- Lestoros inca (marsupial)
rat opossum: …Caenolestes) with four species, the Incan caenolestid (Lestoros inca), and the Chilean shrew opossum (Rhyncholestes raphanurus). These six species, together with opossums (family Didelphidae), form the New World section (Ameridelphia) of the cohort Marsupialia. Rat opossums, named for their general appearance and size, have 46–48 teeth and long epipubic bones…
- Lestrade, Inspector (fictional character)
Inspector Lestrade, fictional character, the perennially confounded Scotland Yard inspector who must request the help of Sherlock Holmes in the Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan
- Lestrange, Dom Augustine de (French abbot)
Trappist: …number of them, led by Dom Augustine de Lestrange, settled at Val-Sainte in Fribourg, Switzerland, where they adopted an even more rigid life and made several foundations before their expulsion in 1798. Long years of wandering in Russia and Germany were followed in 1814 by a return to La Trappe;…
- Lestres, Alonié de (Canadian historian)
Lionel-Adolphe Groulx was a Canadian priest and historian who for 50 years strongly influenced the Quebec nationalist movement. The son of a lumberjack, Groulx became a seminarian at Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blaineville and Montreal and was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1903. After teaching at a
- Lestrygonians (Greek mythology)
Laestrygones, fictional race of cannibalistic giants described in Book 10 of Homer’s Odyssey. When Odysseus and his men land on the island native to the Laestrygones, the giants pelt Odysseus’s ships with boulders, sinking all but Odysseus’s own
- Lesueur, Eustache (French painter)
Eustache Le Sueur was a painter known for his religious pictures in the style of the French classical Baroque. Le Sueur was one of the founders and first professors of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. Le Sueur studied under the painter Simon Vouet and was admitted at an early age into
- Lesueur, Jean-François (French composer)
Jean-François Lesueur was a composer of religious and dramatic works who helped to transform French musical taste during the French Revolution. In 1781 Lesueur was appointed chapelmaster at the cathedral of Dijon and in 1786 at Notre-Dame de Paris. There he aroused controversy by introducing a
- Lesueur, Lucille (American actress)
Joan Crawford was an American motion-picture actress who made her initial impact as a vivacious Jazz Age flapper but later matured into a star of psychological melodramas. She developed a glamorous screen image, appearing often as a sumptuously gowned, fur-draped, successful career woman. Crawford
- lesula (primate)
guenon: The lesula (C. lomamiensis), which inhabits pockets of habitat in Rwanda’s Nyungwe Forest National Park, possesses a spot of yellowish brown fur on the tip of its nose. The lesula was first described in 2007 and determined to be a new species in 2012. It has…
- Lésvos (island, Greece)
Lésbos, largest island after Crete (Modern Greek: Kríti) and Euboea (Évvoia) in the Aegean Sea. It constitutes a dímos (municipality) and a perifereiakí enótita (regional unit) in the North Aegean (Vóreio Aigaío) periféreia (region), eastern Greece. Mytilene (Mitilíni) is the chief town of the
- leśyā (Indian philosophy)
leśyā, (Sanskrit: “light,” “tint”), according to Jainism, a religion of India, the special aura of the soul that can be described in terms of colour, scent, touch, and taste and that indicates the stage of spiritual progress reached by the creature, whether human, animal, demon, or divine. The
- Leszczyàska, Marie-Catherine (queen of France)
Marie Leszczyńska was the queen consort of King Louis XV of France (ruled 1715–74). Although she had no direct influence on French politics, her Polish dynastic connections involved France in a European conflict that resulted in the eventual annexation of Lorraine by France. Marie’s father,
- Leszczyńska, Maria Karolina (queen of France)
Marie Leszczyńska was the queen consort of King Louis XV of France (ruled 1715–74). Although she had no direct influence on French politics, her Polish dynastic connections involved France in a European conflict that resulted in the eventual annexation of Lorraine by France. Marie’s father,
- Leszczyński family (Polish family)
Leszno: …15th century by the prominent Leszczyński family, whose tombs are in the parish church. In the 16th century a band of Protestant Moravian Brothers, expelled from Bohemia, made Leszno a centre of the Reformation. The educator John Amos Comenius lived and taught there. During the 17th and 18th centuries it…
- Leszczyński, Stanisław (king of Poland)
Stanisław I was the king of Poland (1704–09, 1733) during a period of great problems and turmoil. He was a victim of foreign attempts to dominate the country. Stanisław was born into a powerful magnate family of Great Poland, and he had the opportunity to travel in western Europe as a young man. In
- Leszetycki, Teodor (Polish pianist)
Theodor Leschetizky was a Polish pianist and teacher who, with Franz Liszt, was the most influential teacher of piano of his time. Leschetizky studied under Carl Czerny in Vienna and thus was linked indirectly with the playing of Czerny’s teacher, Ludwig van Beethoven. In 1852 he went to St.
- Leszno (Poland)
Leszno, city, Wielkopolskie województwo (province), west-central Poland. It is a rail junction and an agricultural and manufacturing centre. Leszno was founded in the 15th century by the prominent Leszczyński family, whose tombs are in the parish church. In the 16th century a band of Protestant
- LeT (terrorist group)
Lashkar-e-Taiba, Islamist militant group, begun in Pakistan in the late 1980s as a militant wing of Markaz-ud-Dawa-wal-Irshad, an Islamist organization influenced by the Wahhābī sect of Sunni Islam. It sought ultimately to establish Muslim rule over the entire Indian subcontinent. Though based in
- let (tennis)
tennis: Principles of play: …court, it is a “let” and is replayed. The server is allowed one miss, or “fault,” either into the net or outside the opponent’s service court. Failure to deliver a correct service on two attempts constitutes loss of the point.
- LET (physics)
radiation: Linear energy transfer and track structure: The stopping power of a medium toward a charged particle refers to the energy loss of the particle per unit path length in the medium. It is specified by the differential -dE/dx, in which -dE represents the energy loss…
- Let England Shake (album by Harvey)
PJ Harvey: She later surfaced with Let England Shake (2011), a rollicking folk-influenced album that alluded to the battles of World War I as part of a complex portrait of her relationship to her homeland. In 2011 Let England Shake earned Harvey her second Mercury Prize, making her the first two-time…
- Let Freedom Ring (film by Conway [1939])
Jack Conway: Heyday of the 1930s: The musical Let Freedom Ring (1939) sets a newspaper owner (Nelson Eddy) against a ruthless railroad magnate, while Lady of the Tropics (1939) was a light romance starring Robert Taylor and Hedy Lamarr.
- Let Go (album by Lavigne)
Avril Lavigne: …her sound, her first album, Let Go, debuted in 2002 and went seven times platinum. It featured the hits “Complicated,” “Sk8er Boi,” “I’m with You,” and “Losing Grip.” Her popularity and fame continued with the albums Under My Skin (2004), The Best Damn Thing (2007), Goodbye Lullaby (2011), and Avril…
- Let Him Go (film by Bezucha [2020])
Kevin Costner: In the drama Let Him Go (2020), he appeared as a former sheriff who seeks to save his grandson from an abusive stepfather.
- Let History Judge (work by Medvedev)
Roy Medvedev: Perhaps his most important book, Let History Judge (1971), is a comprehensive historical study of Stalinism, with particular attention paid to that movement’s origins and consequences. His books Khrushchev: The Years in Power (1976; written with Zhores), Khrushchev (1983), and Khrushchev: A Political Biography (1986) are landmark biographies of that…
- Let It Be (album by the Beatles)
Let It Be, studio album of the revolutionary British rock group the Beatles, the last of 12 albums released by the group. Let It Be, which was released on May 8, 1970—nearly a month after the Beatles disbanded—is best known for its iconic title track, as well as the popular songs “Across the
- Let it Be (album by the Replacements)
the Replacements: …three eclectic, critically acclaimed albums: Let it Be (1984), Tim (1985), and Pleased to Meet Me (1987). The albums document Westerberg’s growing sophistication as a pop tunesmith, but they promised a commercial breakthrough that never came. An unstable blend of personalities, the Replacements dissolved after All Shook Down (1990), which…
- Let It Be (song by the Lennon and McCartney)
Paul McCartney: Early life: …inspiration for his ballad “Let It Be” (1970). His younger brother, Michael, later changed his name to Mike McGear and had a number of hits in the satirical rock group Scaffold. Like fellow Beatles George Harrison and Ringo Starr (Richard Starkey), McCartney grew up in a traditional north of…
- Let It Be (documentary by Lindsay-Hogg [1970])
Let It Be: …as a theatrical film titled Let It Be; it won an Academy Award and a Grammy Award for its song score. The Let It Be album was nominated for multiple Grammy Awards in 1971.
- Let It Bleed (album by the Rolling Stones)
the Rolling Stones: Sticky Fingers and Exile on Main Street: Including the studio albums Let It Bleed (1969) and Sticky Fingers (1971) plus the in-concert Get Yer Ya-Yas Out! (1970), it gave them the repertoire and image that still defines them and on which they have continued to trade ever since: an incendiary blend of sex, drugs, Satanism, and…
- Let It Go (album by McGraw)
Tim McGraw: McGraw’s subsequent albums included Let It Go (2007), Southern Voice (2009), and Emotional Traffic (2012). Two Lanes of Freedom (2013) featured a duet with pop-country superstar Taylor Swift, whose debut single, “Tim McGraw” (2006), had memorably paid tribute to his music. His albums Sundown Heaven
- let it ride (card game)
poker: Let it ride: Let it ride is a five-card stud poker game. There is no dealer’s hand in this house-banked game. Each player lays three equal bets on the table before receiving three cards facedown. Then each player may let his first bet stay on…
- Let Me Be Frank with You (work by Ford)
Richard Ford: … in the novellas comprised in Let Me Be Frank with You (2014).
- Let Me Down Easy (one-woman play by Smith)
Anna Deavere Smith: …she premiered a one-woman play, Let Me Down Easy, which explored the resiliency and vulnerability of the human body. Smith portrayed more than 20 characters, who spoke out about current events such as genocide in Rwanda, steroid use among athletes, AIDS in Africa, and the U.S. health care system. Another…
- Let Me Finish: Trump, the Kushners, Bannon, New Jersey, and the Power of In-Your-Face Politics (memoir by Christie)
Chris Christie: In the memoir Let Me Finish: Trump, the Kushners, Bannon, New Jersey, and the Power of In-Your-Face Politics (2019), Christie focused on his role within Trump’s campaign and transition team. In addition to criticizing key advisers, Christie claimed that he had been considered for a number of government…
- Let Me Off Uptown (recording by Krupa)
Gene Krupa: …North Carolina,” and, especially, “Let Me Off Uptown,” the Krupa band’s biggest hit.
- Let Me Praise the Lord of Wisdom (Mesopotamian literature)
Ludlul bel nemeqi, in ancient Mesopotamian religious literature, a philosophical composition concerned with a man who, seemingly forsaken by the gods, speculates on the changeability of men and fate. The composition, also called the “Poem of the Righteous Sufferer” or the “Babylonian Job,” has been
- Let Me Tell You What I Mean (essays by Didion)
Joan Didion: Let Me Tell You What I Mean (2021) is a collection of previously released essays. Didion was honoured with the National Humanities Medal in 2013. Her life and career were the focus of the documentary Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold (2017).
- Let Science Be Our Guidepost
Our planet today faces tremendous pressures: a burgeoning and aging population, accelerating climate change, polluted waters, threatened food crops, and drug-resistant diseases. Without intervention, these pressures promise to inflate to catastrophes. (Read Britannica’s biography of this author,
- Let the Right One In (novel by Lindqvist)
vampire: History: …den rätte komma in (2004; Let the Right One In) by John Ajvide Lindqvist, in which the main characters are a perpetually childlike vampire and a young boy she befriends and helps fend off bullies. The book was adapted for film in Sweden in 2008 and in the United States…
- Let the River Run (song by Simon)
Carly Simon: …an Academy Award for “Let the River Run,” which she also sang, in Working Girl (1988). She also scored music for the films Postcards from the Edge (1990) and This Is My Life (1992).
- Let the Sunshine (play by Williamson)
David Williamson: for Grabs (2001), Influence (2005), Let the Sunshine (2010), and Nearer the Gods (2018). Williamson also wrote several screenplays, including Phar Lap (1982) and, in collaboration with Peter Weir, Gallipoli (1981) and The Year of Living Dangerously (1982).
- Let the Sunshine In (film by Denis [2017])
Juliette Binoche: …Un beau soleil intérieur (2017; Let the Sunshine In). Binoche’s subsequent films included Doubles vies (2018; Non-Fiction), a dramedy set in the publishing world; Celle que vous croyez (2019; Who You Think I Am), in which a middle-aged professor pretends to be a younger woman on social media; and La…
- Let Them All Talk (film by Soderbergh [2020])
Steven Soderbergh: Later credits: …reunited with the actress for Let Them All Talk (2020), about an award-winning author who goes on a cruise with several old friends. Soderbergh’s next film, No Sudden Move (2021), featured Don Cheadle and Benicio Del Toro as small-time criminals in 1950s Detroit. In 2022 he helmed KIMI, a thriller…
- Let Them Talk (album by Laurie)
Hugh Laurie: …he released the solo albums Let Them Talk (2011) and Didn’t It Rain (2013), which were inspired by New Orleans-style blues. He wrote the novels The Gun Seller (1996) and The Paper Soldier (2007). Laurie was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2007 and…
- Let There Be Light (film by Huston)
John Huston: Films of the 1940s: …of San Pietro (1945), and Let There Be Light, the last a disturbing study of emotionally unstable veterans in a Long Island hospital that was so powerful that it was not given a public release until the early 1980s. Huston was discharged from the army in 1945 with the rank…
- Let There Be Rock (album by AC/DC)
AC/DC: …found success in Britain with Let There Be Rock (1977). After solidifying their lineup (with Scott as vocalist, Rudd on drums, Williams on bass, and the Youngs), the band recorded Highway to Hell (1979), which brought them international fame. AC/DC’s rise was hampered by Scott’s alcohol-related death in February 1980,…
- Let Us Descend (novel by Ward)
Jesmyn Ward: Literary career: …she published her fourth novel, Let Us Descend, its title being an allusion to the descent into hell in Dante’s Inferno. Taking place in the years before the American Civil War, it tells the story of a girl named Annis who is sold by the white enslaver who fathered her…
- Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (work by Agee and Evans)
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, nonfiction work on the daily lives of Depression-era tenant farmers, with text by American author James Agee and black-and-white portraits by American documentary photographer Walker Evans, published in 1941. In 1936, at the request of Fortune magazine, Agee and Evans
- Let’s Dance (album by Bowie)
David Bowie: …equally impressive commercial calculation of Let’s Dance (1983), which produced three American top 20 hits, Bowie’s work grew steadily more trivial. In tandem with an acting career that, since his arresting debut in Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), largely failed to jell, his vague later albums…
- Let’s Dance (American radio program)
Benny Goodman: King of Swing: …on the national radio program Let’s Dance. This three-hour weekly program devoted an hour apiece to bands of varying styles, with Goodman’s band appearing last. The band’s first national tour, in 1935, started off poorly—besides being relatively unknown, the band had an unfamiliar sound that many producers did not like.…
- Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls: Essays, Etc. (work by Sedaris)
David Sedaris: His later works included Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls: Essays, Etc. (2013), which contained detailed anecdotes from his travels interspersed with fictional vignettes, and Theft by Finding (2017), a selection of his diary entries from 1977 to 2002. In the essay collection Calypso (2018), Sedaris wrote about family, aging,…
- Let’s Face the Music and Dance (album by Nelson)
Willie Nelson: Among them were Heroes (2012); Let’s Face the Music and Dance (2013), a collection of standards; To All the Girls… (2013), a series of duets with female singers; and Summertime (2016), a set of George Gershwin songs. In 2014 Nelson issued Band of Brothers, which comprised largely new material, and…
- Let’s Get Harry (film by Smithee [1986])
Stuart Rosenberg: Last films: Let’s Get Harry (1986) was a little-seen action film about a soldier of fortune (Robert Duvall) hired to rescue a man kidnapped in South America. Unhappy with changes made by the studio, Rosenberg had his name removed from the film; the directorial credit is given…
- Let’s Get Lost (recording by Baker)
Chet Baker: His 1954 recording of “Let’s Get Lost,” a romantic ballad that took on new connotations when sung by the addict Baker, became the song most associated with him.
- Let’s Go Native (film by McCarey [1930])
Leo McCarey: Feature films: …next directed the popular musical Let’s Go Native (1930), which starred Jeanette MacDonald, Kay Francis, and Jack Oakie as people shipwrecked on a tropical island. He had even more success with Part Time Wife (1930), a comedy about an estranged couple (Edmund Lowe and Leila Hyams) who reconnect through golf.…
- Let’s Make It Legal (film by Sale [1951])
Marilyn Monroe: …a succession of movies, including Let’s Make It Legal (1951), Love Nest (1951), Clash by Night (1952), and Niagara (1953), she advanced to star billing on the strength of her studio-fostered image as a “love goddess.” With performances in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), and
- Let’s Make Love (film by Cukor [1960])
George Cukor: Films of the 1950s: Let’s Make Love (1960) offered Marilyn Monroe the opportunity to sing, dance, and romance costar Yves Montand, and Cukor extracted one of her best performances.
- Let’s Make Up (film by Wilcox [1954])
Sean Connery: …made his film debut in Lilacs in the Spring (1954; U.S. title Let’s Make Up) and received top billing for the first time in the comedy On the Fiddle (1961; also released as Operation Snafu). His other notable films of the period included the Disney fantasy Darby O’Gill and the…
- Let’s Roll (song by Young)
Neil Young: Later work and causes: …September 11 attacks with “Let’s Roll,” a song honouring passengers’ efforts to foil the hijacking of one of the planes (United Airlines flight 93) used in the attack. Young’s politics continued to be as mercurial as his music. In the mid-1980s he had expressed admiration for conservative U.S. Pres.…
- Let’s Stay Together (song by Green)
Al Green: …preparing the way for “Let’s Stay Together,” the title track from Green’s first gold album.
- Let’s Talk About Love (album by Dion)
Céline Dion: …propel sales of her album Let’s Talk About Love (1997)—which also featured duets with Barbra Streisand and Luciano Pavarotti—into the tens of millions. Throughout the 1990s Dion continued to record in French, with D’eux (1995; also released as The French Album) becoming the best-selling Francophone album of all time.
- let-up (baseball pitch)
baseball: The pitching repertoire: …to the fastball is the change-up, which is a deliberately slower pitch that can sneak past a batter expecting a fastball.
- Letchworth (England, United Kingdom)
Letchworth, town (parish), North Hertfordshire district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, east-central England. It is located north of London, about 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Luton. Britain’s first planned “garden city,” much copied elsewhere, it was founded in 1903 by Sir
- Letchworth Garden City (England, United Kingdom)
Letchworth, town (parish), North Hertfordshire district, administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, east-central England. It is located north of London, about 10 miles (16 km) northeast of Luton. Britain’s first planned “garden city,” much copied elsewhere, it was founded in 1903 by Sir
- Letelier, Orlando (Chilean lawyer, economist, and diplomat)
Orlando Letelier was a Chilean lawyer, economist, and diplomat who was closely identified with Chilean president Salvador Allende, whose democratically elected Marxist government was overthrown in a military coup in 1973. Letelier is best known in the United States for the manner of his death:
- Leterme, Yves (prime minister of Belgium)
Belgium: Federalized Belgium: …by the Flemish Christian Democrat Yves Leterme, finally took power in March 2008.
- lethal dose 50 (pharmacology)
drug: Dose-response relationship: …result being expressed as the median lethal dose (LD50), which is defined as the dose causing mortality in 50 percent of a group of animals.
- lethal injection (capital punishment)
lethal injection, method of executing condemned prisoners through the administration of one or more chemicals that induce death. Lethal injection—now the most widely used method of execution in the United States—was first adopted by the U.S. state of Oklahoma in 1977, because it was considered
- lethal toxin-neutralizing factor (protein)
opossum: The Virginia opossum: …protein in its blood called lethal toxin-neutralizing factor (LTNF), which has been shown to detoxify a wide variety of poisons, including the venom produced by snakes, bees, and scorpions. The flesh of the Virginia opossum was once enjoyed as food in the southern United States, where opossum hunting was a…
- Lethal Weapon (film by Donner [1987])
Richard Donner: Films of the 1980s: …greater success with the blockbuster Lethal Weapon (1987). A spin on the mismatched-partners chestnut—Danny Glover played a by-the-book police detective with a loving family, and Mel Gibson was a widower with a suicidal bent who breaks every rule for the sheer joy of it—that reveled in its spectacular action sequences,…
- Lethal Weapon 2 (film by Donner [1989])
Richard Donner: Films of the 1980s: …closed out the 1980s with Lethal Weapon 2 (1989), which added Joe Pesci and again featured Glover, Gibson, and numerous stunts and explosions.
- Lethal Weapon 3 (film by Donner [1992])
Richard Donner: The 1990s and beyond: By contrast, his Lethal Weapon 3 (1992) became one of the year’s highest-grossing films. He reteamed with Gibson for the amiable but rather bloated Maverick (1994), which profited from the presence of James Garner, the original Bret Maverick, and Jodie Foster. Though the film needed more substance from…
- Lethal Weapon 4 (film by Donner [1998])
Richard Donner: The 1990s and beyond: …film of the 1990s was Lethal Weapon 4 (1998). In addition to series regulars Glover and Gibson, the action thriller featured Chris Rock as a rookie detective and Jet Li as the leader of a deadly Chinese gang. Although not well received by critics, it proved popular with moviegoers.
- Lethal White (novel by Rowling)
J.K. Rowling: Writing for adults: …included Career of Evil (2015), Lethal White (2018), Troubled Blood (2020), and The Ink Black Heart (2022). A television series based on the books premiered in the United Kingdom in 2017 and in the United States the following year. In May 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Rowling began serializing a…
- lethargy (medical condition)
lethargy, in medicine, a morbid condition of deep and lasting drowsiness from which the sufferer can be aroused only with difficulty and temporarily. It is a symptom of various disorders, such as sleeping sickness (African trypanosomiasis) and encephalitis
- Lethbridge (Alberta, Canada)
Lethbridge, city, southern Alberta, Canada. It lies on the Oldman River near its junction with the St. Mary River, 135 miles (217 km) south-southeast of Calgary and about 100 miles (160 km) west of Medicine Hat. Founded in the 1880s as a mining town called Coalbanks, it was renamed Lethbridge for
- Lethe (Greek mythology)
Lethe, (Greek: “Oblivion”), in Greek mythology, daughter of Eris (Strife) and the personification of oblivion. Lethe is also the name of a river or plain in the infernal regions. In Orphism, a Greek mystical religious movement, it was believed that the newly dead who drank from the River Lethe
- Lethem, Jonathan (American author)
Donna Tartt: …writers, including Bret Easton Ellis, Jonathan Lethem, and Jill Eisenstadt. It was there that Tartt began work on her first novel, The Secret History (1992).
- Lethocerus (insect)
giant water bug, any wide and flat-bodied aquatic insect of the family Belostomatidae (order Heteroptera). This family, although containing only about 100 species, includes the largest bugs in the order: sometimes exceeding 10 cm (4 inches) in the South American species Lethocerus grandis and
- Lethrinidae (fish family)
perciform: Annotated classification: Families Nemipteridae and Lethrinidae (breams) Resemble Lutjanidae; some with wider preorbital area under which upper jaw slips; others (Nemipteridae) with molar teeth in sides of jaws and incisors or caninelike teeth at front end of jaws. About 100 species; marine, Atlantic and Indo-Pacific, especially around coral reefs; some…
- Leticia (Colombia)
Leticia, town, southeastern Colombia, lying on the Amazon River at the point where the borders of Colombia, Brazil, and Peru meet. Founded as a military outpost and river port by Peruvians in 1867, the jungle village passed into Colombian hands in the 1930s. Despite recent growth and the
- Létinois, Lucien (French author)
Paul Verlaine: Life.: …farming with his favourite pupil, Lucien Létinois, and the boy’s parents. Lucien’s death in April 1883, as well as that of the poet’s mother (to whom he was tenderly attached) in January 1886, and the failure of all attempts at reconciliation with his wife broke down whatever will to “respectability”…
- Letlama (African chief)
Moshoeshoe was the founder and first paramount chief of the Sotho (Basuto, Basotho) nation. One of the most successful Southern African leaders of the 19th century, Moshoeshoe combined aggressive military counteraction and adroit diplomacy against colonial invasions. He created a large African
- Leto (mythology)
Leto, in classical mythology, a Titan, the daughter of Coeus and Phoebe, and mother of the god Apollo and the goddess Artemis. The chief places of her legend were Delos and Delphi. Leto, pregnant by Zeus, sought a place of refuge to be delivered. She finally reached the barren isle of Delos, which,
- Leto, Giulio Pomponio (Italian humanist)
Julius Pomponius Laetus was an Italian humanist and founder of the Academia Romana, a semi-secret society devoted to archaeological and antiquarian interests and the celebration of ancient Roman rites. As a youth, Laetus decided to dedicate his life to the study of the ancient world. He went to
- Leto, Jared (American actor and musician)
Jared Leto is an American actor and musician who won an Academy Award for best supporting actor for his performance in Dallas Buyers Club (2013). He cofounded and led the popular alternative rock band 30 Seconds to Mars. Leto’s parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he was raised by his
- Leto, Jared Joseph (American actor and musician)
Jared Leto is an American actor and musician who won an Academy Award for best supporting actor for his performance in Dallas Buyers Club (2013). He cofounded and led the popular alternative rock band 30 Seconds to Mars. Leto’s parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he was raised by his
- Letohrádek (building, Prague, Czech Republic)
Western architecture: Eastern Europe: …more Classical, such as the Letohrádek (1538–63), or garden belvedere (summerhouse), at Prague for Queen Anne, wife of Ferdinand I, with its delicate exterior arcade. The nearby tennis court (1565–68), designed by Bonifaz Wolmut, is in a heavier classicism expressed by the alternation of engaged Ionic half columns with deeply…
- letras y figuras (artistic style)
Southeast Asian arts: The Philippines: …including portraiture and the unique letras y figuras—a style developed by José Honorato Lonzano, which combines ornamental figures forming the letters of the patron’s name with familial motifs and a personalized background landscape. Schools of fine art modeled on the European academies were set up from 1821. Throughout the 19th…
- letrozole (drug)
letrozole, anticancer drug used to inhibit the synthesis of estrogen in postmenopausal women who have breast cancers that are dependent on the growth-promoting actions of the hormone. Letrozole is marketed as Femara and is manufactured by Swiss drug company Novartis AG. Letrozole is taken orally
- Letsie III (king of Lesotho)
Moshoeshoe II: …his eldest son, Crown Prince Letsie III, who promised not to become involved in the country’s politics. Moshoeshoe remained popular with the people of Lesotho, however, and in 1991, when the government was seized by Maj. Gen. Elias Ramaema, plans were laid for Moshoeshoe’s return in 1992. Free elections were…
- Lett (people)
Latvia: Ethnic groups, languages, and religion: …Soviet occupation in 1940, ethnic Latvians constituted about three-fourths of the country’s population. Today they make up about three-fifths of the population, and Russians account for about one-fourth. There are small groups of Belarusians, Ukrainians, Poles, Lithuanians, and others. The official language of Latvia is Latvian; however, nearly one-third of…
- Letta, Enrico (Italian politician)
Silvio Berlusconi: Prosecutions, political ban, and continued influence of Silvio Berlusconi: …the PdL moved to support Enrico Letta, a moderate member of the Democratic Party (Partito Democratico; PD), and a cross-party coalition government was formed. Another trial reached its conclusion in June 2013, when Berlusconi was found guilty of soliciting sex from an underage prostitute and sentenced to seven years in…
- Letten und ihre Latwija, Die (work by Cakste)
Janis Čakste: …Latvian independence and there wrote Die Letten und ihre Latwija (1917; “The Letts and Their Latvia”). Elected chairman of the Latvian People’s Council in 1918, he was later the head of the delegation sent to London and to the Paris Peace Conference to secure the recognition of the Latvian republic.…
- letter (literature)
Latin literature: Biography and letters: The idea of comparing Romans with foreigners was taken up by Cornelius Nepos, a friend of Cicero and Catullus. Of his De viris illustribus all that survive are 24 hack pieces about worthies long dead and one of real merit about his friend Atticus.…
- letter (mail)
postal system: Postal operations and management: Letters and parcels in all shapes and sizes are subject only to the limits of weight and dimension prescribed by postal legislation. Yet, if postal services are to be efficient and economical, these items must be mass-processed, as far as is possible. Thus, the basic…
- letter (alphabet)
handwriting: …affected also by length of letter elements, since it usually takes more time to make long strokes than to make short ones. By comparing the handwriting movements of good and poor writers, researchers found that these two groups differ in position of writing hand, speed, and types of movements in…
- letter box
postal system: United States: …with the provision of street letter boxes in 1858. A free delivery service was established in 1863, covering 49 cities and employing 440 letter carriers. By 1900 the service was provided at 796 offices by 15,322 carriers. The rural free delivery (RFD) service was introduced in 1896 and town delivery…
- Letter Concerning Enthusiasm (work by Shaftesbury)
Deism: The English Deists: In this respect Shaftesbury’s Letter Concerning Enthusiasm (1708) was probably the crucial document in propagating their ideas. Revolted by the Puritan fanatics of the previous century and by the wild hysteria of a group of French exiles prophesying in London in 1707, Shaftesbury denounced all forms of religious extravagance…