- Red River delta (region, Vietnam)
Vietnam: Agriculture, forestry, and fishing: …primary agricultural areas are the Red River delta, the Mekong River delta, and the southern terrace region. The central coastal land, which is subject to destructive typhoons, is a region of low productivity. The central highlands area, traditionally one of low productivity, has been intensively cultivated since 1975, but with…
- red river hog (mammal)
red river hog, African hoofed mammal, a subspecies of bush pig
- Red River Indian War (United States history)
Red River Indian War, (1874–75), uprising of warriors from several Indian tribes thought to be peacefully settled on Oklahoma and Texas reservations, ending in the crushing of the Indian dissidents by the United States. Presumably the Treaty of Medicine Lodge (Kansas, October 1867) had placed on
- Red River of the North (river, North America)
Red River of the North, river flowing through the northern United States and southern Manitoba, Canada. It is formed by the confluence of the Bois de Sioux and Otter Tail rivers at the twin cities of Wahpeton, North Dakota, and Breckenridge, Minnesota. It flows northward, forming for 440 miles (710
- Red River of the South (river, United States)
Red River, navigable river rising in the high plains of eastern New Mexico, U.S., and flowing southeast across Texas and Louisiana to a point northwest of Baton Rouge, where it enters the Atchafalaya River, which flows south to Atchafalaya Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. Until the mid-20th century, the
- Red River of the South Valley (region, United States)
Louisiana: Relief: The Red River valley has a low-elevation relief, with red soils in its alluvial plain and many raft lakes built by impounding water from logjams. The terraces include much of the so-called Florida Parishes to the north and northeast of the Mississippi delta, as well as…
- Red River Plains (region, Oklahoma, United States)
Oklahoma: Relief: The Red River Plains, once the area of the best farmlands in the state, has been depleted by cotton cultivation. Its agriculture has been diversified by the addition of peanuts (groundnuts), melons, and vegetables grown on medium-sized plots. Its population is relatively dense, with many small…
- Red River Rebellion (Canadian history)
Red River Rebellion, uprising in 1869–70 in the Red River Colony against the Canadian government that was sparked by the transfer of the vast territory of Rupert’s Land from the Hudson’s Bay Company to the new country of Canada. Fearing that their culture and land rights would be compromised under
- Red River Settlement (colony, Canada)
Red River Settlement, (1811–36), colony in Canada on the banks of the Red River near the mouth of the Assiniboine River (in what is now Manitoba). The colony was founded in 1811–12 by Thomas Douglas, 5th earl of Selkirk, a Scottish philanthropist, who obtained from the Hudson’s Bay Company a grant
- Red River to Appomattox (work by Foote)
Shelby Foote: …Fredericksburg to Meridian (1963), and Red River to Appomattox (1974). Considered a masterpiece by many critics, it was also criticized by academics for its lack of footnotes and other scholarly conventions. Despite its superb storytelling, the work received little popular attention until Foote appeared as a narrator and commentator in…
- Red River Valley (river valley, Canada-United States)
Canada: The interior plains: The fertile southern portion, the Red River valley, is covered with black clay and silt soils.
- Red Rock River (river, Montana, United States)
Jefferson River, river, most westerly of the Missouri River’s three headstreams, rising in the Gravelly Range in southwestern Montana, U.S., near the Continental Divide and Yellowstone National Park (where it is known as Red Rock River). It flows west through Red Rock Pass and Upper and Lower Red
- Red Rocks Park (park, Colorado, United States)
Denver: The contemporary city: …events are held at the Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre, an outdoor venue in the foothills just west of the city, and the Denver Performing Arts Complex is the home of the state ballet, opera, and symphony orchestra. The annual National Western Stock Show (held in January) includes a rodeo…
- Red Room, The (work by Strindberg)
August Strindberg: Early years: …he published his first novel, The Red Room, a satirical account of abuses and frauds in Stockholm society: this was something new in Swedish fiction and made its author nationally famous.
- Red Rose Speedway (album by Paul McCartney and Wings)
Linda McCartney: Career: …consecutive number one albums, including Red Rose Speedway (1973), which featured Linda’s photograph of Paul on the album cover, and the live album Wings over America (1976).
- Red Roses for Me (work by O’Casey)
Sean O’Casey: …antifascist play, and the semiautobiographical Red Roses for Me (1946) is set in Dublin at the time of the Irish railways strike of 1911.
- red rot (plant disease)
sugarcane: Diseases: Red rot (important in Indonesia and South Asia) is characterized by interrupted red and white patches within the cane along with a sour alcoholic odour when the cane is split open. Caused by the fungus Colletotrichum falcatum (Glomerella tucumanensis), red rot first attracts attention by…
- Red Rover, The (novel by Cooper)
James Fenimore Cooper: Novels: …his sea stories, in particular The Red Rover (1827) and The Sea Lions (1849). Never before in prose fiction had the sea become not merely a theatre for, but the principal actor in, moral drama that celebrated man’s courage and skill at the same time that it revealed him humbled…
- Red Rum (British steeplechase horse)
Red Rum, (foaled 1965), steeplechase horse who won the Grand National at Aintree, England, an unprecedented three times, in 1973, 1974, and 1977. Bought as a crippled seven-year-old, he was reconditioned by his trainer Ginger McCain, who ran him on the sand and in the sea. In 1973, ridden by Brian
- Red Ruthenia (historical region, Poland)
Poland: Casimir the Great: …larger part of Halicz, or Red, Ruthenia (the future eastern Galicia), which Hungary and Lithuania also coveted. That acquisition marked an expansion beyond ethnic Polish territory. Casimir’s international prestige was evidenced by his acting as arbiter between the Luxembourgs, the Angevins, and the Habsburgs and subsequently hosting an international conference…
- red sable (mammal)
kolinsky, any of several species of Asian weasels. See
- red salmon (fish)
sockeye salmon, (Oncorhynchus nerka), North Pacific food fish of the family Salmonidae that lacks distinct spots on the body. It weighs about 3 kg (6.6 pounds); however, some specimens may weigh as much as 7.7 kg (17 pounds). Sockeye salmon range from the northern Bering Sea to Japan and from
- Red Salute (film by Lanfield [1935])
Sidney Lanfield: Films of the 1930s: …then directed the screwball comedy Red Salute (1935), a reworking of Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night (1934) with a heavy dose of anticommunism. Barbara Stanwyck played a college student who begins dating a radical (Hardie Albright), much to the chagrin of her father, a U.S. Army general. He has…
- red sandspurrey (plant)
Caryophyllales: Caryophyllaceae: Red sandspurrey (Spergularia rubra) is commonly found in sandy heaths near the sea in Europe, Asia, North America, and Australia and has been used as a folk medicine to cure acute and chronic cystitis. Soapwort, or bouncing bet (Saponaria officinalis), is common in central and…
- Red Scare (politics)
Red Scare, period of public fear and anxiety over the supposed rise of communist or socialist ideologies in a noncommunist state. The term is generally used to describe two such periods in the United States. The first occurred from 1917 to 1920, amid an increase in organized labour movements,
- Red Sea (sea, Middle East)
Red Sea, narrow strip of water extending southeastward from Suez, Egypt, for about 1,200 miles (1,930 km) to the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which connects with the Gulf of Aden and thence with the Arabian Sea. Geologically, the Gulfs of Suez and Aqaba (Elat) must be considered as the northern extension
- Red Sea coastal plain (coastal plain, Arabia)
Arabia: The Hejaz and Asir: The name Tihāmah, used for the whole plain, is sometimes subdivided into Tihāmat Al-Ḥijāz and Tihāmat ʿAsīr. There are no natural harbours adequate for large vessels, but the many inlets are well suited for sailing craft. Islands are particularly numerous along the southern part of the coast,…
- Red Sea Diving Resort, The (film by Raff [2019])
Ben Kingsley: …member of Mossad in both The Red Sea Diving Resort and Spider in the Web.
- Red Sea Hills (region, Africa)
Itbāy, mountainous region of southeastern Egypt and the northeastern part of Sudan, paralleling the Red Sea. It lies largely south of Egypt’s administrative boundary with Sudan and separates the coastal lowland of the Red Sea from the Nile River valley. The north-south–trending mountain chains in
- Red Sea, crossing of the (biblical literature)
ʿĀshūrāʾ: …as the day that Allah parted the Red Sea for Moses (Mūsā) and his followers to escape from the pharaoh.
- Red Sea, parting of the (biblical literature)
ʿĀshūrāʾ: …as the day that Allah parted the Red Sea for Moses (Mūsā) and his followers to escape from the pharaoh.
- Red Seal (record label)
music recording: The early years: …raised cultural expectations with its Red Seal series (Red Label in Europe), particularly with discs made, beginning in 1902, by Enrico Caruso. By 1910 the vast majority of record sales—some estimates are as high as 85 percent—were classical.
- red seaweed (division of algae)
red algae, (division Rhodophyta), any of about 6,000 species of predominantly marine algae, often found attached to other shore plants. Their morphological range includes filamentous, branched, feathered, and sheetlike thalli. The taxonomy of the group is contentious, and organization of the
- Red Shift (novel by Garner)
Alan Garner: Red Shift (1973) follows the lives of three men living in different centuries, all of whom come into possession of a magical ax. The novel elliptically references the ballad of Tam Lin, a man rescued from the fairies by his paramour. Strandloper (1996) is based…
- Red Shirt movement (Indian nationalist movement)
Red Shirt movement, in support of the Indian National Congress, an action started by Abdul Ghaffar Khan of the North-West Frontier Province of India in 1930. Ghaffar Khan was a Pashtun who greatly admired Mahatma Gandhi and his nonviolent principles and saw support for the Congress as a way of
- red shirts (populist movement, Thailand)
Thailand: Yellow shirts and red shirts: …a populist movement called the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD). The UDD organized protests against this latest change of government, which in April forced the cancellation of an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit meeting outside Bangkok. Security forces were able to disperse the protesters, but antigovernment…
- Red Shoes, The (film by Powell and Pressburger [1948])
The Red Shoes, British dance film, released in 1948, based on the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale of the same title. Though not immediately acclaimed on its release, the movie grew in stature, and today it is widely considered the best film made about the world of dance. (Read Martin Scorsese’s
- red shoveler (bird)
shoveler: Other species are the red shoveler (A. platalea) of South America; the Cape, or Smith’s, shoveler (A. smithii) of South Africa; and the Australasian, or blue-winged, shoveler (A. rhynchotis) of New Zealand and Australia.
- red silk cotton tree (plant)
bombax cotton: 2 inches) in length, and B. ceiba, with fibres about 1 to 1.5 cm (0.4 to 0.6 inch) long, both growing in tropical areas of the Western Hemisphere, where the floss is sometimes called ceiba cotton or paina limpa. In southern Asia and Africa the fibres of B. malabarica, called…
- Red Skelton Show, The (American television program)
Red Skelton: …the popular TV variety program The Red Skelton Show (1951–71; called The Red Skelton Hour from 1962 to 1970). In that series, Skelton re-created a number of characters—among them Clem Kaddiddlehopper, Sheriff Deadeye, Junior, the Mean Widdle Kid, and Cauliflower McPugg—he had developed during his years in vaudeville and radio.…
- Red Sky in the Morning (work by Coffin)
Robert P. Tristram Coffin: …writing in such works as Red Sky in the Morning (1935), a novel about the Maine coast; Kennebec (1937), part of a historical series on American rivers; and Maine Doings (1950), informal essays on New England life.
- red slender loris (primate)
loris: …species of slender lorises (the red slender loris [Loris tardigradus] and the gray slender loris [L. lydekkerianus]) of India and Sri Lanka are about 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) long and have long slender limbs, small hands, a rounded head, and a pointed muzzle. Slender lorises feed mostly on insects (predominantly…
- red snake-bark maple (plant)
maple: pennsylvanicum), the red snake-bark maple (A. capillipes), the Her’s maple (A. hersii), and the David’s maple (A. davidii). The chalk maple, with whitish bark, is sometimes classified as A. leucoderme, although some authorities consider it a subspecies of sugar maple.
- red snapper (fish)
ceviche: …fish such as crab, shrimp, red snapper, mahi mahi, and bonito, often in combination. The fish is cut into small pieces and then marinated in lime or lemon juice for at least two hours, the citric acid effectively cooking the fish. To this is added a cold salsa comprising but…
- red snow (biology)
red snow, snow or ice surfaces, usually overlying soil on mountains, that are coloured by algae such as Chlamydomonas or Raphidonema. During seasons when there is little sunlight and temperatures are below the freezing point, the algae are
- red soil (pedology)
red soil, Any of a group of soils that develop in a warm, temperate, moist climate under deciduous or mixed forests and that have thin organic and organic-mineral layers overlying a yellowish-brown leached layer resting on an illuvial (see illuviation) red layer. Red soils generally form from
- Red Sorghum (film by Zhang [1987])
Zhang Yimou: …first film, Hong gaoliang (Red Sorghum). The critically acclaimed epic—which won the Golden Bear at the Berlin film festival—starred Gong Li as a woman sold into marriage. Gong subsequently appeared in a number of Zhang’s films, including Ju Dou (1990), a drama about a woman in a loveless marriage…
- Red Sorghum Family (short stories by Mo Yan)
Mo Yan: …jiazu (1987; “Red Sorghum Family”; Red Sorghum). It won him widespread fame, especially after its adaptation into a film of the same name (1987).
- Red Sox (American baseball team)
Boston Red Sox, American professional baseball team based in Boston. One of the most-storied franchises in American sports, the Red Sox have won nine World Series titles and 14 American League (AL) pennants. Founded in 1901, the franchise (then unofficially known as the Boston Americans) was one of
- Red Sparrow (film by Lawrence [2018])
Jeremy Irons: …appeared in the spy thriller Red Sparrow (2018). His credits from 2021 included Munich: The Edge of War, in which he portrayed Neville Chamberlain, and House of Gucci, a true-crime drama involving a family and its luxury fashion brand.
- red spider (mite family)
red spider, any of the plant-feeding mites of the family Tetranychidae (subclass Acari). Red spiders are a common pest on houseplants and agriculturally important plants, including the foliage and fruit of orchard trees. The life cycle of the red spider from egg to adult takes about three weeks.
- red sprites and blue jets (meteorology)
red sprites and blue jets, flashes of light that occur above thunderstorms and that are associated with normal lightning in the thundercloud below. The causes of both phenomena are not known. Red sprites tend to form almost instantaneously over a broad region between 40 and 90 km (about 25 to 55
- Red Square (square, Moscow, Russia)
Red Square, open square in Moscow adjoining the historic fortress and centre of government known as the Kremlin (Russian: Kreml). The Kremlin and Red Square were added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 1990. Dating from the late 15th century, just after the Kremlin walls were completed, Red Square
- red squill (chemical compound)
rodenticide: Red squill, a rodenticide derived from the bulbs of a lilylike subtropical plant, is slower-acting and less toxic to animals other than rodents because it is removed from the stomach by vomiting—a reflex that is absent in rodents.
- red squirrel (rodent)
squirrel: In northern Europe the red squirrel (S. vulgaris) is valued for its soft, thick fur. Villagers in tropical forests keep squirrels as pets. Most species are hunted for food.
- Red Star (Serbian football club)
Red Star Belgrade, Serbian professional football (soccer) team based in Belgrade. Best known simply as Red Star, the club is the most successful team in the history of Serbian football, with more than two dozen national titles (including those won when Serbia was part of federated Yugoslavia and
- Red Star Belgrade (Serbian football club)
Red Star Belgrade, Serbian professional football (soccer) team based in Belgrade. Best known simply as Red Star, the club is the most successful team in the history of Serbian football, with more than two dozen national titles (including those won when Serbia was part of federated Yugoslavia and
- Red Stilts (poetry by Kooser)
Ted Kooser: …and Selected Poems (2018), and Red Stilts (2020). His nonfiction work included Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps (2002) and The Poetry Home Repair Manual: Practical Advice for Beginning Poets (2005), a guidebook to writing poetry.
- Red Stockings (American baseball team)
Cincinnati Reds, American professional baseball franchise based in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Reds play in the National League (NL) and were founded in 1882. They have won five World Series titles (1919, 1940, 1975, 1976, 1990) and nine NL pennants. The city of Cincinnati lays claim to hosting the first
- Red Stockings (American baseball team [1966–present])
The Atlanta Braves are the only existing Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise to have played every season since professional baseball came into existence. Founded in Boston in 1871, the franchise has moved twice: it began playing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1953 and then in Atlanta in 1966. The
- Red Stone Dancer (work by Gaudier-Brzeska)
Henri Gaudier-Brzeska: …in his most famous work, Red Stone Dancer (1913), a figure composed of simplified geometric forms that also retains some of the emotionalism of Rodin. Just before World War I, Gaudier-Brzeska joined Wyndham Lewis’s Vorticist movement, which advocated abstraction and an embrace of the machines and energy of modern life.…
- red stoneware (stoneware)
stoneware: Böttger developed a red stoneware (in fact, varying from red to dark brown) about 1707. Decoration included applied reliefs, engraving, faceting, and polishing. Because of the vogue for porcelain, stoneware manufacture declined in Germany in the 18th century and was finally abandoned about 1730. In the Netherlands, also…
- Red Storm Rising (novel by Clancy)
Tom Clancy: Red Storm Rising (1986), Patriot Games (1987; film 1992), Clear and Present Danger (1989; film 1994), The Sum of All Fears (1991; film 2002), Rainbow Six (1998), The Bear and the Dragon
- red summer cypress (plant)
burning bush: Red summer cypress, or firebush (Bassia scoparia), is also called burning bush (see Bassia), as is Combretum microphyllum, the flame creeper of Mozambique, a rambling shrub with scarlet flower spikes.
- Red Sun (film by Young [1971])
Alain Delon: …Across the River (1966), and Red Sun (1971). He failed to catch on with American audiences, however, despite his prominence in Europe and in Japan. His subsequent films included Monsieur Klein (1976), Notre histoire (1984; Our Story), Nouvelle vague (1990; “New Wave”), and 1 chance sur 2 (1998; Half a…
- red surmullet (fish)
goatfish: …known of these is the red surmullet, or red mullet (Mullus barbatus), of the Mediterranean, which was one of the most highly prized food fishes of the ancient Romans. Very similar is another European species, M. surmuletus.
- Red Tai (people)
Laos: Ethnic groups and languages: …Dam and Tai Deng (Red Tai; so named after their red clothing), among others.
- red tai (fish)
porgy: …Japan a related species, the red tai (C. major), is another important food fish.
- Red Tails (film by Hemingway [2012])
George Lucas: The growth of Lucasfilm Ltd.: …was then executive producer of Red Tails (2012), an action-packed account of the Tuskegee Airmen and his first film in nearly two decades that was not affiliated with either the Star Wars or Indiana Jones franchises.
- Red Terror (Soviet history)
20th-century international relations: Bolshevik diplomacy: On the other hand, the Red Terror launched by the Bolsheviks in 1918, including the murder of the royal family, convinced many in the West that this new breed was beyond the pale. U.S. Secretary of State Robert Lansing called Bolshevism “the most hideous and monstrous thing that the human…
- Red Terror Campaign (Ethiopian history)
Mengistu Haile Mariam: …then unleashed a bloody “Red Terror Campaign” to crush armed opponents among the civilian populace, and later that year he solicited Soviet weaponry and Cuban troops to repel an invasion of the Somali-speaking Ogaden region by Somalia. As undisputed ruler of the country, he oversaw the establishment of the…
- Red Thumb Mark, The (work by Freeman)
Richard Austin Freeman: The Red Thumb Mark (1907) was the first of many works featuring Thorndyke.
- red tide (marine biology)
red tide, discoloration of sea water usually caused by dinoflagellates, during periodic blooms (or population increases). Toxic substances released by these organisms into the water may be lethal to fish and other marine life. Red tides occur worldwide in warm seas. Up to 50 million cells per litre
- Red Top (missile)
rocket and missile system: Air-to-air: …infrared-homing missiles as the British Red Top and the French Magic, the latter being a short-range (one-quarter to four miles) highly maneuverable equivalent of the Sidewinder.
- red topaz (mineral)
topaz: …topaz” is often known as Brazilian ruby, as is the very rare, natural red topaz. Cut topazes of large size are known, and it is said that the great “Braganza diamond” of Portugal is probably a topaz.
- Red Tram, The (poetry by Stead)
C.K. Stead: …The Right Thing (2000), and The Red Tram (2004). Stead composed the poems in The Black River (2007) after suffering a stroke. The Yellow Buoy: Poems 2007–2012 (2013) deals largely with his European travels.
- red tuna (fish)
tuna: …of the group is the northern bluefin tuna, which grows to a maximum length and weight of about 4.3 metres (14 feet) and 800 kg (1,800 pounds). The yellowfin tuna reaches a maximum weight of about 180 kg (397 pounds), and the albacore grows to about 36 kg (79 pounds).
- Red Turbans (Chinese history)
Red Turbans, Peasant rebel movement of the mid-14th century that flourished in northern China at the end of the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368). The Red Turbans, whose leader was regarded as an incarnation of the bodhisattva Maitreya, were opposed to alien Mongol rule; their movement gained momentum from
- red twig dogwood (plant)
dogwood: Major species: …twig, or red osier (C. sericea), dogwood of northern and western North America has bright red twigs that are especially showy in winter and early spring; the branches are dark red in colour and the fall foliage ranges from red to purple to yellow.
- red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus ucayalii subspecies)
uakari: calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald, uakari (C. calvus calvus) is a different…
- red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus rubicundus subspecies)
uakari: …faces of red uakaris (subspecies Cacajao calvus rubicundus, C. calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald,…
- red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus novaesi subspecies)
uakari: …uakaris (subspecies Cacajao calvus rubicundus, C. calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald, uakari (C. calvus…
- red valerian (plant)
Valerianoideae: Red valerian, or Jupiter’s-beard (Centranthus ruber), native to the Mediterranean, is widely naturalized in British meadows, on roadsides, and on walls. Its billowy masses of pink, white, or red tiny fragrant blooms are borne on stems sometimes reaching 90 cm (3 feet).
- Red Violin, The (film by Girard [1998])
The Red Violin: …Corigliano for the 1998 Canadian film of the same name. In 1999 Corigliano’s music for the film—which follows a particular violin from its creation in the late 1600s through the centuries of its history to the late 20th century—won him an Academy Award for best original score.
- Red Violin, The (film score by Corigliano)
The Red Violin, film score by American composer John Corigliano for the 1998 Canadian film of the same name. In 1999 Corigliano’s music for the film—which follows a particular violin from its creation in the late 1600s through the centuries of its history to the late 20th century—won him an Academy
- Red Volta River (river, Africa)
Red Volta River, river in West Africa, rising in Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta) northwest of Ouagadougou. It flows about 200 mi (320 km) south-southeast to join the White Volta (Volta Blanche) near the Gambaga scarp in the Upper Region of Ghana. The combined rivers then turn southwestward as
- red water (marine biology)
red tide, discoloration of sea water usually caused by dinoflagellates, during periodic blooms (or population increases). Toxic substances released by these organisms into the water may be lethal to fish and other marine life. Red tides occur worldwide in warm seas. Up to 50 million cells per litre
- Red Week (Italian history)
Italy: Conduct of the war: In June, “Red Week,” a period of widespread rioting throughout the Romagna and the Marche, came in response to the killing of three antimilitarist demonstrators at Ancona. When World War I broke out in August, the Salandra government stayed neutral and began to negotiate with both sides—a…
- Red Wheel, The (work by Solzhenitsyn)
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn: …part of a projected series, Krasnoe koleso (The Red Wheel); other volumes (or uzly [“knots”]) in the series were Oktyabr 1916 (“October 1916”), Mart 1917 (“March 1917”), and Aprel 1917 (“April 1917”).
- Red Wheelbarrow, The (poem by Williams)
Spring and All: …as the often reprinted “The Red Wheelbarrow,” are vivid and sensuous.
- red wine
Roquefort: Dry red wine is considered an ideal accompaniment.
- Red Wing (airplane)
Aerial Experiment Association: …first of those aircraft, named Red Wing because of the colour of the silk covering its wings, 319 feet (97 metres) over the frozen surface of Lake Keuka, near Hammondsport, on March 12, 1908. Taking turns, the four younger members of the AEA (i.e., excluding the Bells) made a total…
- Red Wing (Minnesota, United States)
Red Wing, city, seat (1853) of Goodhue county, southeastern Minnesota, U.S. It lies on the Mississippi River (bridged to Wisconsin), near Lake Pepin, about 45 miles (70 km) southeast of St. Paul. In 1805 the explorer Zebulon Pike arrived at the site, which was overlooked by Barn Bluff and was then
- red wolf (mammal)
wolf: Other wolves: The red wolf is tawny, reddish, or black. It grows to a length of about 105–125 cm (41–49 inches), excluding the tail, which is 33–43 cm (13–17 inches) long, and weighs about 20–37 kg (44–82 pounds). It was once considered a distinct species of wolf, but…
- Red, Hot and Blue (film by Farrow [1949])
John Farrow: Films of the 1940s: …the decade with the comedy Red, Hot and Blue (1949), starring Betty Hutton as an aspiring actress and Victor Mature as a gangster.
- Red, Hot and Blue (musical by Porter)
Cole Porter: Divorcée (1932), Anything Goes (1934), Red, Hot and Blue (1934), Jubilee (1935), Dubarry Was a Lady (1939), Panama Hattie (1940), Kiss Me, Kate (1948, based on William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew), Can-Can (1953), and Silk Stockings (1955). He concurrently
- Red-Back Book (recording by New England Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble)
Gunther Schuller: …Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble, whose recording The Red Back Book, consisting of works of Scott Joplin, became a best seller and won a Grammy Award in 1973.
- red-backed lemming (rodent)
lemming: The wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor) and steppe lemming (Lagurus lagurus) are the smallest, measuring 8 to 12 cm (3.1 to 4.7 inches) in body length and weighing 20 to 30 grams (0.7 to 1.0 ounce). The other species are larger, weighing 30 to 112 grams, with…
- red-backed sandpiper (bird)
dunlin, (Calidris alpina), one of the most common and sociable birds of the sandpiper group. The dunlin is a member of the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). It is about 20 cm (8 inches) long and has a bill curved downward at the tip. In breeding season, its plumage is brightly coloured,
- red-backed shrike (bird)
migration: In Europe: Golden orioles (Oriolus oriolus) and red-backed shrikes (Lanius collurio) go to East Africa by way of Greece and Egypt. Swallows—particularly barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) and house martins (Delichon urbica)—and swifts (Apus apus) pass the winter in Africa south of 20° N latitude, particularly in