- reduction (medicine)
Avicenna: Influence in medicine: Reduction involved the use of pressure and traction to straighten or otherwise correct bone and joint deformities such as curvature of the spine. The techniques were not used again until French surgeon Jean-François Calot reintroduced the practice in 1896. Avicenna’s suggestion of wine as a…
- reduction class (logic)
metalogic: The undecidability theorem and reduction classes: Given the completeness theorem, it follows that the task of deciding whether any sentence is a theorem of the predicate calculus is equivalent to that of deciding whether any sentence is valid or whether its negation is satisfiable.
- reduction division (cytology)
meiosis, division of a germ cell involving two fissions of the nucleus and giving rise to four gametes, or sex cells, each possessing half the number of chromosomes of the original cell. A brief treatment of meiosis follows. For further discussion, see cell: Cell division and growth. The process of
- reduction rolling (food processing)
cereal processing: Milling: …between smooth steel rolls, called reduction rolls. The flour produced in the reduction rolls is then sieved out. There are usually four or five more reduction rolls and some “scratch” rolls to scrape the last particles of flour from branny stocks. Since the various sieving and purification processes free more…
- reduction smelting (metallurgy)
metallurgy: Smelting: …are two types of smelting, reduction smelting and matte smelting. In reduction smelting, both the metallic charge fed into the smelter and the slag formed from the process are oxides; in matte smelting, the slag is an oxide while the metallic charge is a combination of metallic sulfides that melt…
- reductionism (philosophy)
reductionism, in philosophy, a view that asserts that entities of a given kind are identical to, or are collections or combinations of, entities of another (often simpler or more basic) kind or that expressions denoting such entities are definable in terms of expressions denoting other entities.
- reductive elimination (chemistry)
organometallic compound: Simple alkyl ligands: …well as other groups) is reductive elimination.
- reductive pentose phosphate cycle (chemistry)
bacteria: Autotrophic metabolism: …the reductive pentose phosphate (Calvin) cycle, the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle, and the acetyl-CoA pathway. The Calvin cycle, elucidated by American biochemist Melvin Calvin, is the most widely distributed of these pathways, operating in plants, algae, photosynthetic bacteria, and most aerobic lithoautotrophic bacteria. The key step in the Calvin
- reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle (biochemistry)
bacteria: Autotrophic metabolism: …pentose phosphate (Calvin) cycle, the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle, and the acetyl-CoA pathway. The Calvin cycle, elucidated by American biochemist Melvin Calvin, is the most widely distributed of these pathways, operating in plants, algae, photosynthetic bacteria, and most aerobic lithoautotrophic bacteria. The key step in the Calvin cycle is the…
- réduit (military science)
Switzerland: World War II and the Cold War: …in the central Alps, the réduit, was equipped with ammunition, medical supplies, food, water, hydroelectric plants, and factories to enable the Swiss army to fight the Nazis even if the cities of the Mittelland were captured.
- Redunca (mammal)
reedbuck, (genus Redunca), any of three medium-sized antelopes (family Bovidae) that inhabit the grasslands and marshes of sub-Saharan Africa. The reedbuck is distinguished by a round glandular spot below each ear and curved horns (on males only) that point forward; these horns are shortest (14–41
- Redunca arundinum (mammal)
reedbuck: …and less hooked in the southern, or common, reedbuck (R. arundium). The southern reedbuck is the largest species, standing 65–105 cm (26–41 inches) tall and weighing 50–95 kg (110–210 pounds), compared with 65–76 cm (26–30 inches) and 19–38 kg (42–84 pounds) for the mountain reedbuck, the smallest of the three.…
- Redunca fulvorufula (mammal)
reedbuck: …reedbuck (Redunca redunca) and the mountain reedbuck (R. fulvorufula). They are 30–45 cm (12–18 inches) and less hooked in the southern, or common, reedbuck (R. arundium). The southern reedbuck is the largest species, standing 65–105 cm (26–41 inches) tall and weighing 50–95 kg (110–210 pounds), compared with 65–76 cm (26–30…
- Redunca redunca (mammal)
reedbuck: …and most hooked in the bohor reedbuck (Redunca redunca) and the mountain reedbuck (R. fulvorufula). They are 30–45 cm (12–18 inches) and less hooked in the southern, or common, reedbuck (R. arundium). The southern reedbuck is the largest species, standing 65–105 cm (26–41 inches) tall and weighing 50–95 kg (110–210…
- Reduncini (mammal tribe)
antelope: Classification: and addaxes) Tribe Reduncini (includes reedbucks, kobs, lechwes, and waterbucks) Tribe Alcelaphini (includes hartebeests, wildebeests, and topis)
- redundancy (information theory)
communication: Entropy, negative entropy, and redundancy: …version of the communication process, redundancy—the repetition of elements within a message that prevents the failure of communication of information—is the greatest antidote to entropy. Most written and spoken languages, for example, are roughly half-redundant. If 50 percent of the words of this article were taken away at random, there…
- redundancy reduction (technology)
telecommunication: Source encoding: As is pointed out in analog-to-digital conversion, any available telecommunications medium has a limited capacity for data transmission. This capacity is commonly measured by the parameter called bandwidth. Since the bandwidth of a signal increases with the number of bits to be transmitted…
- redundancy theory of truth (philosophy and logic)
truth: Deflationism: Philosophers before Tarski, including Gottlob Frege and Frank Ramsey, had suspected that the key to understanding truth lay in the odd fact that putting “It is true that…” in front of an assertion changes almost nothing. It is true that snow is white if…
- redundant array of inexpensive disks (computing)
computer memory: Magnetic disk drives: RAID (redundant array of inexpensive disks) combines multiple disk drives to store data redundantly for greater reliability and faster access. They are used in high-performance computer network servers.
- reduplication (grammar)
Austronesian languages: Reduplication: Reduplication takes numerous forms and has a great variety of functions in Austronesian languages. Partial reduplication of a verb stem is used to mark the future tense in both Rukai of Taiwan and Tagalog of the Philippines, as in Tagalog l-um-akad ‘walk’ but la-lakad…
- reduplicative paramnesia (pathology)
memory disorder: Paramnesia and confabulation: This has been renamed reduplicative paramnesia or simply reduplication. Last, there was identifying paramnesia, in which a novel situation is experienced as duplicating an earlier situation in every detail; this is more generally known as déjà vu or paramnesia tout court. The term confabulation denotes the production of false…
- Reduviidae (insect)
assassin bug, (family Reduviidae), any of about 7,000 species of insects in the true bug order, Heteroptera (Hemiptera), that are characterized by a thin necklike structure connecting the narrow head to the body. They range in size from 5 to 40 mm (0.2 to 1.6 inches). An assassin bug uses its short
- Reduvius personatus (insect)
assassin bug: Predatory behaviour: The masked hunter (or masked bedbug hunter; Reduvius personatus), when threatened, will also bite humans, causing pain and localized swelling. The masked hunter is widely known for its ability to camouflage itself as a ball of dust during the immature stages, when the body, legs, and…
- redvein flowering maple (plant)
abutilon: Another species, sometimes known as redvein flowering maple (A. pictum), is a handsome variegated-leaf shrub reaching a height of 4.5 metres (15 feet) and is grown as a houseplant. The trailing abutilon (A. megapotamicum), often grown as a hanging plant, is noted for its nodding, yellowish orange, closed flowers.
- Redwald (king of the East Angles)
Raedwald was the king of the East Angles in England from the late 6th or early 7th century, son of Tytili. Raedwald became a Christian during a stay in Kent, but on his return to East Anglia he sanctioned the worship of both the Christian and the traditional Anglo-Saxon religions. For a time he
- redwood (tree)
redwood, any of three species of large trees in the cypress family (Cupressaceae). See coast redwood, dawn redwood, and
- Redwood City (California, United States)
Redwood City, city, seat (1856) of San Mateo county, California, U.S. It lies on the western shore of San Francisco Bay, at the mouth of Redwood Creek, 25 miles (40 km) south of San Francisco. Originally inhabited by Ohlone Indians, the area in 1800 became part of a Spanish land grant called Rancho
- Redwood National Park (national park, California, United States)
Redwood National Park, national park in the northwestern corner of California, U.S. It was established in 1968, with a boundary change in 1978, and was designated a World Heritage site in 1980. Preserving virgin (old-growth) groves of ancient redwood trees, including the world’s tallest tree, the
- redwood wood sorrel (plant)
Oxalis: …States, with rose-purple flowers; the redwood wood sorrel (O. oregana), of the coast redwood belt from California to Oregon, with pink to white flowers; and O. cernua, known as Bermuda buttercups, with showy yellow flowers, native to southern Africa and naturalized in Florida and the Bermudas. Another yellow-flowered kind is…
- Redwood, John (British politician)
John Redwood is a British politician who served in the cabinet of Prime Minister John Major (1993–95) before unsuccessfully challenging Major for leadership of the Conservative Party in 1995. A ferociously bright student, Redwood was awarded one of the highly prized fellowships of All Souls
- Redwood, Sir John Alan (British politician)
John Redwood is a British politician who served in the cabinet of Prime Minister John Major (1993–95) before unsuccessfully challenging Major for leadership of the Conservative Party in 1995. A ferociously bright student, Redwood was awarded one of the highly prized fellowships of All Souls
- Redzepi, René (Danish chef and restaurateur)
René Redzepi is a Danish chef recognized internationally for his unique reinterpretation of Scandinavian cuisine; his recipes are characterized by distinctly Nordic locally sourced ingredients. Redzepi’s father was a Muslim immigrant from the Macedonian region of Yugoslavia who moved to Copenhagen
- REE (physiology)
human nutrition: BMR and REE: energy balance: Energy is needed not only when a person is physically active but even when the body is lying motionless. Depending on an individual’s level of physical activity, between 50 and 80 percent of the energy expended each day is devoted to basic…
- Ree, Lough (lake, Ireland)
Lough Ree, lake on the River Shannon, Ireland, separating Counties Longford and Westmeath (east) from County Roscommon (west). The irregular shoreline is varied and includes both deep bays and shallow inlets. There are numerous islands, accessible by boat from Athlone. On several of the larger
- Reeb, James J. (American clergyman)
Selma March: Turnaround Tuesday: …of them, Massachusetts Unitarian minister James J. Reeb, died of his wounds.
- Reece, Eric Elliott (Australian politician)
Tasmania: Tasmania since 1950: Premiers Robert Cosgrove (1939–58) and Eric Elliott Reece (1958–69 and 1972–75) were tough and efficient and saved the local Labor Party from the blows it was suffering elsewhere in the country. They sustained faith in further developing hydroelectricity, and some heavy industry appeared. Government services in housing, health, education, and…
- reed (musical instrument)
reed instrument, in music, any of several wind instruments (aerophones) that sound when the player’s breath or air from a wind chamber causes a reed (a thin blade of cane or metal) to vibrate, thereby setting up a sound wave in an enclosed air column (in reed pipes) or in the open air (usually free
- reed (musical instrument part)
wind instrument: Flutes and reeds: Sound is generated by different methods in the aerophones designated as flutes and reeds in the Sachs-Hornbostel system. In flutes, the airstream is directed against a sharp edge; in reeds, the air column in the tube is caused to vibrate between beating parts of…
- reed (weaving)
textile: Early development of the loom: …reeds and thus called a reed, which, mounted at right angles to the warp, oscillates between the heddles and the junction of the warp and the cloth. The ends pass, one or more at a time, through the spaces between consecutive reed wires, so that the reed, in addition to…
- reed (anatomy)
artiodactyl: Digestive system: …derived from the esophagus—and the abomasum (or reed), which corresponds to the stomach of other mammals. The omasum is almost absent in chevrotains. Camels have a three-chambered stomach, lacking the separation of omasum and abomasum; the rumen and reticulum are equipped with glandular pockets separated by muscular walls having sphincters…
- reed (plant)
reed, in botany, any of several species of large aquatic grasses, especially the four species constituting the genus Phragmites of the grass family (Poaceae). The common, or water, reed (Phragmites australis) occurs along the margins of lakes, fens, marshes, and streams from the Arctic to the
- reed bunting (bird)
bunting: …and northeastern Europe, and the reed bunting (E. schoeniclus), a chunky bird common to marshes across Europe and Asia.
- reed canary grass (plant)
reed: …donax), sea reed (Ammophila arenaria), reed canary grass (Phalaris), and reedgrass, or bluejoint (Calamagrostis). Bur reed (Sparganium) and reed mace (Typha) are plants of other families.
- Reed College (college, Portland, Oregon, United States)
Reed College, Private liberal-arts college in Portland, Ore. Founded in 1909, it is named after Simeon Reed, a prosperous Portland businessman. It offers undergraduate programs in the physical and biological sciences, the humanities, and the social sciences. Its curriculum emphasizes both
- Reed Dance (Swazi festival)
Eswatini: Cultural life: The Umhlanga, or Reed Dance, brings together the unmarried girls and young women of the country to cut reeds for the annual repairs to the windbreaks of the queen mother’s village; it lasts for five days. It is also symbolic of the unity of the nation…
- reed fescue (plant)
fescue: …meadow fescue and tall or reed fescue (S. arundinaceus, formerly F. arundinacea) are Old World species that have become widespread in parts of North America.
- reed frog (amphibian)
frog: Sedge frogs (Hyperolius), for example, are climbing African frogs with adhesive toe disks. The flying frogs (Rhacophorus) are tree-dwelling, Old World rhacophorids; they can glide 12 to 15 metres (40 to 50 feet) by means of expanded webbing between the fingers and toes (see tree…
- reed instrument (musical instrument)
reed instrument, in music, any of several wind instruments (aerophones) that sound when the player’s breath or air from a wind chamber causes a reed (a thin blade of cane or metal) to vibrate, thereby setting up a sound wave in an enclosed air column (in reed pipes) or in the open air (usually free
- reed mace (plant)
cattail, (genus Typha), genus of about 30 species of tall reedy marsh plants (family Typhaceae), found mainly in temperate and cold regions of the Northern and Southern hemispheres. The plants inhabit fresh to slightly brackish waters and are considered aquatic or semi-aquatic. Cattails are
- reed organ (musical instrument)
regal, a small, easily portable pipe organ usually having only a single set, or rank, of reed pipes. The beating reeds are surmounted by small resonators, producing a nasal, buzzing tone. Wind under pressure to sound the pipes is supplied by one or two bellows attached to the instrument and
- reed organ (musical instrument family)
reed organ, any keyboard instrument sounded by vibration of metal reeds under wind pressure. “Reed organ” commonly refers to instruments having free reeds (vibrating through a slot with close tolerance) and no pipes. Such instruments include the harmonium and the melodeon (qq.v.) and are distinct
- reed organ (musical instrument)
melodeon, keyboard instrument sounded by the vibration of free reeds by wind. It is an American development of the harmonium, from which it differs in two principal respects. Its foot-operated bellows draw the air in past the reeds by suction, rather than forcing it out by pressure; and the
- reed pen (writing implement)
drawing: Pens: …form is that of the reed pen; cut from papyrus plants, sedge, or bamboo, it stores a reservoir of fluid in its hollow interior. Its stroke—characteristically powerful, hard, and occasionally forked as a result of stronger pressure being applied to the split tip—became a popular medium of artistic expression only…
- reed pipe (wind instrument)
wind instrument: Classification: comprises reed instruments, or reedpipes, which have a column of air that is activated by the vibrations between the two or more parts of a reed or between a single reed and the mouthpiece. In the Sachs-Hornbostel system, all multiple reeds are generically classified as oboes and the single…
- reed pipe (organ)
keyboard instrument: Reed pipes: Organ reeds were probably originally copied from instrumental prototypes. A reed stop may have a beating reed like that of a clarinet or a free reed (a type discussed below in connection with reed organs).
- reed relay (electronics)
electromagnet: Relays.: Present reed switches used in telephone equipment are operated by up to 50 volts direct current. Typically, the reed closes at 58 ampere-turns and releases at 15 ampere-turns, the hold current being 27 ampere-turns. The contact closes to give a stable contact resistance in 2 milliseconds,…
- Reed Richards (comic-book character)
Fantastic Four: Origins: …a quartet of new characters: Dr. Reed Richards, a pompous scientist; Sue Storm, his lovely and somewhat reserved fiancée; Sue’s hotheaded teenaged brother Johnny Storm; and Richards’s beefy longtime friend pilot Ben Grimm. The foursome commandeered an untested spaceship of Richards’s design from the U.S. military in a frantic but…
- Reed Rules (United States government)
Thomas B. Reed: The Reed Rules, adopted in February 1890, provided that every member present in the House must vote unless financially interested in a measure; that members present and not voting be counted for a quorum; and that no dilatory motions be entertained by the chair. Reed claimed…
- reed stop (organ)
keyboard instrument: Reed pipes: A reed stop may have a beating reed like that of a clarinet or a free reed (a type discussed below in connection with reed organs).
- reed warbler (bird species, Acrocephalus scirpaceus)
warbler: Reed (see photograph), bush, and swamp warblers (Acrocephalus, Bradypterus, Calamocichla, and Cettia) are mostly brown-plumaged and harsh-voiced birds. Among other well-known genera of Old World warblers are the fantail warblers (see cisticola) and longtail warblers (see
- Reed, B. Mitchel (American disc jockey)
B. Mitchel Reed: In a career that spanned four decades, B. Mitchel Reed roamed the wide world of radio formats and established himself as a standout in both Top 40 and its flip side, free-form FM rock. He began his radio career as a jazz announcer in Baltimore,…
- Reed, Carol (British director)
Carol Reed was a British film director noted for his technical mastery of the suspense-thriller genre. He was the first British film director to be knighted. Carol Reed was born to the mistress of one of England’s most successful stage actors, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree. After a rather lacklustre
- Reed, Charlotte Maria (Welsh singer)
Charlotte Church is a Welsh singer and television host best known for her powerful soprano voice and for being both the youngest musician to reach number one on the classical music album chart in the U.K. and the youngest female singer to break into the U.K. top 40 albums chart. Church is also
- Reed, Donna (American actress)
Donna Reed was an American film and television actress who embodied a wholesome, engaging girl next door in numerous movies in the 1940s and ’50s and later on television. Reed graduated from high school in Iowa and then moved to California to attend Los Angeles City College. She was named campus
- Reed, Eliot (British author)
Eric Ambler was a British author and screenwriter widely regarded as one of the most distinguished writers of espionage and crime stories. Ambler was the son of music-hall entertainers. After studying engineering at London University, he worked as an advertising writer. It was while thus employed
- Reed, Ishmael (American author)
Ishmael Reed is an author of poetry, essays, novels, and plays who is perhaps best known for his fictional works, which are marked by surrealism, satire, and political and racial commentary. His novels include Mumbo Jumbo (1972), Flight to Canada (1976), and Japanese by Spring (1993). Reed’s
- Reed, Ishmael Scott (American author)
Ishmael Reed is an author of poetry, essays, novels, and plays who is perhaps best known for his fictional works, which are marked by surrealism, satire, and political and racial commentary. His novels include Mumbo Jumbo (1972), Flight to Canada (1976), and Japanese by Spring (1993). Reed’s
- Reed, Jack (United States senator)
Jack Reed is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 1996 and began representing Rhode Island the following year. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1991–97). Through U.S. Sen. John Pastore, Reed received an appointment to the United States
- Reed, James (American pioneer)
Donner party: The journey west: …Jacob Donner and local businessman James Reed left Springfield on April 14, 1846. With the addition of roughly a dozen teamsters and employees, this initial party numbered some 31 people, and within a month the Donners and Reeds had reached Independence, Missouri. There, on May 12, they became a part…
- Reed, James A. (United States senator)
United States presidential election of 1928: Rum, Romanism, and race: James A. Reed, who captured more than 20 percent despite only winning one of the five primaries he entered.
- Reed, Jim (American outlaw)
Belle Starr: …afterward, Belle ran away with Jim Reed, a Missouri outlaw, and became his common-law wife. They lived for a time in California, where their son, Edward, was born and then returned to Texas, where Belle fashioned herself a “bandit queen,” costumed in either velvet and feathers or buckskin and moccasins.…
- Reed, Jimmy (American musician)
Jimmy Reed was an American singer, harmonica player, and guitarist who was one of the most popular blues musicians of the post-World War II era. Reed began recording with the Chicago-based label Vee Jay in 1953 and had a string of hits in the 1950s and ’60s that included “Honest I Do,” “Baby, What
- Reed, John (American author)
John Reed was a U.S. poet-adventurer whose short life as a revolutionary writer and activist made him the hero of a generation of radical intellectuals. Reed, a member of a wealthy Portland family, was graduated from Harvard in 1910 and began writing for a Socialist newspaper, The Masses, in 1913.
- Reed, John Francis (United States senator)
Jack Reed is an American politician who was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 1996 and began representing Rhode Island the following year. He previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1991–97). Through U.S. Sen. John Pastore, Reed received an appointment to the United States
- Reed, Lewis Allan (American musician)
Lou Reed was a singer-songwriter whose place in the rock pantheon rests primarily on his role in guiding the Velvet Underground, a New York City-based quartet that produced four poor-selling but enormously influential studio albums under Reed’s direction from 1965 to 1970. Reed’s post-Velvets
- Reed, Lou (American musician)
Lou Reed was a singer-songwriter whose place in the rock pantheon rests primarily on his role in guiding the Velvet Underground, a New York City-based quartet that produced four poor-selling but enormously influential studio albums under Reed’s direction from 1965 to 1970. Reed’s post-Velvets
- Reed, Margaret Teresa Yvonne (American entertainer)
Martha Raye was an American entertainer who established her reputation as an irrepressible comic in a career that encompassed radio shows, theatre, film, and entertaining U.S. troops stationed overseas. Raye began performing at the age of three, when she joined the family vaudeville act. She made
- Reed, Mathis James (American musician)
Jimmy Reed was an American singer, harmonica player, and guitarist who was one of the most popular blues musicians of the post-World War II era. Reed began recording with the Chicago-based label Vee Jay in 1953 and had a string of hits in the 1950s and ’60s that included “Honest I Do,” “Baby, What
- Reed, Rex (American film critic)
A Hard Day’s Night: Film critic Rex Reed derisively referred to playwright Alun Owen’s script of A Hard Day’s Night as a “non-screenplay.” Yet it is precisely the inspired anarchy of Owen’s screenplay—so suited to the Beatles’ personalties that they appear to be improvising—that distinguishes this landmark musical. Until A Hard…
- Reed, Robert (American actor)
The Brady Bunch: …when Mike Brady (played by Robert Reed), the father of three sons, marries Carol Martin (Florence Henderson), the mother of three girls. They combine their households in a four-bedroom house in an unnamed suburb of Los Angeles. The main cast included the Brady boys, Greg (Barry Williams), Peter (Christopher Knight),…
- Reed, Sir Carol (British director)
Carol Reed was a British film director noted for his technical mastery of the suspense-thriller genre. He was the first British film director to be knighted. Carol Reed was born to the mistress of one of England’s most successful stage actors, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree. After a rather lacklustre
- Reed, Stanley F. (United States jurist)
Stanley F. Reed was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1938–57). Reed was the only child of John A. Reed, a physician, and Frances Forman Reed, who at one time was registrar general of the Daughters of the American Revolution. After earning undergraduate degrees from
- Reed, Stanley Forman (United States jurist)
Stanley F. Reed was an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1938–57). Reed was the only child of John A. Reed, a physician, and Frances Forman Reed, who at one time was registrar general of the Daughters of the American Revolution. After earning undergraduate degrees from
- Reed, Thomas (Danish architect)
Latin American architecture: Architecture of the new independent republics, c. 1810–70: …Bogotá by the Danish architect Thomas (Tomás) Reed is one of the finest examples of this period. It is an austere building faced in a quarry stone, providing space for all the institutions of the state, including the congress, the supreme court, and the executive branch.
- Reed, Thomas B (American politician)
Thomas B. Reed was a vigorous U.S. Republican Party leader who, as speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1889–91, 1895–99), introduced significant procedural changes (the Reed Rules) that helped ensure legislative control by the majority party in Congress. After he was admitted to the bar
- Reed, Thomas Brackett (American politician)
Thomas B. Reed was a vigorous U.S. Republican Party leader who, as speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1889–91, 1895–99), introduced significant procedural changes (the Reed Rules) that helped ensure legislative control by the majority party in Congress. After he was admitted to the bar
- Reed, Tomás (Danish architect)
Latin American architecture: Architecture of the new independent republics, c. 1810–70: …Bogotá by the Danish architect Thomas (Tomás) Reed is one of the finest examples of this period. It is an austere building faced in a quarry stone, providing space for all the institutions of the state, including the congress, the supreme court, and the executive branch.
- Reed, Walter (American pathologist and bacteriologist)
Walter Reed was a U.S. Army pathologist and bacteriologist who led the experiments that proved that yellow fever is transmitted by the bite of a mosquito. The Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, originally located in Washington, D.C., and moved to Bethesda, Md., in 2011, was named in his
- Reed, William J. (American postmaster)
Ada: …daughter of the first postmaster, William J. Reed, who built a log store there in 1889. The railroad arrived in 1900, and the city developed as a marketing and trading centre for a large cattle and grain area. The discovery of oil in the vicinity contributed to Ada’s economic growth.…
- Reed, Willis (American basketball player and coach)
Willis Reed was an American professional basketball player and professional and collegiate basketball coach who helped the New York Knicks of the National Basketball Association (NBA) win two championships (1970 and 1973). Reed left his home in rural Louisiana to attend Grambling State College (now
- reedbuck (mammal)
reedbuck, (genus Redunca), any of three medium-sized antelopes (family Bovidae) that inhabit the grasslands and marshes of sub-Saharan Africa. The reedbuck is distinguished by a round glandular spot below each ear and curved horns (on males only) that point forward; these horns are shortest (14–41
- Reede, Godard Van (Dutch soldier)
Godard van Reede, 1st earl of Athlone was a Dutch soldier in English service who completed the conquest of Ireland for King William III of England (William of Orange, stadtholder of the United Provinces) against the forces of the deposed king James II after the Glorious Revolution (1688–89). Van
- Reeder, Eggert (German general)
Brussels: The 20th century: Eggert Reeder, chief of the German military administration for Belgium, decided to follow the Nazi policy of creating large urban zones by amalgamating the communes. In order to crush the spirited opposition to this measure, Reeder dissolved all municipal councils and dismissed Joseph van de…
- reedfish (fish)
reedfish, (Erpetoichthys calabaricus), species of air-breathing eel-like African fishes classified in the family Polypteridae (order Polypteriformes), inhabiting the lower stretches of freshwater river systems in Benin, Nigeria, and Cameroon. Their elongated body is covered with rhomboid scales
- reedgrass (plant)
reed: …reed canary grass (Phalaris), and reedgrass, or bluejoint (Calamagrostis). Bur reed (Sparganium) and reed mace (Typha) are plants of other families.
- reeding (architecture)
fluting and reeding, in architectural decoration, surfaces worked into a regular series of (vertical) concave grooves or convex ridges, frequently used on columns. In Classical architecture fluting and reeding are used in the columns of all the orders except the Tuscan. In the Doric order there are
- reedling (bird)
reedling, (species Panurus biarmicus), songbird often placed in the family Panuridae (order Passeriformes) but also sometimes classified with the Sylviidae or Timaliidae. It lives in reedy marshes from England to eastern Asia. About 16 cm (6.5 inches) long, the male wears subtle reddish, yellowish,
- reedmace (plant)
cattail, (genus Typha), genus of about 30 species of tall reedy marsh plants (family Typhaceae), found mainly in temperate and cold regions of the Northern and Southern hemispheres. The plants inhabit fresh to slightly brackish waters and are considered aquatic or semi-aquatic. Cattails are
- reedpipe (wind instrument)
wind instrument: Classification: comprises reed instruments, or reedpipes, which have a column of air that is activated by the vibrations between the two or more parts of a reed or between a single reed and the mouthpiece. In the Sachs-Hornbostel system, all multiple reeds are generically classified as oboes and the single…
- Reeds and Mud (work by Blasco Ibáñez)
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez: …and Cañas y barro (1902; Reeds and Mud, 1966), is marked by a vigorous and intense realism and considerable dramatic force in the depiction of the life of Valencia. Later novels, such as La bodega (1906; The Fruit of the Vine, 1919), are held to have suffered from a heavy…