- Limerick lace (Irish lace)
Limerick lace, strictly speaking not lace at all but embroidered machine-made net the appearance of which approximates true lace. It was made at Mount Kennet, near Limerick, in Ireland, having been introduced there by an English lace manufacturer in 1829. Designs similar to those of contemporary
- Limerick, Treaty of (Great Britain-Ireland [1691])
Godard van Reede, 1st earl of Athlone: …by the signing of the Treaty of Limerick, Oct. 3, 1691. For his services Ginkel was created earl of Athlone and baron of Aughrim, both in the Irish peerage, in 1692, when he also became naturalized as a subject in order to secure the ownership of the lands he had…
- Limerick, University of (university, Limerick, Ireland)
Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara: …the medical school for the University of Limerick (2012).
- limes (ancient Rome)
limes, in ancient Rome, originally a path that marked the boundary between plots of land. Later it came to refer to roads along which troops advanced into unfriendly territory. The word, therefore, came to mean a Roman military road, fortified with watchtowers and forts. Finally, limes acquired the
- Limes Alutanus (Roman fortifications, Europe)
Olt Defile: …of fortifications, known as the Limes Alutanus, for a time marked the eastern frontier of Roman Dacia. Remains of Roman castra have been found in the villages of Boița, Câlineni, and Călimănești. Several monasteries and hermitages were built in the area from the 14th to 18th century. The 17th-century Turnul…
- Limes Palestinae (Roman fortifications, Israel)
Elat: …a southern outpost of the Limes Palestinae, the line of border fortresses established by the Romans and the Nabataeans (Semitic tribes of ancient Arabia). It was a place of refuge for Jews fleeing the Muslim conquest of the Arabian Peninsula (7th century). In 1116 the town, by then known as…
- limestone (rock)
limestone, sedimentary rock composed mainly of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), usually in the form of calcite or aragonite. It may contain considerable amounts of magnesium carbonate (dolomite) as well; minor constituents also commonly present include clay, iron carbonate, feldspar, pyrite, and quartz.
- Limestone (Kentucky, United States)
Maysville, city, seat (1848) of Mason county, northeastern Kentucky, U.S. It lies at the confluence of Limestone Creek and the Ohio River, there bridged (1931) to Aberdeen, Ohio. The town was established as Limestone in 1787 at the site of a tavern operated (1786–89) by frontiersman Daniel Boone
- Limestone Hill (New York, United States)
Lackawanna, city, Erie county, western New York, U.S., on Lake Erie, adjoining Buffalo (north). Originally part of an Indian reservation, it was settled in the 1850s as part of West Seneca and was known as Limestone Hill. It was primarily a nursery and truck-farm area until 1899, when it was chosen
- Limestone Plains (territory, Australia)
Australian Capital Territory (A.C.T.), political entity of the Commonwealth of Australia consisting of Canberra, the national and territorial capital, and surrounding land. Most of the Australian Capital Territory lies within the Southern Tablelands district of New South Wales in southeastern
- Limey, The (film by Soderbergh [1999])
Steven Soderbergh: Breakthrough: sex, lies, and videotape; Erin Brockovich; and Traffic: The Limey (1999), a gritty gangster tale, enjoyed similar accolades. In 2000 Soderbergh established himself as a leading director with the release of Erin Brockovich and Traffic. The former was based on the true story of a woman (played by Julia Roberts) who discovers that…
- Limfjorden (strait, Denmark)
Limfjorden, strait (110 miles [180 km] long) across northern Jutland, Denmark, connecting the North Sea and the Kattegat and separating the Vendsyssel and Thy regions from the mainland. Actually a series of fjords dotted with inlets and islands, it opens into a lagoon (15 miles [24 km] wide) in its
- Limicolae (bird)
shorebird, any member of the suborder Charadrii (order Charadriiformes) that is commonly found on sea beaches or inland mudflats; in Britain they are called waders, or wading birds. Shorebirds include the avocet, courser, lapwing, oystercatcher, phalarope, plover, pratincole, sandpiper, and snipe
- liming (agriculture)
agricultural technology: Liming: Liming to reduce soil acidity is practiced extensively in humid areas where rainfall leaches calcium and magnesium from the soil, thus creating an acid condition. Calcium and magnesium are major plant nutrients supplied by liming materials. Ground limestone is widely used for this purpose;…
- limit (mathematics)
limit, mathematical concept based on the idea of closeness, used primarily to assign values to certain functions at points where no values are defined, in such a way as to be consistent with nearby values. For example, the function (x2 − 1)/(x − 1) is not defined when x is 1, because division by
- limit (liability insurance)
insurance: Limits of liability: Practically all liability insurance policies contain limitations on the maximum amount of a judgment payable under the contract. Further, the cost of defense, supplementary payments, and punitive damages may or may not be paid in addition to the judgment limits. Separate limits…
- limit order (business)
security: Types of orders: A limit (or limited) order is an order to buy or sell a stated amount of a security when it reaches a specified price or a better one if it is obtainable after the order comes to the trading floor. In the Amsterdam market, the device…
- limit point (mathematics)
connectedness: A point is called a limit point of a set in the Euclidean plane if there is no minimum distance from that point to members of the set; for example, the set of all numbers less than 1 has 1 as a limit point. A set is not connected if…
- limitanei (Roman military)
North Africa: Later Roman Empire: …these were second-line soldiers, or limitanei. The whole frontier region along the desert and mountain fringes was divided into sectors and garrisoned by limitanei. These were locally recruited and closely identified with the farming population of their areas. The Tripolitanian plateau, which was increasingly exposed to attacks by the nomadic…
- limitation, statute of (law)
statute of limitations, legislative act restricting the time within which legal proceedings may be brought, usually to a fixed period after the occurrence of the events that gave rise to the cause of action. Such statutes are enacted to protect persons against claims made after disputes have become
- limitations, statute of (law)
statute of limitations, legislative act restricting the time within which legal proceedings may be brought, usually to a fixed period after the occurrence of the events that gave rise to the cause of action. Such statutes are enacted to protect persons against claims made after disputes have become
- limited effects paradigm (communication)
two-step flow model of communication: …be known as the “limited effects paradigm” of media influence, explicated more fully by Joseph Klapper in The Effects of Mass Communication (1960), which guided mass communication researchers over the next five decades.
- Limited Inc., The (American company)
Abercrombie & Fitch: …& Fitch was bought by The Limited, Inc. Repositioned as the trademarked “casual luxury” brand, it became parent to the subsidiary brands abercrombie kids, a children’s line launched in 1998 and marketed as abercrombie; Hollister Co., a line for younger teens launched in 2000; RUEHL No. 925, a line targeting…
- limited liability (law)
limited liability, condition under which the losses that owners (shareholders) of a business firm may incur are limited to the amount of capital invested by them in the business and do not extend to their personal assets. Acceptance of this principle by business enterprises and governments was a
- limited nuclear options (military strategy)
limited nuclear options (LNO), military strategy of the Cold War era that envisioned a direct confrontation between the two nuclear superpowers (i.e., the Soviet Union and the United States) that did not necessarily end in either surrender or massive destruction and the loss of millions of lives on
- limited obligation bond (government finance)
revenue bond, bond issued by a municipality, state, or public agency authorized to build, acquire, or improve a revenue-producing property such as a mass transit system, an electric generating plant, an airport, or a toll road. Unlike general obligation bonds, which carry the full faith and credit
- limited order (business)
security: Types of orders: A limit (or limited) order is an order to buy or sell a stated amount of a security when it reaches a specified price or a better one if it is obtainable after the order comes to the trading floor. In the Amsterdam market, the device…
- limited partnership (business)
limited liability: …amounts of capital in industry, limited partnerships became popular. Known as the société en commandite in France and Kommanditgesellschaft in Germany, the limited-partnership arrangement required at least one partner to be totally liable as in a regular partnership and allowed other partners to be liable only for the amounts invested…
- limited performance (theater)
theatrical production: The single performance: Single or limited performance of a presentation, as part of institutional or communal life, has been fairly common throughout the history of the theatre. The Greek city-state (polis), the medieval town, the Japanese temple, and the American high school are but a few…
- limited proteolysis (biochemistry)
bleeding and blood clotting: Biochemical basis of activation: This process, known generally as limited proteolysis, is equivalent to a molecular switch; by cutting a specific bond that connects two amino acids in the string of amino acids known as a polypeptide, an active enzyme is formed. Thus, the blood contains a system poised to become engaged instantaneously in…
- Limited Views (work by Qian Zhongshu)
Qian Zhongshu: …and the four-volume Guanzhuibian (1979; Limited Views, a partial translation). The latter work contains comparative studies in literature and culture in general, many of which involve several languages and a good number of authors and their creative or scholarly works, both ancient and modern. In 1986 a volume of revisions…
- limited warfare
total war: …complete victory, as distinguished from limited war. Throughout history, limitations on the scope of warfare have been more economic and social than political. Simple territorial aggrandizement has not, for the most part, brought about total commitments to war. The most deadly conflicts have been fought on ideological grounds in revolutions…
- limited-liability company (business)
business organization: Limited-liability companies, or corporations: The company or corporation, unlike the partnership, is formed not simply by an agreement entered into between its first members; it must also be registered at a public office or court designated by law or otherwise obtain official acknowledgment of its…
- limited-service wholesaler (business)
marketing: Limited-service wholesalers: Limited-service wholesalers, who offer fewer services to their customers and suppliers, emerged in order to reduce the costs of service. There are several types of limited-service wholesalers. Cash-and-carry wholesalers usually handle a limited line of fast-moving merchandise, selling to smaller retailers on a…
- limites (ancient Rome)
limes, in ancient Rome, originally a path that marked the boundary between plots of land. Later it came to refer to roads along which troops advanced into unfriendly territory. The word, therefore, came to mean a Roman military road, fortified with watchtowers and forts. Finally, limes acquired the
- limiting factor (biology)
density-dependent factor, in ecology, any force that affects the size of a population of living things in response to the density of the population (the number of individuals per unit area). Density-dependent factors often arise from biological phenomena, rather than from physical and chemical
- Limiting presidential terms of office (United States Constitution)
Twenty-second Amendment, amendment (1951) to the Constitution of the United States effectively limiting to two the number of terms a president of the United States may serve. It was one of 273 recommendations to the U.S. Congress by the Hoover Commission, created by Pres. Harry S. Truman, to
- Limitless (film by Burger [2011])
Bradley Cooper: Action roles followed, notably in Limitless (2011), Hit and Run (2012), and The Place Beyond the Pines (2012).
- Limits and Possibilities of Schooling, The (work by Hurn)
education: Implications for socioeconomic status: In The Limits and Possibilities of Schooling (1993), the American sociologist Christopher Hurn proposed one method of evaluating education systems over time. Hurn identified the following set of relationships between variables: first, the correlation between adults’ educational attainment (years of schooling and degrees completed) and socioeconomic…
- Limits and Renewals (work by Kipling)
Rudyard Kipling: Legacy of Rudyard Kipling: …Debits and Credits (1926), and Limits and Renewals (1932). While his later stories cannot exactly be called better than the earlier ones, they are as good—and they bring a subtler if less dazzling technical proficiency to the exploration of deeper though sometimes more perplexing themes. It is a far cry…
- Limits of Control, The (film by Jarmusch [2009])
Jim Jarmusch: The Limits of Control (2009) comprised a series of surreal interludes between an assassin and his various contacts, and Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) was an atmospheric vampire thriller.
- Limits of Religious Thought, The (work by Mansel)
Henry Longueville Mansel: In his Bampton Lectures, The Limits of Religious Thought (1858), Mansel expounded Hamilton’s doctrine that human knowledge is strictly limited to the finite and is “conditioned.” In reply to attacks on this notion by John Stuart Mill and other critics, Mansel defended Hamilton’s views in The Philosophy of the…
- Limits to Growth, The (work by Meadows)
futurology: …Massachusetts Institute of Technology published The Limits to Growth, based on a study commissioned by the Club of Rome, an international assembly of business leaders. This report focused on hypotheses derived from a computer model of the interaction of various global socioeconomic trends; it projected a Malthusian vision in which…
- limma (music)
microtonal music: …as comma (24 cents) and limma (90 cents).
- Limmat River (river, Switzerland)
Zürich: … and is continued as the Limmat. East of the lake, separated by successively higher ridges, are the valleys of the Glatt, which flows through the lake called Greifensee, and the more gorgelike Töss, separated from the Toggenburg (valley) by a ridge along the east boundary that reaches 3,717 ft (1,133…
- Limmen Bight (inlet, Northern Territory, Australia)
Limmen Bight, inlet of the Gulf of Carpentaria, in the northeast coast of Northern Territory, Australia. It extends for 85 miles (135 km) between the islands of Groote Eylandt (north) and the Sir Edward Pellew Group (southeast) and includes Maria Island. The bight receives the Roper, Towns, and
- Limmu list
chronology: Mesopotamian chronology, 747 to 539 bc: …at the same time as eponym lists, and a number of these annals, or the campaigns mentioned in them, were dated by eponyms who figured in the eponym lists. Moreover, some of the Assyrian kings in the annals were also kings of Babylonia and as such were included in Ptolemy’s…
- Limnanthaceae (plant family)
Brassicales: Other families: Limnanthaceae, or the meadowfoam family, includes one or two genera and eight species growing in temperate North America. They are rather soft-stemmed herbs with deeply lobed or compound leaves and rather widely open flowers, and there may be one style coming from the base of…
- Limnatis nilotica (leech)
leech: Aquatic leeches, particularly Limnatis nilotica, may enter the body in drinking water. Some may enter the excretory openings of persons who bathe in infested waters. L. nilotica, which inhabits lakes and streams of southern Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, attains lengths of up to 12 cm…
- limner (visual arts)
Nicholas Hilliard: …of painting miniature portraiture (called limning in Elizabethan England) to its highest point of development and did much to formulate the concept of portraiture there during the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
- limnetic zone (ecology)
lacustrine ecosystem: …plants and bottom-dwelling animals; (2) limnetic, the water open to effective light penetration, supporting plant and animal plankton; and (3) profundal, the bottom and deepwater area beyond light penetration, supporting dark-adapted organisms.
- Limnichidae
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Limnichidae (minute marsh-loving beetles) Similar to Dryopidae; a few widely distributed species. Family Lutrochidae (travertine beetles) 1 genus (Lutrochus); found near streams; distribution limited to New World. Family Psephenidae (
- limning (art)
miniature painting, small, finely wrought portrait executed on vellum, prepared card, copper, or ivory. The name is derived from the minium, or red lead, used by the medieval illuminators. Arising from a fusion of the separate traditions of the illuminated manuscript and the medal, miniature
- Limnoaedus ocularis (amphibian)
chorus frog: …115 inches) long, but the little grass frog (P. ocularis) reaches a maximum of 1.9 cm (34 inch), and Strecker’s chorus frog (P. streckeri) may grow to 4.5 cm (145 inches).
- Limnocharitaceae (plant family)
Alismatales: Families: Limnocharitaceae consist of three genera, Butomopsis of the Paleotropics (Old World tropics) and Limnocharis and Hydrocleys (water poppy) of the Neotropics. Limnocharis has been introduced into the Asian tropics, however. Butomaceae, native to Europe and Asia, consists of one species, Butomus umbellatus (flowering rush
- Limnocorax flavirostra (bird)
crake: Africa’s black crake (Limnocorax flavirostra) is a 20-centimetre- (8-inch-) long form, black with a green bill and pink legs. It is less secretive than most. Pygmy crakes (Sarothrura species), about 14 cm (6 inches) long, are very secretive, inhabiting swampy African forests. Other New World crakes…
- Limnodromus (bird)
dowitcher, any of three species of shorebirds belonging to the genus Limnodromus, family Scolopacidae. The dowitcher has a chunky appearance and a long bill like a snipe and, in breeding plumage, has reddish underparts, giving rise to the alternative names red-breasted snipe and robin snipe (given
- Limnodromus griseus (bird)
dowitcher: …northwesterly breeding range than the short-billed dowitcher (L. griseus), which is about the same size except for the bill. There is also an Asian species, called the Asiatic dowitcher (L. semipalmatus).
- Limnodynastinae (amphibian subfamily)
frog and toad: Annotated classification: …cm (4 inches); 2 subfamilies: Limnodynastinae (New Guinea and Australia) and Myobatrachinae (New Guinea and Australia). Family Pseudidae No fossil record; 8 presacral vertebrae; sacral diapophyses round; pectoral girdle arciferal; intercalary cartilages present, ossified; omosternum present; Bidder’s organ absent; maxillary teeth present; aquatic larvae (which grow to a
- Limnogale mergulus (mammal)
tenrec: The amphibious tenrec (Limnogale mergulus) is the only species in its genus. In addition to its webbed feet, keeled tail, and water-repellent fur, the amphibious tenrec also has the body form, habits, and diet of water shrews.
- limnology (hydrology)
limnology, subsystem of hydrology that deals with the scientific study of fresh waters, specifically those found in lakes and ponds. The discipline also includes the biological, physical, and chemical aspects of the occurrence of lake and pond waters. Limnology traditionally is closely related to
- Limnomedusae (invertebrate suborder)
cnidarian: Annotated classification: Suborder Limnomedusae Small medusae with gonads on stomach walls or radial canals. Polyps solitary or colonial, commonly with 1 or 2 tentacles, and no skeleton. Mostly freshwater. Order Milleporina Fire coral. Colonial forms producing massive calcareous skeletons. Gastrozooids and dactylozooids project through pores in surface of…
- Limnopithecus (fossil primate genus)
primate: Miocene: …number of other genera (Limnopithecus, Dendropithecus, Afropithecus, Kamoypithecus, and others) have been added to the family. The location of the actual ancestors of living hominoids remained mysterious until previously known specimens from the Moroto District, in eastern Uganda, were reexamined and fresh material was discovered. In 1997 the description…
- Limnoria (crustacean)
gribble, any of the approximately 20 species of wood-boring, marine crustaceans constituting the genus Limnoria, in the order Isopoda. They feed on algae, driftwood, and the submerged wood of docks and wharves and sometimes attack the nonwoody insulation of submarine cables. Limnoria lignorum,
- Limnoria lignorum (crustacean)
gribble: Limnoria lignorum, which occurs throughout the seas of the Northern Hemisphere, grows to 5 mm (0.2 inch) in length and has a gray body consisting of 14 clearly defined segments. It burrows about 12 mm into wood. L. tripunctata occurs in the Atlantic Ocean from…
- Limnoria pfefferi (crustacean)
gribble: L. pfefferi is found in the Pacific and Indian oceans; L. saseboensis is found on the Atlantic coast of the southeastern United States and on the coast of Japan.
- Limnoria saseboensis (crustacean)
gribble: …the Pacific and Indian oceans; L. saseboensis is found on the Atlantic coast of the southeastern United States and on the coast of Japan.
- Limnoria tripunctata (crustacean)
gribble: L. tripunctata occurs in the Atlantic Ocean from New England (U.S.) to Venezuela and in the Pacific Ocean from California to Mexico. It even penetrates wood that has been impregnated with creosote, an offensive chemical that repels most wood-boring invertebrates. L. pfefferi is found in…
- Límnos (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
- Limnoscelis (fossil tetrapod genus)
Limnoscelis, extinct genus of tetrapod that appeared very close to the origin of amniotes (mammals, birds, or reptiles). It may have been a stem form from which more advanced reptiles may have descended. It occurs as fossils in Permian rocks (those 251 million to 299 million years old) of North
- Limoges (France)
Limoges, city, capital of Haute-Vienne département and of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine région, southeastern France (formerly in the province of Limousin), south-southwest of Paris, on the right bank of the Vienne River. Capital of the Lemovices, a Gallic tribe, Limoges was an important Roman centre, with
- Limoges painted enamel
Limoges painted enamel, any of the enamelled products made in Limoges, France, and generally considered the finest painted enamelware produced in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries. Limoges enamels are largely the work of a few families, such as the Pénicaud, Limosin, and Reymond families. The
- Limoges ware
Limoges ware, porcelain, largely servicewares, produced in Limoges, Fr., from the 18th century. Faience (tin-glazed earthenware) of mediocre quality was produced there after 1736, but the manufacture of hard-paste, or true, porcelain dates only from 1771. The manufacturers took advantage of being
- Limoges, University of (university, Limoges, France)
Limoges: …is the seat of the Université de Limoges (founded 1808; suppressed 1840; reopened 1965) and is a bishopric. Pop. (1999) 133,968; (2014 est.) 134,577.
- Limoida (bivalve order)
bivalve: Annotated classification: Order Limoida Shell equivalve, ovally elongate, ribbed, often thin and transparent, with outer foliated calcite and inner crossed-lamellar aragonitic layers; hinge short and edentulous; monomyarian; ctenidia pseudolamellibranch, encircling the adductor; palps small and lips of mouth variably fused; mantle margins unfused and often red, with long…
- limon (sedimentary deposit)
loess, an unstratified, geologically recent deposit of silty or loamy material that is usually buff or yellowish brown in colour and is chiefly deposited by the wind. Loess is a sedimentary deposit composed largely of silt-size grains that are loosely cemented by calcium carbonate. It is usually
- Limón (Costa Rica)
Limón, city and port, eastern Costa Rica. It is located on an open roadstead of the Caribbean Sea near the landfall sighted by Christopher Columbus in 1503. The waters there are deep enough for large ships, and a sandbar offers some protection for the port. In the colonial era, the port was used by
- Limón Bay (bay, Panama)
Limón Bay, natural harbour of the Caribbean Sea, in Panama at the north end of the Panama Canal. Approximately 4.5 miles (7 km) long and 2.5 miles wide, it is protected from storms by breakwaters at its entrance. The bay serves as a waiting area for ships about to enter the canal. On its eastern
- Limón, Ada (American poet)
Ada Limón is an American poet who is best known for creating intimacy with readers through her emotional sincerity and thoughtful observations of nature and humans’ place within it. In 2022 she was named the 24th poet laureate of the United States. Limón was born into a family of artists and
- Limón, José (Mexican-born American dancer)
José Limón was a Mexican-born American modern dancer and choreographer who expanded the repertoire of modern dance in works that explored the strengths and weaknesses of the human character. Discouraged by his progress as an art student, Limón in 1930 began to study dance with Doris Humphrey and
- Limón, José Arcadio (Mexican-born American dancer)
José Limón was a Mexican-born American modern dancer and choreographer who expanded the repertoire of modern dance in works that explored the strengths and weaknesses of the human character. Discouraged by his progress as an art student, Limón in 1930 began to study dance with Doris Humphrey and
- limoncello (alcoholic beverage)
limoncello, tangy, sweet, and fragrant liqueur of Italian origin made from lemon zest. Limoncello is mainly produced in southern Italy, particularly around the Amalfi coast, Sicily, and the Bay of Naples. It is traditionally served chilled as an after-dinner digestif. Limoncello can also be used to
- Limondjian, Baba Hampartsoum (Armenian musician)
Armenian chant: …Armenian from Constantinople (now Istanbul), Baba Hampartsoum Limondjian, proposed another reform and modernization of the musical notation along the lines of the contemporary notational reform in the Greek church (which allowed more precise indication of pitch). In its present-day performance, Armenian chant consists of intricate melodies with great rhythmic variety,…
- limonene (chemical compound)
limonene, a colourless liquid abundant in the essential oils of pine and citrus trees and used as a lemonlike odorant in industrial and household products and as a chemical intermediate. Limonene exists in two isomeric forms (compounds with the same molecular formula—in this case, C10H16—but with
- limonite (mineral)
limonite, one of the major iron minerals, hydrated ferric oxide (FeO(OH)·nH2O). It was originally considered one of a series of such oxides; later it was thought to be the amorphous equivalent of goethite and lepidocrocite, but X-ray studies have shown that most so-called limonite is actually
- Limonium (plant)
sea lavender, (genus Limonium), genus of about 300 species of chiefly perennial herbaceous plants of the family Plumbaginaceae. The plants are found in North America, Eurasia, Africa, and Australia, most members being found around the Mediterranean region. Sea lavenders tolerate saline soils and
- Limonium arborescens (plant)
sea lavender: Major species: A few species, including tree sea lavender (L. arborescens) of Tenerife, are tall and shrubby.
- Limonium sinuatum (plant)
sea lavender: Major species: Wavy-leaf sea lavender (L. sinuatum) is one of several species cultivated for use as cut flowers in the floral industry. A few species, including tree sea lavender (L. arborescens) of Tenerife, are tall and shrubby.
- Limonium vulgare (plant)
sea lavender: Major species: …or common, sea lavender (Limonium vulgare). Bearing small flowers in dense spikes, it grows naturally in large tracts that sometimes turn acres lilac-coloured in late summer. It is a popular ornamental in warm climates. Wavy-leaf sea lavender (L. sinuatum) is one of several species cultivated for use as cut…
- Limosa (bird)
godwit, any of four species of large, long-billed shorebirds of the genus Limosa, family Scolopacidae, named for its whistling call. Godwits are generally reddish brown in summer and grayish in winter; all nest in the Northern Hemisphere. The black-tailed godwit (L. limosa), about 40 centimetres
- Limosa fedoa (bird)
godwit: …other North American form, the marbled godwit (L. fedoa), with slightly upturned bill and pinkish brown underwings, is fairly common; it undergoes little seasonal colour change. Slightly smaller is the bar-tailed godwit (L. lapponica), of the Eurasian and Alaskan tundra. Some members of the subspecies L. lapponica bauri are capable…
- Limosa haemastica (bird)
godwit: …America a smaller form, the Hudsonian godwit (L. haemastica), declined in population from overshooting to an estimated 2,000 survivors, but it may be reviving. The other North American form, the marbled godwit (L. fedoa), with slightly upturned bill and pinkish brown underwings, is fairly common; it undergoes little seasonal colour…
- Limosa lapponica (bird)
godwit: Slightly smaller is the bar-tailed godwit (L. lapponica), of the Eurasian and Alaskan tundra. Some members of the subspecies L. lapponica bauri are capable of migrating nonstop from Alaska to New Zealand.
- Limosa lapponica bauri (bird subspecies)
godwit: Some members of the subspecies L. lapponica bauri are capable of migrating nonstop from Alaska to New Zealand.
- Limosa limosa (bird)
godwit: The black-tailed godwit (L. limosa), about 40 centimetres (16 inches) long including the bill, has a black-banded, white tail. The bill is long and straight. The black-tailed godwit, which breeds in Iceland and on wet plains across Eurasia, is the emblem of the Netherlands Ornithological Union.…
- Limosin, Léonard (French painter)
Léonard Limosin was a French painter especially known for the revealing realism of his portraits painted in enamel. Limosin was the most accomplished member of one of the best-known families of enamelers working in Limoges during the 16th century. His early works were influenced by German
- Limousin (historical region, France)
Limousin, historical region and former région of France. As a région, it encompassed the central départements of Corrèze, Haute-Vienne, and Creuse. In 2016 the Limousin région was joined with the régions of Poitou-Charentes and Aquitaine to form the new administrative entity of Nouvelle Aquitaine.
- Limousin (breed of cattle)
livestock farming: Beef cattle breeds: The Limousin breed, which originated in west central France, is second in importance to the Charolais as a European meat breed. Limousin cattle, often longer, finer boned, and slightly smaller than the Charolais, are also heavily muscled and relatively free from excessive deposits of fat.
- Limousin 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…
- Limousin, Léonard (French painter)
Léonard Limosin was a French painter especially known for the revealing realism of his portraits painted in enamel. Limosin was the most accomplished member of one of the best-known families of enamelers working in Limoges during the 16th century. His early works were influenced by German