- Life with Father (play by Lindsay and Crouse)
Lillian Gish: … (1936), The Star Wagon (1937), Life with Father (1940, in which she enjoyed a record run in Chicago while Dorothy was starring with the road company), Mr. Sycamore (1942), Magnificent Yankee (1946), Crime and Punishment (1947), The Curious Savage (1950), The Trip to Bountiful (1953), The Family Reunion (1958), All…
- Life with Father (film by Curtiz [1947])
Life with Father, American comedy film, released in 1947, that was based on Clarence Day, Jr.’s best-selling autobiography (1935) of the same name. The film chronicles Day’s childhood growing up in Victorian-era New York under the ironclad rule of his stern but loving father (played by William
- Life Without Children (short stories by Doyle)
Roddy Doyle: Other writings: Deportees (2007), Bullfighting (2011), and Life Without Children (2021) are short-story collections. Doyle also wrote a number of books for children, including Wilderness (2007) and A Greyhound of a Girl (2011). Two Pints (2012), Two More Pints (2014), and Two for the Road (2019) are humorous dialogue-only books in which…
- Life’s a Riot with Spy vs. Spy (album by Bragg)
Billy Bragg: His debut album, Life’s a Riot with Spy vs. Spy, brought critical acclaim, reached the British Top 30, and yielded the hit “A New England” in 1984. A committed socialist, Bragg played a number of benefit performances during the British miners’ strike of 1984–85. (He later helped form…
- Life’s Little Ironies (short stories by Hardy)
Thomas Hardy: Middle period: …Group of Noble Dames (1891), Life’s Little Ironies (1894), and A Changed Man (1913). Hardy’s short novel The Well-Beloved (serialized 1892, revised for volume publication 1897) displays a hostility to marriage that was related to increasing frictions within his own marriage.
- Life’s Too Good (album by the Sugar Cubes)
Björk: …Kingdom with their first album, Life’s Too Good (1986). After recording two more albums over the next five years, Here Today, Tomorrow, Next Week! and Stick Around for Joy, the band broke up, and Björk embarked on a solo career.
- Life’s Too Short (cable series by Gervais and Merchant)
Ricky Gervais: …themselves in the TV series Life’s Too Short, which, like Extras, lampooned the entertainment industry. The show debuted in 2011 and concluded with a special two years later. In Gervais’s next series, Derek (2012–14), he portrayed a naive and loyal caretaker at a nursing home. He then took a dark…
- Life, A (work by Svevo)
Italo Svevo: …first novel, Una vita (1892; A Life), was revolutionary in its analytic, introspective treatment of the agonies of an ineffectual hero (a pattern Svevo repeated in subsequent works). A powerful but rambling work, the book was ignored upon its publication. So was its successor, Senilità (1898; As a Man Grows…
- Life, Adventures and Pyracies, of the Famous Captain Singleton (work by Defoe)
John Avery: …for Daniel Defoe’s hero in Life, Adventures, and Pyracies, of the Famous Captain Singleton (1720).
- Life, An (river, Ireland)
River Liffey, river in Counties Wicklow, Kildare, and Dublin, Ireland, rising in the Wicklow Mountains about 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Dublin. Following a tortuous course laid out in preglacial times, it flows in a generally northwesterly direction from its source to the Lackan Reservoir, the
- life, elixir of (alchemy)
elixir, in alchemy, substance thought to be capable of changing base metals into gold. The same term, more fully elixir vitae, “elixir of life,” was given to the substance that would indefinitely prolong life—a liquid that was believed to be allied with the philosopher’s stone. Chinese Taoists not
- life, origin of
life: The origin of life: Perhaps the most fundamental and at the same time the least understood biological problem is the origin of life. It is central to many scientific and philosophical problems and to any consideration of extraterrestrial life. Most of the hypotheses of the…
- life, tree of (classification)
tree of life: In science the tree of life is often used as a metaphor for the connection between the diversity of all life on Earth. Every organism on Earth appears to descend from a single common ancestor that existed roughly 3.5 billion years ago. As that ancestor and its descendents…
- life, tree of (plant)
carnauba wax: The carnauba palm is a fan palm of the northeastern Brazilian savannas, where it is called the “tree of life” for its many useful products. After 50 years, the tree can attain a height of over 14 metres (45 feet). It has a dense, large crown…
- life, tree of (plant)
arborvitae, (genus Thuja), (Latin: “tree of life”), any of the five species of the genus Thuja, resinous, evergreen ornamental and timber conifers of the cypress family (Cupressaceae), native to North America and eastern Asia. A closely related genus is false arborvitae. Arborvitae are trees or
- life, water of (alcoholic beverage)
distilled spirit, alcoholic beverage (such as brandy, whiskey, rum, or arrack) that is obtained by distillation from wine or other fermented fruit or plant juice or from a starchy material (such as various grains) that has first been brewed. The alcoholic content of distilled liquor is higher than
- Life, Wheel of (Buddhism)
bhava-cakra, in Buddhism, a representation of the endless cycle of rebirths governed by the law of dependent origination (pratītya-samutpāda), shown as a wheel clutched by a monster, symbolizing impermanence. In the centre of the wheel are shown the three basic evils, symbolized by a red dove
- life-cycle ceremony (sociology)
rite of passage: Life-cycle ceremonies: Life-cycle ceremonies are found in all societies, although their relative importance varies. The ritual counterparts of the biological crises of the life cycle include numerous kinds of rites celebrating childbirth, ranging from “baby showers” and rites of pregnancy to rites observed at the…
- life-cycle theory (economics)
Franco Modigliani: …of personal savings, termed the life-cycle theory. The theory posits that individuals build up a store of wealth during their younger working lives not to pass on these savings to their descendents but to consume during their own old age. The theory helped explain the varying rates of savings in…
- Life-Line (story by Heinlein)
Robert A. Heinlein: His first story, “Life-Line,” was published in the action-adventure pulp magazine Astounding Science Fiction. He continued to write for that publication—along with other notable science-fiction writers—until 1942, when he began war work as an engineer. Heinlein returned to writing in 1947, with an eye toward a more sophisticated…
- life-of-man (plant, Aralia species)
spikenard: American spikenard (A. racemosa) is a North American member of the ginseng family (Araliaceae). The plant is characterized by large spicy-smelling roots and is cultivated as an ornamental. It grows 3.5 metres (11 feet) tall and has leaves divided into three heart-shaped parts. The flowers…
- life-safety system (building design)
life-safety system, Any interior building element designed to protect and evacuate the building population in emergencies, including fires and earthquakes, and less critical events, such as power failures. Fire-detection systems include electronic heat and smoke detectors that can activate audible
- life-span psychology
developmental psychology, the branch of psychology concerned with the changes in cognitive, motivational, psychophysiological, and social functioning that occur throughout the human life span. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, developmental psychologists were concerned primarily with child
- life-support system (environmental system)
life-support system, any mechanical device that enables a person to live and usually work in an environment such as outer space or underwater in which he could not otherwise function or survive for any appreciable amount of time. Life-support systems provide all or some of the elements essential
- life-world (philosophy)
life-world, in Phenomenology, the world as immediately or directly experienced in the subjectivity of everyday life, as sharply distinguished from the objective “worlds” of the sciences, which employ the methods of the mathematical sciences of nature; although these sciences originate in the
- Life: A User’s Manual (work by Perec)
Georges Perec: …La Vie: mode d’emploi (1978; Life: A User’s Manual), which describes each unit in a large Parisian apartment building and relates the stories of its inhabitants.
- Lifeboat (film by Hitchcock [1944])
Alfred Hitchcock: The Hollywood years: Rebecca to Dial M for Murder: The claustrophobic Lifeboat (1944) was a heavily allegorical tale about eight survivors of a ship torpedoed by a German U-boat. The challenge of a film set entirely in a lifeboat attracted Hitchcock. The film alternates between suspense and philosophical debate; the story was written for the screen…
- lifeboat (boat)
lifeboat, watercraft especially built for rescue missions. There are two types, the relatively simple versions carried on board ships and the larger, more complex craft based on shore. Modern shore-based lifeboats are generally about 40–50 feet (12–15 metres) long and are designed to stay afloat
- lifela (song-poem)
South Africa: Music: …new circumstances, such as the lifela song-poems composed by Sotho migrant workers to express and comment upon the life of miners. Because miners were frequently so far away from home, traditional rituals had to be performed during the weekends or on holidays. Mining companies often sponsored dances as an outlet…
- lifesaving
lifesaving, any activity related to the saving of life in cases of drowning, shipwreck, and other accidents on or in the water and to the prevention of drowning in general. Drowning involves suffocation by immersion in a liquid, usually water. Water closing over the victim’s mouth and nose cuts off
- Lifeson, Alex (Canadian musician)
Rush: Formation and early albums: …of multiple bands that teenagers Alex Lifeson and John Rutsey attempted to form that year. The lineup included Lifeson on guitar, Rutsey on drums, and Jeff Jones on bass and vocals; Jones was quickly replaced, however, by bassist Geddy Lee, who also became the group’s lead singer.
- lifespace (psychology)
field theory: …a psychological field, or “life space,” as the locus of a person’s experiences and needs. The life space becomes increasingly differentiated as experiences accrue. Lewin adapted a branch of geometry known as topology to map the spatial relationships of goals and solutions contained in regions within a life space.…
- lifestyle
Alfred Adler: …a style of life, or lifestyle. The individual’s lifestyle forms in early childhood and is partly determined by what particular inferiority affected him most deeply during his formative years. The striving for superiority coexists with another innate urge: to cooperate and work with other people for the common good, a…
- Lifestyle Heart Trial (medical research study)
Dean Ornish: He began the Lifestyle Heart Trial, a controlled study of the effects of a low-fat diet and stress-management regime on a small group of heart disease patients, implementing a unique approach to treating heart disease that he developed in the late 1970s while he was still a student.…
- Lifetime Achievement Academy Award (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)
Sophia Loren: …distinguished acting career included a lifetime achievement Oscar (1991) and a career Golden Lion from the Venice Film Festival (1998). She also made headlines in the 1990s for her strong defense of animal rights. In 2010 she received the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize for theatre/film.
- Liffey, River (river, Ireland)
River Liffey, river in Counties Wicklow, Kildare, and Dublin, Ireland, rising in the Wicklow Mountains about 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Dublin. Following a tortuous course laid out in preglacial times, it flows in a generally northwesterly direction from its source to the Lackan Reservoir, the
- LIFO (accounting)
accounting: Cost of goods sold: …(1) first-in, first-out (FIFO), (2) last-in, first-out (LIFO), or (3) average cost. The LIFO method is widely used in the United States, where it is also an acceptable costing method for income tax purposes; companies in most other countries measure inventory cost and the cost of goods sold by some…
- Lifou Island (island, New Caledonia)
Lifou Island, largest and most populous of the Loyalty Islands in the French overseas country of New Caledonia, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is the central island of the group. Lifou rises no higher than 200 feet (60 metres) above sea level. The coralline limestone creates a fertile soil but also
- Lifsens rot (novel by Lidman)
Sara Lidman: …narrative writer with the novel Lifsens rot (1996; “Life’s Root”), “an independent continuation of the Railroad Suite” in which the author “masterfully goes over to a feminine track,” to quote one critic. Lifsens rot was followed by another railroad epic, Oskuldens minut (1999; “The Moment of Innocence”), which depicts a…
- Lifshitz, Ralph Rueben (American fashion designer)
Ralph Lauren is an American fashion designer who, by developing his brand around the image of an elite American lifestyle, built one of the world’s most successful fashion empires. Lifshitz grew up in the Bronx, in New York City. He and his brother changed their last name to Lauren when they were
- Lifshitz, Yevgeny (Russian physicist)
Casimir effect: In 1956 Russian physicist Yevgeny Lifshitz applied Casimir’s work to materials with different dielectric properties and found that in some cases the Casimir effect could be repulsive. In 2008 American physicist Jeremy Munday and Italian American physicist Federico Capasso first observed the repulsive Casimir effect between a gold-plated polystyrene
- lift (physics)
lift, upward-acting force on an aircraft wing or airfoil. An aircraft in flight experiences an upward lift force, as well as the thrust of the engine, the force of its own weight, and a drag force. The lift force arises because there is a zone of low air pressure on the top of the airfoil and a
- lift (ice skating)
figure skating: Lifts: Lifts are among the more spectacular elements of pairs skating. A basic lift is the overhead lift, in which the man raises his partner off the ice and balances her overhead with his arms fully extended as he moves across the ice. The star…
- lift (vertical transport)
elevator, car that moves in a vertical shaft to carry passengers or freight between the levels of a multistory building. Most modern elevators are propelled by electric motors, with the aid of a counterweight, through a system of cables and sheaves (pulleys). By opening the way to higher buildings,
- lift (rigging)
rigging: …rigging is subdivided into the lifts, jeers, and halyards (haulyards), by which the sails are raised and lowered, and the tacks and sheets, which hold down the lower corners of the sails. The history of the development of rigging over the centuries is obscure, but the combination of square and…
- Lift Every Voice and Sing (hymn by Johnson)
Lift Every Voice and Sing, hymn composed by the American writer and activist James Weldon Johnson and his younger brother, John Rosamond Johnson. Since it was first performed in 1900, it has come to be widely regarded as the Black American national anthem. Drawing on the tradition of Black
- lift net (fishing net)
commercial fishing: Drive-in and lift nets: A further fishing method employs lift nets, which are submerged, then raised or hauled upward out of the water to catch the fish or crustaceans above them, often attracted by light or natural bait. This group includes small hand-operated lift nets, such as hoop and blanket nets, as well as…
- lift station (civil engineering)
wastewater treatment: Pumps: …are installed in structures called lift stations. There are two basic types of lift stations: dry well and wet well. A wet-well installation has only one chamber or tank to receive and hold the sewage until it is pumped out. Specially designed submersible pumps and motors can be located at…
- lift-drag ratio
airplane: Aerodynamics: The ratio of lift to drag is low. When the hand is held parallel to the wind, there is far less drag and a moderate amount of lift is generated, the turbulence smooths out, and there is a better ratio of lift to drag. However, if…
- lift-ground etching (printmaking)
printmaking: Lift-ground etching (sugar-lift aquatint): In lift-ground etching, a positive image is etched on an aquatint plate by drawing with a water-soluble ground. In the conventional aquatint technique, the artist controls the image by stopping out negative areas with varnish, thus working around the positive image.…
- lift-netter (fishing vessel)
commercial fishing: Lift-netters: These vessels catch fish by lowering nets over the side, switching on powerful lights to attract the fish, and then lifting the net. Their main characteristics are long booms and support masts along the working side of the vessel. Lift-netters are generally low-powered vessels…
- lift-slab construction (building construction)
lift-slab construction, Technique whereby concrete floor slabs are poured on the ground, one on top of the other, and then lifted into place on top of columns by hydraulic jacks. Used for very tall multistory buildings, this method offers substantial savings in
- lift-to-drag ratio
airplane: Aerodynamics: The ratio of lift to drag is low. When the hand is held parallel to the wind, there is far less drag and a moderate amount of lift is generated, the turbulence smooths out, and there is a better ratio of lift to drag. However, if…
- Lifthrasir (Norse mythology)
Ragnarök: …two human beings, Lif and Lifthrasir (“Life” and “Vitality”), will emerge from the world tree (which was not destroyed) and repeople the earth. The title of Richard Wagner’s opera Götterdämmerung is a German equivalent of Ragnarök meaning “twilight of the gods.”
- lifting
weight training, system of physical conditioning using free weights (barbells and dumbbells) and weight machines (e.g., Nautilus-type equipment). It is a training system rather than a competitive sport such as Olympic weightlifting or powerlifting. There is evidence of weight training even in
- Lifting Up of the Bronze Serpent (painting by Tintoretto)
Tintoretto: Career: …of the upper hall with Lifting Up of the Bronze Serpent in time for the feast of the saint on August 16 and promised to paint a certain number of canvases, “wishing to demonstrate the great love that I bear for the saint and our venerable school, because of my…
- Lifu Island (island, New Caledonia)
Lifou Island, largest and most populous of the Loyalty Islands in the French overseas country of New Caledonia, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is the central island of the group. Lifou rises no higher than 200 feet (60 metres) above sea level. The coralline limestone creates a fertile soil but also
- Lifuka (island, Tonga)
Lifuka, uplifted crescent-shaped coral island in the Haʿapai Group of Tonga, southwestern Pacific Ocean. Lifuka was once the seat of the Tongan kings. Pangai, on its west coast, has the best harbour of the Haʿapai Group; it is also an administrative centre. Copra is exported. Area 4.4 square miles
- Liga Femenil Mexicanista, La (American organization)
Jovita Idár: Journalist and activist: …women at the congress formed La Liga Femenil Mexicanista (the League of Mexican Women), and she was chosen as its first president. The organization encouraged women to join the feminist movement and to work outside the home. In addition, La Liga opened free bilingual schools for children and raised money…
- Liga Filipina (Filipino political society)
José Rizal: …founded a nonviolent-reform society, the Liga Filipina, in Manila, and was deported to Dapitan in northwest Mindanao. He remained in exile for the next four years. In 1896 the Katipunan, a Filipino nationalist secret society, revolted against Spain. Although he had no connections with that organization and he had had…
- Liga Litoral (Argentine political society)
unitario: …which was opposed by the Liga Litoral, composed of the littoral provinces of Santa Fe and Entre Ríos. The Liga Litoral was joined in 1831 by Buenos Aires, which was in the hands of its governor (later dictator) Juan Manuel de Rosas, who fashioned his politics to further his drive…
- Liga Unitaria (Argentine political society)
unitario: José María Paz organized the Liga Unitaria to oppose the federalists; the provinces of Córdoba, San Luis, Mendoza, San Juan, Santiago del Estero, Tucumán, Salta, Jujuy, and Catamarca adhered to the league, which was opposed by the Liga Litoral, composed of the littoral provinces of Santa Fe and Entre Ríos.…
- Ligachev, Yegor Kuzmich (Soviet politician)
Russia: The Gorbachev era: perestroika and glasnost: When he took office, Yegor Ligachev was made head of the party’s Central Committee Secretariat, one of the two main centres of power (with the Politburo) in the Soviet Union. Ligachev subsequently became one of Gorbachev’s opponents, making it difficult for Gorbachev to use the party apparatus to implement…
- ligament (anatomy)
ligament, tough fibrous band of connective tissue that serves to support the internal organs and hold bones together in proper articulation at the joints. A ligament is composed of dense fibrous bundles of collagenous fibres and spindle-shaped cells known as fibrocytes, with little ground substance
- ligamentum teres femoris (anatomy)
femur: …place by a ligament (ligamentum teres femoris) within the socket and by strong surrounding ligaments. In humans the neck of the femur connects the shaft and head at a 125° angle, which is efficient for walking. A prominence of the femur at the outside top of the thigh provides…
- ligancy (chemistry)
coordination number, the number of atoms, ions, or molecules that a central atom or ion holds as its nearest neighbours in a complex or coordination compound or in a crystal. Thus the metal atom has coordination number 8 in the coordination complexes [Mo(CN)8]4- and [Sr(H2O)8]2+; 7 in the complex
- ligand (chemistry)
ligand, in chemistry, any atom or molecule attached to a central atom, usually a metallic element, in a coordination or complex compound. The atoms and molecules used as ligands are almost always those that are capable of functioning as the electron-pair donor in the electron-pair bond (a
- ligand field theory (chemistry)
ligand field theory, in chemistry, one of several theories that describe the electronic structure of coordination or complex compounds, notably transition metal complexes, which consist of a central metal atom surrounded by a group of electron-rich atoms or molecules called ligands. The ligand
- ligand isomerism (chemistry)
coordination compound: Ligand isomerism: Isomeric coordination compounds are known in which the overall isomerism results from isomerism solely within the ligand groups. An example of such isomerism is shown by the ions, bis(1,3-diaminopropane)platinum(2+) and bis(1,2-diaminopropane)platinum(2+),
- ligand-field splitting energy
chemical bonding: Ligand field theory: …two sets of orbitals, the ligand-field splitting energy (LFSE) is the ligand field version of the CFSE in crystal field theory, and from this point on the construction of the lowest-energy electron configuration is much the same as in crystal field theory. However, ligand field theory is less artificial, allows…
- Ligaridis, Paisios (Greek adventurer)
Nikon: A Greek adventurer, Paisios Ligaridis (now known to have been in collusion with Rome), was particularly active in bringing about Nikon’s downfall. The council deprived Nikon of all his sacerdotal functions and on December 23 exiled him as a monk to Beloozero, about 350 miles (560 km) directly…
- ligase (biochemistry)
ligase, any one of a class of about 50 enzymes that catalyze reactions involving the conservation of chemical energy and provide a couple between energy-demanding synthetic processes and energy-yielding breakdown reactions. They catalyze the joining of two molecules, deriving the needed energy from
- ligature (music)
musical notation: Neumes: …of notes are called “ligatures”:
- ligature (calligraphy)
calligraphy: Origins to the 8th century ce: …in a continuous stroke (a ligature); from the running action of the pen, this writing is often termed cursive. Scribes also made frequent use of abbreviations. When the scribe was skillful in reconciling clarity and speed, such writing may have much character, even beauty; but it often degenerates into a…
- Ligdan (khan of Mongolia)
Ligdan was the last of the paramount Mongol khans (ruled 1604–34). Ligdan was a member of the Chahar royal family in which the Mongol supreme khanate was vested. He lived at a time when the Mongols were abandoning their traditional shamanism to convert to Tibetan Buddhism. He had Buddhist temples
- Ligdan Kahn (khan of Mongolia)
Ligdan was the last of the paramount Mongol khans (ruled 1604–34). Ligdan was a member of the Chahar royal family in which the Mongol supreme khanate was vested. He lived at a time when the Mongols were abandoning their traditional shamanism to convert to Tibetan Buddhism. He had Buddhist temples
- Ligeia (short story by Poe)
Edgar Allan Poe: Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe: …of survival after dissolution (“Ligeia,” “Morella,” “Metzengerstein”), and his tales of fatality (“The Assignation,” “The Man of the Crowd”). Even when he does not hurl his characters into the clutch of mysterious forces or onto the untrodden paths of the beyond, he uses the anguish of imminent death as…
- liger (mammal)
liger, offspring of a male lion and a female tiger. The liger is a zoo-bred hybrid, as is the tigon, which is the result of mating a male tiger with a female lion. The liger and the tigon possess features of both parents, in variable proportions, but are generally larger than either. It is thought
- Ligeti, György (Hungarian-born composer)
György Ligeti was a leading composer of the branch of avant-garde music concerned principally with shifting masses of sound and tone colours. Ligeti, the great-nephew of violinist Leopold Auer, studied and taught music in Hungary until the Hungarian Revolution in 1956, when he fled to Vienna; he
- Ligeti, György Sándor (Hungarian-born composer)
György Ligeti was a leading composer of the branch of avant-garde music concerned principally with shifting masses of sound and tone colours. Ligeti, the great-nephew of violinist Leopold Auer, studied and taught music in Hungary until the Hungarian Revolution in 1956, when he fled to Vienna; he
- Ligety, Ted (American skier)
Ted Ligety is an American Alpine skier who was the first American man to win two Olympic gold medals in Alpine skiing events. Ligety began to ski when he was two years old. He started racing competitively at age 10 and quickly earned the nickname “Ted Shred” from his coach. By that age he had
- Ligety, Theodore Sharp (American skier)
Ted Ligety is an American Alpine skier who was the first American man to win two Olympic gold medals in Alpine skiing events. Ligety began to ski when he was two years old. He started racing competitively at age 10 and quickly earned the nickname “Ted Shred” from his coach. By that age he had
- Ligget’s Gap Railroad (American railway)
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, American railroad built to carry coal from the anthracite fields of northeastern Pennsylvania. Originally known as Ligget’s Gap Railroad, it was chartered in 1851 as the Lackawanna and Western. Eventually it ran from the Lackawanna Valley in
- Liggett & Myers Company (American company)
Liggett Group Inc., former U.S. conglomerate that once held major interests in tobacco products, spirits and wines, and pet foods. In 1849 J.E. Liggett and Brother was established in St. Louis, Mo., by John Edmund Liggett (1826–97) as an outgrowth of a family concern dating to 1822. George S. Myers
- Liggett & Myers Incorporated (American company)
Liggett Group Inc., former U.S. conglomerate that once held major interests in tobacco products, spirits and wines, and pet foods. In 1849 J.E. Liggett and Brother was established in St. Louis, Mo., by John Edmund Liggett (1826–97) as an outgrowth of a family concern dating to 1822. George S. Myers
- Liggett & Myers Tobacco Company (American company)
Liggett Group Inc., former U.S. conglomerate that once held major interests in tobacco products, spirits and wines, and pet foods. In 1849 J.E. Liggett and Brother was established in St. Louis, Mo., by John Edmund Liggett (1826–97) as an outgrowth of a family concern dating to 1822. George S. Myers
- Liggett Group Inc. (American company)
Liggett Group Inc., former U.S. conglomerate that once held major interests in tobacco products, spirits and wines, and pet foods. In 1849 J.E. Liggett and Brother was established in St. Louis, Mo., by John Edmund Liggett (1826–97) as an outgrowth of a family concern dating to 1822. George S. Myers
- Liggett, Hunter (United States general)
Hunter Liggett was an American general, corps and army commander in World War I. After graduating from West Point in 1879, Liggett served in frontier posts and in the Philippines. He attended the Army War College (1909–10) and then served on the General Staff, earning wide respect for his ability
- Liggins, Jimmy (American musician)
rhythm and blues: …Jordan, Amos Milburn, Roy Milton, Jimmy Liggins, Joe Liggins, Floyd Dixon, Wynonie Harris, Big Joe Turner, and Charles Brown. While many of the numbers in these performers’ repertoires were in the classic 12-bar A-A-B blues form, others were straight pop songs, instrumentals that were close to light jazz
- light (physics)
light, electromagnetic radiation that can be detected by the human eye. Electromagnetic radiation occurs over an extremely wide range of wavelengths, from gamma rays with wavelengths less than about 1 × 10−11 metre to radio waves measured in metres. Within that broad spectrum the wavelengths
- Light a Penny Candle (novel by Binchy)
Maeve Binchy: Binchy’s first novel, Light a Penny Candle (1982), follows the friendship of two young women through two decades. Her second novel, Echoes (1985), tells of the struggle of an impoverished young woman to escape a narrow-minded, cruel resort town. In 1988 it was produced as a miniseries on…
- Light Action in the Caribbean (short stories by Lopez)
Barry Lopez: …volumes were Winter Count (1981), Light Action in the Caribbean (2000), and Outside (2014). Other notable works included the essay collections Crossing Open Ground (1988), About This Life (1998), and Embrace Fearlessly the Burning World (2022), the latter of which was published posthumously. In Horizon
- light adaptation (physiology)
photoreception: Refracting, reflecting, and parabolic optical mechanisms: …types of superposition eyes have adaptation mechanisms that restrict the amount of light reaching the retina in bright conditions. In most cases, light is restricted by the migration of dark pigment (held between the crystalline cones in the dark) into the clear zone; this cuts off the most oblique rays.…
- light air-defense gun (weapon)
artillery: Light weapons: Light air-defense guns, of calibres from 20 to 40 millimetres, were developed in the 1930s for protection against dive bombers and low-level attack. The most famous of these was a 40-millimetre gun sold by the Swedish firm of Bofors. Virtually an enlarged machine gun, this…
- light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation (instrument)
laser, a device that stimulates atoms or molecules to emit light at particular wavelengths and amplifies that light, typically producing a very narrow beam of radiation. The emission generally covers an extremely limited range of visible, infrared, or ultraviolet wavelengths. Many different types
- Light and Darkness (novel by Natsume Sōseki)
Japanese literature: The novel between 1905 and 1941: His last novel, Meian (1916; Light and Darkness), though unfinished, has been acclaimed by some as his masterpiece.
- Light and Grass (work by Christensen)
Inger Christensen: …within the same volume as Light and Grass—both of which explore the relationship of language to the natural world with lyric maps of the Danish landscape. The publication of her long poem Det (1969; It) brought Christensen international acclaim. A 200-page exploration of the word it, the poem reveals the…
- Light and Space Movement (art)
Robert Irwin: …sculptor known for pioneering the Light and Space movement, a variety of West Coast Minimalist art that was concerned with the visual impact of light on geometric forms and on the viewer’s sensory experience of the work. In 1984 he became the first artist to receive the MacArthur Foundation “genius”…
- light antitank weapon
bazooka: …abandoned bazookas in favour of light antitank weapons, or LAWs, such as the M72, a one-shot disposable weapon that weighed 5 pounds (2.3 kg) fully loaded yet could launch its rocket with reasonable accuracy out to 350 yards (320 metres).
- Light at the End of the Tunnel (work by Musgrave)
Thea Musgrave: Light at the End of the Tunnel (2020), for viola, is a short piece commissioned by BBC Radio 3 during the COVID-19 pandemic.