to be the foremost modern interpreter of the music of 1920s Germany. Lemper’s mother was an opera singer, and she started her daughter on piano, voice, and ballet lessons at an early age. Lemper took children’s parts in operettas and
- lemur (primate suborder)
lemur, (suborder Strepsirrhini), generally, any primitive primate except the tarsier; more specifically, any of the indigenous primates of Madagascar. In the broad sense, the term lemur applies not only to the typical lemurs (family Lemuridae) but also to the avahis, sifakas, indri, and aye-aye of
- Lemur catta (primate)
lemur: Lemur diversity: …known of these is the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta), commonly seen in zoos. It is unique both in its habitat (some dry and rocky areas of Madagascar) and for its striped tail (all other lemurs have solid-coloured tails). Troops are made up of several males and females, and the females…
- Lemur macaco (primate)
lemur: Lemur diversity: …related genus Eulemur include the black lemur (E. macaco), in which the male is black and the female is reddish brown. The rare black-and-white or black-and-red ruffed lemurs (genus Varecia) live in rainforests on the eastern side of Madagascar. The gentle lemurs, or lesser bamboo lemurs (genus Hapalemur), and the…
- Lemures (Roman religion)
Lemures, in Roman religion, wicked and fearsome spectres of the dead. Appearing in grotesque and terrifying forms, they were said to haunt their living relatives and cause them injury. To propitiate these ghosts and keep them from the household, ritual observances called Lemuria were held yearly on
- Lemuria (mythological continent)
Stone Age: Oceania: , Lemuria, Mu) or direct relations with the Middle East (e.g., the Ten Lost Tribes, migrations of Children of the Sun from Egypt), early India (e.g., Indus Valley–Easter Island connections), or Japan (e.g., supposed language relations). They also insist that, while eastern-voyaging Polynesians could well have…
- Lemuria (Roman religion)
Lemures: …the household, ritual observances called Lemuria were held yearly on May 9, 11, and 13. These Lemuria, reputedly instituted by Romulus in expiation of his brother’s murder, required the father of every family to rise at midnight, purify his hands, toss black beans for the spirits to gather, and recite…
- Lemuridae (primate)
lemur: Lemur diversity: The “true lemurs” (family Lemuridae) include five genera and about 20 species. The best known of these is the ring-tailed lemur (Lemur catta), commonly seen in zoos. It is unique both in its habitat (some dry and rocky areas of Madagascar) and for its striped tail…
- Lemuriformes (primate infraorder)
primate: Classification: Infraorder Lemuriformes (lemurs) Family Cheirogaleidae (dwarf, mouse, and fork-crowned lemurs) 5 genera, 25 or more species from Madagascar. The number of species cannot be precisely given, as new species continue to be discovered. Holocene. Subfamily
- Lemus, José María (president of El Salvador)
El Salvador: Military dictatorships: José María Lemus (1956–60), continued these programs, but there was no improvement in the living standards of workers. When faced with open discontent, Lemus resorted to repressive measures, and a military coup deposed him in October 1960.
- Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria (album by Horne)
Lena Horne: One of her albums, Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria (1957), was a longtime best seller, and her first featured performance on Broadway—in the musical Jamaica (1957)—won her a New York Drama Critics’ Poll Award in 1958.
- Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music (American theatrical production)
Lena Horne: Her one-woman show, Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music (1981), garnered many awards, including a Drama Critics’ Circle Award and a special achievement Tony Award. In 1984 Horne received a Kennedy Center honour for lifetime contribution to the arts, and in 1989 she was given a Grammy…
- Lena River (river, Russia)
Lena River, major river of Russia and the 11th longest river, or river system, in the world. It flows 2,734 miles (4,400 km) from its sources in the mountains along the western shores of Lake Baikal, in southeastern Siberia, to the mouth of its delta on the Arctic Laptev Sea. The area of the
- Lena River Basin (basin, Russia)
Lena River: The area of the river’s drainage basin is about 961,000 square miles (2,490,000 square km).
- Lenaea (ancient Greek festival)
Great Dionysia: …was also introduced into the Lenaea, the minor festival of Dionysus held in January, and tragedy was added 10 years later.
- Lenana (Maasai chief)
Kenya: Maasai and Kikuyu: …time before his younger son, Lenana, was able to restore order. Power was never revived, however, because their problems coincided with the arrival of European traders and administrators who eventually gained control of the region.
- Lenana (mountain peak, Kenya)
East African mountains: Physiography: …closely followed in height by Lenana (16,355 feet).
- Lenape (people)
Delaware, a confederation of Algonquian-speaking North American Indians who occupied the Atlantic seaboard from Cape Henlopen, Delaware, to western Long Island. Before colonization, they were especially concentrated in the Delaware River valley, for which the confederation was named. However, the
- Lenard, Philipp (German physicist)
Philipp Lenard was a German physicist and recipient of the 1905 Nobel Prize for Physics for his research on cathode rays and the discovery of many of their properties. His results had important implications for the development of electronics and nuclear physics. After working as a lecturer and as
- Lenard, Philipp Eduard Anton (German physicist)
Philipp Lenard was a German physicist and recipient of the 1905 Nobel Prize for Physics for his research on cathode rays and the discovery of many of their properties. His results had important implications for the development of electronics and nuclear physics. After working as a lecturer and as
- Lenasia (township, South Africa)
Johannesburg: The city layout: …Filipinos, and Chinese) lives in Lenasia, a special “Asiatic” township built in the 1950s to accommodate Indians forcibly removed from the city centre. The balance of the city is occupied by whites.
- Lenau, Nikolaus (Austrian poet)
Nikolaus Lenau was an Austrian poet known for melancholy lyrical verse that mirrors the pessimism of his time as well as his personal despair. Severe depression and dissatisfaction characterized Lenau’s life. He began, but never completed, studies in law, medicine, and philosophy. A legacy in 1830
- Lenbach, Franz von (German painter)
Franz von Lenbach was a painter whose powerful characterizations made him the favoured portraitist of late 19th-century Germany. In 1857 Lenbach became a pupil of Karl von Piloty, with whom he traveled in Italy. The works of this first journey were painted from nature and were frequently attacked
- Lenca (people)
Lenca, Indians of the northern highlands of Honduras and El Salvador who are somewhat intermediate culturally between the Maya to the north and circum-Caribbean peoples such as the Kuna to the south. The aboriginal culture of the Lenca has virtually disappeared and is not well known. It is thought
- Lencan languages
Mesoamerican Indian languages: The classification and status of Mesoamerican languages:
- Lenclos, Anne De (French courtesan)
Ninon de Lenclos was a celebrated French courtesan. From her father, Henri de Lenclos, sieur de La Douardière, she acquired a lasting interest in Epicurean philosophy. Although her father fled from France after killing a man in 1632, she remained in Paris and established there a salon that
- Lenclos, Ninon de (French courtesan)
Ninon de Lenclos was a celebrated French courtesan. From her father, Henri de Lenclos, sieur de La Douardière, she acquired a lasting interest in Epicurean philosophy. Although her father fled from France after killing a man in 1632, she remained in Paris and established there a salon that
- Lend Me a Tenor (play by Ludwig)
Tony Shalhoub: …Broadway stage in the farce Lend Me a Tenor, and three years later he earned a Tony Award nomination for his performance in Clifford Odets’s Golden Boy as the hero’s Italian immigrant father. Shalhoub also received a Tony nod for his performance in Act One (2014), in which he appeared…
- lend-lease (United States [1941])
lend-lease, system by which the United States aided its World War II allies with war materials, such as ammunition, tanks, airplanes, and trucks, and with food and other raw materials. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt had committed the United States in June 1940 to materially aiding the opponents of
- Lend-Lease Act (United States [1941])
lend-lease, system by which the United States aided its World War II allies with war materials, such as ammunition, tanks, airplanes, and trucks, and with food and other raw materials. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt had committed the United States in June 1940 to materially aiding the opponents of
- lending (finance)
credit, transaction between two parties in which one (the creditor or lender) supplies money, goods, services, or securities in return for a promised future payment by the other (the debtor or borrower). Such transactions normally include the payment of interest to the lender. Credit may be
- lending circle (finance)
development bank: …are required to join “lending circles.” The fellow members of a circle, which typically contains fewer than 10 people, are other borrowers whose credit rating is at risk if one of their members defaults. Therefore, each member drives other members to pay on time. The Grameen approach has spurred…
- lending library
library: Circulation: …faculties, but the notion of lending, or circulating, libraries did not become popular until the 18th century.
- Lendl, Ivan (Czech tennis player)
Ivan Lendl is a Czech-born American former tennis player who was one of the sport’s most successful professionals during the 1980s and early ’90s. A right-hander who was known for his powerful forehand shots, Lendl won eight Grand Slam tournament titles, including three consecutive U.S. Open
- Leneghan, Mary Patricia (president of Ireland)
Mary McAleese is an Irish politician who was president of Ireland from 1997 to 2011. She was Ireland’s second female president and its first president from Northern Ireland. McAleese was raised on the edge of the nationalist Ardoyne area of Belfast, from which her family was forced to flee in the
- Leng-hu (China)
Lenghu, town, northwestern Qinghai sheng (province), western China. It is situated in the northwestern part of the Qaidam Basin, to the southwest of Dangjin Pass, which leads from the Qaidam region into western Gansu province and to the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. Lenghu is one of the
- Lengenbach Mine (mine, Switzerland)
sulfosalt: At the Lengenbach Mine in Switzerland, for example, more than 30 distinct species have been recognized, 15 of which are not found elsewhere. Most sulfosalts have formed at low temperature in open cavities, usually in association with copper–zinc–arsenic sulfide ores. Very often they occur in cavities of…
- Lenghu (China)
Lenghu, town, northwestern Qinghai sheng (province), western China. It is situated in the northwestern part of the Qaidam Basin, to the southwest of Dangjin Pass, which leads from the Qaidam region into western Gansu province and to the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang. Lenghu is one of the
- Lenglen, Suzanne (French tennis player)
Suzanne Lenglen was a French tennis player and six-time Wimbledon champion in both singles and doubles competition. Her athletic play, combining strength and speed, changed the nature of women’s tennis and positioned her as the dominant women’s amateur player from 1919 until 1926, when she turned
- length (cricket)
cricket: Bowling: …good bowler is command of length—i.e., the ability to pitch (bounce) the ball on a desired spot, usually at or slightly in front of the batsman’s feet. The location varies with the pace of the bowler, the state of the pitch, and the reach and technique of the batsman. The…
- length (speech)
phonetics: Suprasegmentals: Variations in length are also usually considered to be suprasegmental features, although they can affect single segments as well as whole syllables. All of the suprasegmental features are characterized by the fact that they must be described in relation to other items in the same utterance. It…
- length (dimension)
length, area, and volume: Length is the size of a line segment (see distance formulas), area is the size of a closed region in a plane, and volume is the size of a solid. Formulas for area and volume are based on lengths. For example, the area of a…
- length of a curve (integral calculus)
length of a curve, Geometrical concept addressed by integral calculus. Methods for calculating exact lengths of line segments and arcs of circles have been known since ancient times. Analytic geometry allowed them to be stated as formulas involving coordinates (see coordinate systems) of points and
- length, area, and volume (geometry)
length, area, and volume, Dimensional measures of one-, two-, and three-dimensional geometric objects. All three are magnitudes, representing the “size” of an object. Length is the size of a line segment (see distance formulas), area is the size of a closed region in a plane, and volume is the size
- Lengua (people)
Gran Chaco: Early settlement: …major linguistic associations: the Guaycurú, Lengua, Wichí, Zamuco, and Tupí-Guaraní. Most of these people lived under extremely primitive conditions; settlement depended on the availability of fresh water, making stream courses the most coveted sites. Implements were fashioned largely from wood and bones because of the absence of stones, while the…
- lenguas de diamante, Las (poetry by Ibarbourou)
Juana de Ibarbourou: Las lenguas de diamante (1919; “Tongues of Diamond”) is strikingly sensual, erotic, and pantheistic. These qualities, along with a youthful narcissism, are also present in Raíz salvaje (1922; “Savage Root”). The urgency and abundance in these early works gave way later, in La rosa de…
- Lengyel, József (Hungarian author)
Hungarian literature: Writing after 1945: …the adherents of realistic fiction, József Lengyel, who died in 1975, occupied a special place. In his stories (which could not be published until the loosening of restrictions in the early 1960s) he gave a moving testimony of human suffering in Soviet labour camps.