- line (mathematics)
line, Basic element of Euclidean geometry. Euclid defined a line as an interval between two points and claimed it could be extended indefinitely in either direction. Such an extension in both directions is now thought of as a line, while Euclid’s original definition is considered a line segment. A
- line (military formation)
tactics: Linear formation: Meanwhile, the improvement of firearms caused armour to be discarded. Infantry ceased wearing it almost completely after 1660, and the armour carried by cavalrymen grew steadily shorter until all that remained were the breastplates worn by heavy cavalry—the cuirassiers—as late as the 20th…
- line (prosody)
prosody: Scansion: …units are the foot, the line, and the stanza. The recurrence of similar feet in a line determines the metre; here there are three lines consisting of four iambic feet (i.e., of four units in which the common pattern is the iamb—an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable), which…
- line abreast (aviation)
formation flying: In line abreast, or wall formation, all the planes are equally far forward, in line with the leader. A formation with equal numbers of wingmen on either side of the leader is called a vic, or a vee. An aircraft flying directly under and behind the…
- line broadening (spectroscopy)
line broadening, in spectroscopy, the spreading across a greater wavelength, or frequency range, of absorption lines (dark) or emission lines (bright) in the radiation received from some object. The broadening is partly an extremely small intrinsic effect produced within the absorbing or radiating
- line defect (crystallography)
ceramic composition and properties: Brittleness: …property owing to imperfections called dislocations within their crystal lattices. There are many kinds of dislocations. In one kind, known as an edge dislocation, an extra plane of atoms can be generated in a crystal structure, straining to the breaking point the bonds that hold the atoms together. If stress…
- line drive (baseball)
baseball: Getting on base: …angle into the ground), and line drives (a ball that is close to and parallel to the ground). Another way the batter can reach base is through an error. An error occurs when a mistake by the fielder allows the batter to reach base on a play that would normally…
- line engraving (art)
engraving: Another term for the process, line engraving, derives from the fact that this technique reproduces only linear marks. Tone and shading, however, can be suggested by making parallel lines or crosshatching.
- line fishing
commercial fishing: Gear: …wounding gear, (3) stunning, (4) line fishing, (5) trapping, (6) trapping in the air, (7) fishing with bag nets, (8) dredging and trawling, (9) seining, (10) fishing with surrounding nets, (11) driving fish into nets, (12) fishing with lift nets, (13) fishing with falling gear, (14) gillnetting, (15) fishing with…
- line graph (mathematics)
combinatorics: Characterization problems of graph theory: The line graph H of a graph G is a graph the vertices of which correspond to the edges of G, any two vertices of H being adjacent if and only if the corresponding edges of G are incident with the same vertex of G.
- line intaglio (printing)
counterfeiting: …is the poor resolution of lines in the engraving of the bill. The line-intaglio process used for the printing of bills produces a distinctive sharpness of fine lines and readily discernible differences in ink thickness. Genuine bills have another element that is difficult to imitate: the use of a distinctive…
- line integral (mathematics)
line integral, in mathematics, integral of a function of several variables, defined on a line or curve C with respect to arc length s:as the maximum segment Δis of C approaches 0. The line integralsare defined analogously. Line integrals are used extensively in the theory of functions of a complex
- Line Islands (islands, Pacific Ocean)
Line Islands, chain of coral islands in the central Pacific Ocean, some of which belong to Kiribati and some of which are claimed as unincorporated territories belonging to the United States. The Line Islands extend 1,600 miles (2,600 km) northwestward from French Polynesia. They have a land area
- Line Made by Walking, A (work by Long)
Western painting: Land art: Hence, in A Line Made by Walking (1967), Richard Long simply trod a mark into a field of daisies by walking backward and forward repeatedly. Another characteristic British work is Ian Hamilton Finlay’s garden, Stonypath, in Lanarkshire, Scotland. Dotted with clumps of trees harbouring stone tablets inscribed…
- line of credit (finance)
business finance: Commercial bank loans: A line of credit, as distinguished from a single loan, is a formal or informal understanding between the bank and the borrower as to the maximum loan balance the bank will allow at any one time.
- Line of Rail (region, Zambia)
Zambia: …most developed area—known as the Line of Rail—which is served by the railway linking the Copperbelt with Lusaka, the capital, and with the border town of Livingstone.
- line orienteering (sport)
orienteering: Variations of orienteering include line orienteering, in which the competitors follow the same route, visiting controls that can be found only by accurately adhering to the route; route orienteering, in which the route is marked not on a master map but on the ground itself and in which contestants…
- line plate (photoengraving)
photoengraving: Line plates: In line illustrations all of the image areas are either black or white, and hence no halftone screen is required to copy them for use in making a printing plate. Suitable copy consists of line drawings, etchings, etc. The negative as it comes…
- line radiation (physics)
radio source: …produce either continuum radiation or line radiation. Continuum radiation covers a very broad range of wavelengths; hence, continuum sources can be detected and studied with a radio telescope tuned to any convenient wavelength. Two different processes generate continuum radio radiation. One of these involves thermal radiation, the electromagnetic energy given…
- line spectrum (physics)
spectroscopy: Basic atomic structure: The emission and absorption spectra of the elements depend on the electronic structure of the atom. An atom consists of a number of negatively charged electrons bound to a nucleus containing an equal number of positively charged protons. The nucleus
- line squall (meteorology)
squall: …rain, hail, or thunder; a line squall is one associated with a squall line of thunderstorms that is often hundreds of kilometres long.
- Line, bar, and candlestick charts: 3 types technical analysts use
Learn to read the stories charts are telling.Line, bar, and candlesticks—these are the three most common technical analysis chart types. Think of them as vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry ice cream flavors. A line chart gives you that plain vanilla overview; a bar chart adds a bit of richness; and
- line-abreast battle (naval formation)
naval warfare: The age of galley warfare: …the bow, which dictated a line abreast as the tactical formation. In the line abreast, two lines of opposing galleys approached each other head on, with the ram of each vessel unobstructed by the ships on either side. Momentum was the key to the ram’s destructiveness, so that sprint speed—as…
- line-ahead battle (British naval formation)
ship-of-the-line warfare, columnar naval-battle formation developed by the British and Dutch in the mid-17th century whereby each ship followed in the wake of the ship ahead of it. This formation maximized the new firing power of the broadside (simultaneous discharge of all the guns arrayed on one
- line-and-wash drawing (art)
line-and-wash drawing, in the visual arts, a drawing marked out by pen or some similar instrument and then tinted with diluted ink or watercolour. In 13th-century China, artists used transparent ink washes to create delicate atmospheric effects. The line-and-wash technique was practiced in Europe
- line-drilling
mining: Unit operations: In line drilling, closely spaced pilot holes may be drilled first and the intervening material then removed by reaming with a larger-diameter bit. Other arrangements using special guides are also available. For softer, less-abrasive rocks, the remaining rock web between holes may simply be chipped or…
- line-of-battle warfare (British naval formation)
ship-of-the-line warfare, columnar naval-battle formation developed by the British and Dutch in the mid-17th century whereby each ship followed in the wake of the ship ahead of it. This formation maximized the new firing power of the broadside (simultaneous discharge of all the guns arrayed on one
- line-of-sight microwave link (communications)
telecommunications media: Line-of-sight microwave links: A line-of-sight microwave link uses highly directional transmitter and receiver antennas to communicate via a narrowly focused radio beam. The transmission path of a line-of-sight microwave link can be established between two land-based antennas, between a land-based antenna and a satellite-based antenna,…
- line-out (sports)
rugby: Principles of play: …restarts by forming a “line-out.” Two parallel lines of forward players line up at the point where the ball traversed the sideline. The ball is then thrown into play by a player from the team that did not last touch the ball. The player restarts play with an overhead…
- line-staff organization
line-staff organization, in management, approach in which authorities (e.g., managers) establish goals and directives that are then fulfilled by staff and other workers. A line-staff organizational structure attempts to render a large and complex enterprise more flexible without sacrificing
- linea lombarda (Italian literature)
Italian literature: Poetry after World War II: …the continuers of a hypothetical linea lombarda (“Lombard line”) of sober moral realism that, according to critic Luciano Anceschi, originated with Giuseppe Parini (see above). Other Fourth Generation poets of note are epigrammatist Bartolo Cattafi; Rocco Scotellaro, poet of the southern peasant and the most convincing practitioner of Neorealism in…
- Lineage (online game)
Lineage, online multiplayer fantasy role-playing game released by South Korean game developer NCsoft in 1998. Although American versions of Lineage have been released, the game’s core following is in South Korea, where the company boasts of having more than three million subscribers. Lineage allows
- lineage (sociology)
lineage, descent group reckoned through only one parent, either the father (patrilineage) or the mother (matrilineage). All members of a lineage trace their common ancestry to a single person. A lineage may comprise any number of generations but commonly is traced through some 5 or 10. Notionally,
- lineal kin (sociology)
kinship: The evolution of family forms: …while some cultures differentiated “lineal kin” (those in a direct parent-child relationship) from “collateral kin” (such as cousins, aunts, and uncles), others did not. In some cultures, for example, father and father’s brother, or mother and mother’s sister, were denoted by the same term. In such systems the terms…
- Lineale Ausdehnungslehre, ein neuer Zweig der Mathematik, Die (work by Grassmann)
Hermann Günther Grassmann: …general calculus of vectors in Die lineale Ausdehnungslehre, ein neuer Zweig der Mathematik (1844; “The Theory of Linear Extension, a New Branch of Mathematics”).
- lineament (geology)
Australia: The Western Plateau: …only slightly bowed) fractures called lineaments. Those fractures, most obvious in the north and west, delineate prominent rectangular or rhomboidal blocks, some of which have been raised to form uplands; others have been depressed to form lowlands or topographic basins. The lineaments display strong northwest-southeast and northeast-southwest trends in the…
- Linear A and Linear B (script)
Linear A and Linear B, linear forms of writing used by certain Aegean civilizations during the 2nd millennium bc. Linear A is attested in Crete and on some Aegean islands from approximately 1850 bc to 1400 bc. Its relation to the so-called hieroglyphic Minoan script is uncertain. It is a syllabic
- linear accelerator (physics)
linear accelerator, type of particle accelerator (q.v.) that imparts a series of relatively small increases in energy to subatomic particles as they pass through a sequence of alternating electric fields set up in a linear structure. The small accelerations add together to give the particles a
- linear alpha olefin (chemical compound)
olefin: Beginning in the 1970s, so-called linear alpha olefins (LAOs; distinguished by the double bond occurring on the first, or alpha, carbon atom in the unbranched chain) were produced through polymerization (specifically, oligomerization) and olefin metathesis, which together formed the basis of the Shell higher olefin process (SHOP). In olefin oligomerization,…
- linear amplifier (physics)
radiation measurement: Pulse mode: …second unit known as a linear amplifier in a manner that preserves the proportionality of the pulse amplitude to the charge Q produced in the detector.
- linear approximation (mathematics)
linear approximation, In mathematics, the process of finding a straight line that closely fits a curve (function) at some location. Expressed as the linear equation y = ax + b, the values of a and b are chosen so that the line meets the curve at the chosen location, or value of x, and the slope of
- linear arrangement (molecular shape)
chemical bonding: Molecules with no central atom: …is therefore expected to be linear, as is found in practice. The linearity of the molecule can be appreciated by referring to Figure 9.
- linear arrangement of genes, theory of
heredity: Simple linkage: … laid the foundation of the theory of linear arrangement of genes in the chromosomes.
- linear array (computing)
computer science: Algorithms and complexity: …simplest data structure is a linear array, in which adjacent elements are numbered with consecutive integer “indexes” and an element’s value is accessed by its unique index. An array can be used, for example, to store a list of names, and efficient methods are needed to efficiently search for and…
- Linear Associative Algebra (work by Peirce)
Benjamin Peirce: His best work, Linear Associative Algebra (1870), which is a study of possible systems of multiple algebras, stemmed from his interest in quaternions.
- linear astrolabe
mathematics: Islamic mathematics to the 15th century: …of a device, called the linear astrolabe, that places him in another important Islamic mathematical tradition, one that centred on the design of new forms of the ancient astronomical instrument known as the astrolabe. The astrolabe, whose mathematical theory is based on the stereographic projection of the sphere, was invented…
- Linear B (script)
Linear A and Linear B: Linear B, linear forms of writing used by certain Aegean civilizations during the 2nd millennium bc.
- linear circuit (electronics)
integrated circuit: Analog versus digital circuits: Analog, or linear, circuits typically use only a few components and are thus some of the simplest types of ICs. Generally, analog circuits are connected to devices that collect signals from the environment or send signals back to the environment. For…
- linear combination of atomic orbitals approximation
chemical bonding: Molecular orbital theory: …which is known as the linear combination of atomic orbitals (LCAO) approximation, each MO is constructed from a superposition of atomic orbitals belonging to the atoms in the molecule. The size of the contribution of an orbital from a particular atom indicates the probability that the electron will be found…
- linear differential equation
mathematics: Linear algebra: …classified as linear or nonlinear; linear differential equations are those for which the sum of two solutions is again a solution. The equation giving the shape of a vibrating string is linear, which provides the mathematical reason for why a string may simultaneously emit more than one frequency. The linearity…
- linear diffuser (device)
air-conditioning: The linear diffuser brings air through a plenum box or duct with a rectangular opening; louvers divert the down-flowing air. Other units are circular, and their fins radiate the air. Some ceilings are perforated to allow passage of cool air, and other ceilings are simply cooled…
- linear energy transfer (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…
- linear equation
linear equation, statement that a first-degree polynomial—that is, the sum of a set of terms, each of which is the product of a constant and the first power of a variable—is equal to a constant. Specifically, a linear equation in n variables is of the form a0 + a1x1 + … + anxn = c, in which x1, …,
- linear gradation, principle of (philosophy)
Great Chain of Being: According to the principle of linear gradation, this series ranges in hierarchical order from the barest type of existence to the ens perfectissimum, or God.
- linear graph
number game: Graphs and networks: …the latter are sometimes called linear graphs, although there is little confusion within a given context. Such graphs have long been associated with puzzles.
- linear induction motor (mechanical device)
roller coaster: Later innovations: The linear induction motor (LIM) used high-powered magnets to launch coasters like a slingshot, enabling them, for example, to reach speeds of 70 miles (112.5 km) per hour in under four seconds. A similar innovation is the linear synchronous motor (LSM) by Intamin, originally on Superman…
- linear low-density polyethylene (chemistry)
polyethylene: Linear low-density polyethylene: LLDPE is structurally similar to LDPE. It is made by copolymerizing ethylene with 1-butene and smaller amounts of 1-hexene and 1-octene, using Ziegler-Natta or metallocene catalysts. The resultant structure has a linear backbone, but it has short, uniform branches that, like the…
- linear magnification (optics)
magnification: Linear (sometimes called lateral or transverse) magnification refers to the ratio of image length to object length measured in planes that are perpendicular to the optical axis. A negative value of linear magnification denotes an inverted image. Longitudinal magnification denotes the factor by which an…
- linear momentum (physics)
mechanics: Centre of mass: …entire two-body system has constant linear momentum, moving in a straight line at constant speed. Without any loss of generality, one can imagine observing the system from a frame of reference moving along with that same speed and direction. This is sometimes called the centre-of-mass frame. In this frame, the…
- linear motion (physics)
linear motion, motion in one spatial dimension. According to Newton’s first law (also known as the principle of inertia), a body with no net force acting on it will either remain at rest or continue to move with uniform speed in a straight line, according to its initial condition of motion. In
- linear motor
linear motor, power source providing electric traction in a straight line, rather than rotary, as in a conventional motor; it is useful in such applications as high-speed ground transportation. In one form designed for rail vehicles, a continuous stationary conductor is fastened to the roadbed and
- linear operator
Niels Fabian Helge von Koch: …part of the theory of linear operators, which are fundamental in the study of quantum mechanics. He also worked on the Riemann hypothesis (see Riemann zeta function) and the prime number theorem.
- linear perspective (art)
linear perspective, a system of creating an illusion of depth on a flat surface. All parallel lines (orthogonals) in a painting or drawing using this system converge in a single vanishing point on the composition’s horizon line. Linear perspective is thought to have been devised about 1415 by
- linear polarization
radiation: Double refraction: …wave is said to be plane-polarized, the plane of polarization being the one that contains the propagation direction and the electric vector. In the case of elliptic polarization, the field vector generates an ellipse in a plane perpendicular to the propagation direction as the wave proceeds. Circular polarization is a…
- linear polymer (chemistry)
man-made fibre: Linear, branched, and network polymers: …a polymer with a simple linear structure is formed. In some polymers shorter chains grow off the long chain at certain intervals, so that a branched structure is formed. In other polymers the branches become numerous and cross-link to other polymer chains, thus forming a network structure. (These three polymer…
- linear polysaccharide
papermaking: Fibre sources: …known to chemists as a linear polysaccharide. It constitutes about one-third of the structural material of annual plants and about one-half that of perennial plants. Cellulose fibres have high strength and durability. They are readily wetted by water, exhibiting considerable swelling when saturated, and are hygroscopic—i.e., they absorb appreciable amounts…
- linear potentiometer
transducer: …of what is called a linear-displacement transducer, or linear potentiometer. For practical use, such transducers employ wire-wound, thin-film, or printed circuits to allow for a long resistor within a relatively small device. The longer the resistor, the greater the drop in voltage passing through the device; thus, changes in position…
- Linear Pottery culture (anthropology)
history of the Low Countries: Neolithic (4000–2900 bce): Farmers of the Linear Pottery culture, settling on the loess of Dutch Limburg and Belgium about 6500 bp, were among the first to bring Neolithic lifeways to the region. Large-scale excavations in Sittard, Geleen, Elsloo, and Stein in the Netherlands and at sites including Rosmeer and Darion in…
- linear problem (geometry)
mathematics: Apollonius: …third class of problems, called linear, embraced those solvable by means of curves other than the circle and the conics (in Greek the word for “line,” grammē, refers to all lines, whether curved or straight). For instance, one group of curves, the conchoids (from the Greek word for “shell”), are…
- linear programming (education)
programmed learning: Linear programming immediately reinforces student responses that approach the learning goal. Responses that do not lead toward the goal go unreinforced. Each bit of learning is presented in a “frame,” and a student who has made a correct response proceeds to the next frame. All…
- linear programming (mathematics)
linear programming, mathematical modeling technique in which a linear function is maximized or minimized when subjected to various constraints. This technique has been useful for guiding quantitative decisions in business planning, in industrial engineering, and—to a lesser extent—in the social and
- linear proton accelerator
linear accelerator: The proton linac, designed by the American physicist Luis Alvarez in 1946, is a more efficient variant of Wideröe’s structure. In this accelerator, electric fields are set up as standing waves within a cylindrical metal “resonant cavity,” with drift tubes suspended along the central axis. The…
- linear proton resonance accelerator
linear accelerator: The proton linac, designed by the American physicist Luis Alvarez in 1946, is a more efficient variant of Wideröe’s structure. In this accelerator, electric fields are set up as standing waves within a cylindrical metal “resonant cavity,” with drift tubes suspended along the central axis. The…
- linear range (measurement)
chromatography: Detector characteristics: The third is the linear range—i.e., the range of solute amount where the signal intensity is directly proportional to the amount of solute; doubling the amount doubles the signal intensity. Solutes may respond differently to a detector. For example, if equal amounts of methane (containing one carbon) and ethane…
- linear regression (statistics)
linear regression, in statistics, a process for determining a line that best represents the general trend of a data set. The simplest form of linear regression involves two variables: y being the dependent variable and x being the independent variable. The equation developed is of the form y = mx +
- linear resonance accelerator (physics)
linear accelerator, type of particle accelerator (q.v.) that imparts a series of relatively small increases in energy to subatomic particles as they pass through a sequence of alternating electric fields set up in a linear structure. The small accelerations add together to give the particles a
- linear style (Greek art)
Western painting: Late Classical (c. 400–323 bc): …the priority of something called linear style, which is assumed to be closer to drawing than painting. His influence has been detected in the figure of Hermes at Leukadia and in the Lion Hunt and Dionysus mosaics at Pella, also in Macedonia.
- linear sweep voltammetry (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Classic polarography: …analytical method is known as linear sweep voltammetry (LSV).
- linear syllogism (logic)
thought: Deduction: A linear syllogism involves a quantitative comparison in which each term displays either more of less of a particular attribute or quality, and the reasoner must draw conclusions based on the quantification. An example of a reasoning problem based on a linear syllogism is: “John is…
- linear synchronous motor (mechanical device)
roller coaster: Later innovations: A similar innovation is the linear synchronous motor (LSM) by Intamin, originally on Superman the Escape at Six Flags Magic Mountain, which accelerated the train up a 415-foot (125-metre) tower before dropping backward at a speed of 100 miles (160 km) per hour. Part of the thrill of riding a…
- linear system (mechanics)
principles of physical science: Chaos: Linear systems for which the response to a force is strictly proportional to the magnitude of the force do not show chaotic behaviour. The pendulum, if not too far from the vertical, is a linear system, as are electrical circuits containing resistors that obey Ohm’s…
- linear tactics (military)
Battle of Breitenfeld: …of the new Swedish flexible linear tactics over the old massive infantry formations that had long dominated European warfare.
- linear terminal (airport terminal)
airport: Open apron and linear designs: …have terminals designed to the linear concept, with aircraft parked at gates immediately adjacent to the terminal itself. Usually, air bridges are employed for transferring passengers directly between the terminal building and the aircraft. The limitation of the linear concept is usually the long building dimensions required; these can mean…
- linear tetrapyrrole (biological pigment)
bilin, any biological pigment (biochrome) belonging to a series of yellow, green, red, or brown nonmetallic compounds that are formed as a metabolic product of certain porphyrins. In addition to their presence in the bile pigments of mammals, bilins also occur in invertebrates, lower vertebrates,
- linear tomography (technology)
tomography: The simplest method is linear tomography, in which the X-ray tube is moved in a straight line in one direction while the film moves in the opposite direction. As these shifts occur, the X-ray tube continues to emit radiation so that most structures in the part of the body…
- linear transformation (mathematics)
linear transformation, in mathematics, a rule for changing one geometric figure (or matrix or vector) into another, using a formula with a specified format. The format must be a linear combination, in which the original components (e.g., the x and y coordinates of each point of the original figure)
- linear wave (physics)
wave motion: …of almost all forms of linear wave motion. In sound, for instance, a single sine wave produces a pure tone, and the distinctive timbre of different musical instruments playing the same note results from the admixture of sine waves of different frequencies. In electronics, the natural rhythmic oscillations of electric…
- linear-displacement transducer
transducer: …of what is called a linear-displacement transducer, or linear potentiometer. For practical use, such transducers employ wire-wound, thin-film, or printed circuits to allow for a long resistor within a relatively small device. The longer the resistor, the greater the drop in voltage passing through the device; thus, changes in position…
- Linearbandkeramik (prehistory)
LBK culture, Neolithic culture that expanded over large areas of Europe north and west of the Danube River (from Slovakia to the Netherlands) about the 5th millennium bc. Farmers probably practiced a form of shifting cultivation on the loess soil. Emmer wheat and barley were grown, and domestic
- linearity, frequency (physics)
electromechanical transducer: Linearity and directivity: Frequency linearity is the ability of a microphone to yield an electrical output that is proportional to the amplitude of the sound input over the entire frequency range. For music, this must extend to much lower and much higher frequencies than for voice use only.…
- linearly elastic solid
deformation and flow: Linearly elastic solids have molecules envisaged as being locked together by springlike elastic forces. For small deformations, a graph of deformation as a function of the applied load is a straight line. This type of deformation is an energy-storing process, as exemplified by the compression…
- linearly viscous fluid (physics)
amorphous solid: Distinction between crystalline and amorphous solids: …erroneously describe glasses as undercooled viscous liquids, but this is actually incorrect. Along the section of route 2 labeled liquid in Figure 3, it is the portion lying between Tf and Tg that is correctly associated with the description of the material as an undercooled liquid (undercooled meaning that its…
- lineation (geology)
metamorphic rock: Major features: …is present in schists; and lineation, which is any linear structure, such as the axis of the fold, grooves on a fault plane, or the direction of stretching of pebbles.
- Lineatriton (amphibian genus)
Caudata: Locomotion: Oedipina, and Lineatriton have reduced limbs and rely mainly on body movements for rapid locomotion. Species of the genus Aneides have arboreal (tree-dwelling) tendencies, and their long legs and digits, expanded toe tips, and prehensile (grasping) tails make them effective climbers. Some salamanders of the genera Ixalotriton,…
- linebacker (gridiron football)
American football: Tactical developments: …became dominant (6 linemen, 2 linebackers, 2 cornerbacks, and 1 safety). In the NFL, to stop the increased passing that came with the T formation in the 1940s, the Philadelphia Eagles’ Greasy Neale developed the 5-3-2-1 defense, which was in turn replaced in the mid-1950s by the 4-3 (actually 4-3-2-2)…
- Linebacker (United States military strategy)
Vietnam War: The United States negotiates a withdrawal: …Nixon, in an operation code-named Linebacker, unleashed U.S. air power against the North, mined Haiphong Harbour (the principal entry point for Soviet seaborne supplies), and ordered hundreds of U.S. aircraft into action against the invasion forces and their supply lines. By mid-June the communists’ Easter Offensive had ground to a…
- linebreeding (biology)
inbreeding: Linebreeding is a form of inbreeding that involves selection of mates on the basis of their relationships to a certain superior ancestor. The backcross (crossing a first-generation hybrid with one of the parental types) is a common method of inbreeding.
- linecut (printmaking)
printmaking: Linecut: The linecut technique is the simplest and least expensive of all the photoreproductive processes. As it cannot register tone, it is used mostly to reproduce black-and-white line drawings. If tones are needed in a linecut, they are achieved with the use of screens consisting…
- lined tiger heron (bird)
heron: …or banded, tiger heron (Tigrisoma lineatum), 75 cm (30 inches) long, of central and northern South America, is a well-known example. Another is the Mexican, or bare-throated, tiger heron (T. mexicanum) of Mexico and Central America.
- lineless cloisonné (enamelwork)
enamelwork: Japan: …in the 1880s to produce lineless cloisonné enamels, which have all the beauty and brilliance of true cloisonné, with thick layers of enamel colours, but which, showing no trace of cloisons, permit a gradation of colours as in the less clear and brilliant painted enamels. The effect was achieved by…