- Sneeuberg (mountain range, South Africa)
Sneeuberg, mountain range in south-central South Africa. The range lies on the northeastern edge of the Great Karoo and stretches roughly east-west for 30 miles (48 km) with a slight curve southward at the eastern end. The highest point in the Sneeuberg (“Snow Mountain”) range is Mount Kompas
- Sneevliet, Hendricus (Dutch politician)
Hendricus Sneevliet was a Dutch communist politician who founded the Indies Social Democratic Association in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) and whose oratory stimulated the nationalist movement there. Sneevliet began working for the Dutch railroads and by 1909 was president of the Union of
- Sneevliet, Hendricus Josephus Franciscus Marie (Dutch politician)
Hendricus Sneevliet was a Dutch communist politician who founded the Indies Social Democratic Association in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) and whose oratory stimulated the nationalist movement there. Sneevliet began working for the Dutch railroads and by 1909 was president of the Union of
- sneeze reflex
human nervous system: Reflex actions: …in the trachea and the sneeze reflex by one in the nose. In both, the reflex response involves many muscles; this includes a temporary lapse of respiration in order to expel the irritant.
- sneezeweed (plant)
sneezeweed, any of about 40 species of tall herbs constituting the genus Helenium of the family Asteraceae, native to North America. Most are perennials with flat-topped clusters of yellow, brown, or red flower heads and leaves that alternate along the stem. Summer- or fall-blooming species are
- sneezewort (plant)
yarrow: The dried leaves of sneezewort (A. ptarmica) are used to make a sneezing powder, and parts of yarrow or milfoil (A. millefolium) have been used for snuff and tea.
- sneezing monkey (primate)
snub-nosed monkey: …to the genus, the so-called Myanmar snub-nosed monkey (R. strykeri); the species was discovered in northern Myanmar. It is black with white regions on its ear tufts, chin, and perineal area. The species has an estimated population of only a few hundred individuals, and it appears to be extremely susceptible…
- Sneferu (king of Egypt)
Snefru was the first king of ancient Egypt of the 4th dynasty (c. 2543–c. 2436 bce). He fostered the evolution of the highly centralized administration that marked the climax of the Old Kingdom (c. 2543–c. 2120 bce). Snefru came from a family in Middle Egypt, near Hermopolis, and probably ascended
- Snefru (king of Egypt)
Snefru was the first king of ancient Egypt of the 4th dynasty (c. 2543–c. 2436 bce). He fostered the evolution of the highly centralized administration that marked the climax of the Old Kingdom (c. 2543–c. 2120 bce). Snefru came from a family in Middle Egypt, near Hermopolis, and probably ascended
- Sneijder, Wesley (Dutch football player)
Ajax: …1990s and, later, Ryan Babel, Wesley Sneijder, and Rafael van der Vaart.
- Snell’s law (physics)
Snell’s law, in optics, a relationship between the path taken by a ray of light in crossing the boundary or surface of separation between two contacting substances and the refractive index of each. This law was discovered in 1621 by the Dutch astronomer and mathematician Willebrord Snell (also
- Snell, George Davis (American geneticist)
George Davis Snell was an American immunogeneticist who, with Jean Dausset and Baruj Benacerraf, was awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his studies of histocompatibility. Histocompatibility is a compatibility between the genetic makeup of donor and host that allows a tissue
- Snell, Peter (New Zealand athlete)
Peter Snell was a New Zealand middle-distance runner who was a world record holder in the 800-metre race (1962–68), the 1,000-metre race (1964–65), the mile (1962–65), and the 880-yard race (1962–66) and, as a team member, in the 4 × 1-mile relay race (1961). After graduating from Mount Albert
- Snell, Peter George (New Zealand athlete)
Peter Snell was a New Zealand middle-distance runner who was a world record holder in the 800-metre race (1962–68), the 1,000-metre race (1964–65), the mile (1962–65), and the 880-yard race (1962–66) and, as a team member, in the 4 × 1-mile relay race (1961). After graduating from Mount Albert
- Snell, Willebrord (Dutch astronomer and mathematician)
Willebrord Snell was a Dutch astronomer and mathematician who discovered the law of refraction (also known as Snell’s law), which relates the degree of the bending of light to the properties of the refractive material. This law is basic to modern geometrical optics. In 1613 he succeeded his father,
- Snellen chart (optometry)
Snellen chart, chart used to measure visual acuity by determining the level of visual detail that a person can discriminate. It was developed by the Dutch ophthalmologist Herman Snellen in 1862 and was adopted by medical professionals in many countries who have used it for more than 100 years. The
- Snellen eye chart (optometry)
Snellen chart, chart used to measure visual acuity by determining the level of visual detail that a person can discriminate. It was developed by the Dutch ophthalmologist Herman Snellen in 1862 and was adopted by medical professionals in many countries who have used it for more than 100 years. The
- Snellius, Willebrordus (Dutch astronomer and mathematician)
Willebrord Snell was a Dutch astronomer and mathematician who discovered the law of refraction (also known as Snell’s law), which relates the degree of the bending of light to the properties of the refractive material. This law is basic to modern geometrical optics. In 1613 he succeeded his father,
- Snellman, Johan Vilhelm (Finnish philosopher)
Johan Vilhelm Snellman was a Finnish nationalist philosopher and statesman who was an important figure in the movement to establish Finnish as a national language. In 1835, when Snellman became a philosophy instructor at the University of Helsinki, Finland was a grand duchy of Russia (1809–1917)
- Sneskavlen brast (work by Kinck)
Hans E. Kinck: …work is the three-volume novel Sneskavlen brast (1918–19; “The Avalanche Broke”), dealing with the clash between the peasants and the rural and urban upper classes. Rarely do Kinck’s national interests and Neoromantic qualities preclude a harsh critique of sentimentality.
- Snezhnoe (Ukraine)
Snizhne, city, eastern Ukraine, in the Donets Basin coalfield. Established in 1784 as the village of Vasylivka, from 1900 it grew with the discovery of anthracite deposits nearby. It was incorporated in 1938 and, in addition to mining, has specialized in the manufacture of equipment for the
- Snezhnoye (Ukraine)
Snizhne, city, eastern Ukraine, in the Donets Basin coalfield. Established in 1784 as the village of Vasylivka, from 1900 it grew with the discovery of anthracite deposits nearby. It was incorporated in 1938 and, in addition to mining, has specialized in the manufacture of equipment for the
- Sněžka, Mount (mountain, Czech Republic)
Czech Republic: Relief: …point in the Czech Republic, Mount Sněžka, with an elevation of 5,256 feet (1,602 metres), is found in the major segment of this system, the Giant Mountains (Czech: Krkonoše; German: Riesengebirge). Farther to the east is the Oder (Odra) River lowland, a small fringe along the Polish border. Finally, southeast…
- SNI (psychology)
post-traumatic stress disorder: A test known as synchronous neural interaction (SNI) has been shown to effectively distinguish between the patterns of abnormal brain activity seen in persons with PTSD and the patterns of typical brain activity observed in healthy persons. During an SNI test, the patient stares at a dot for approximately…
- Śniardwy (lake, Poland)
Warmińsko-Mazurskie: Geography: …site of Poland’s largest lakes—Śniardwy (44 square miles [114 square km]) and Mamry (40 square miles [104 square km]). The province’s main rivers are the Pasłęka, Łyna, and Drwęca. Forests (mainly coniferous) cover nearly one-third of the province. Because of the high level of forestation and the exceptionally good…
- Snicket, Lemony (American author)
Daniel Handler is an American author best known for his A Series of Unfortunate Events, a 13-book collection of unhappy morality tales for older children that was published between 1999 and 2006. Handler wrote the series under the pen name Lemony Snicket. After earning a B.A. in 1992 from Wesleyan
- Snider, Christopher (American patriot)
Boston Massacre: The killing of Christopher Seider and the end of the rope: Early in 1770, with the effectiveness of the boycott uneven, colonial radicals, many of them members of the Sons of Liberty, began directing their ire against those businesses that had ignored the boycott. The radicals posted signs…
- Snider, Duke (American baseball player)
Duke Snider was an American professional baseball player who was best known for playing centre field on the famed “Boys of Summer” Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s. Snider was raised in Compton, California, where he came to the attention of the Dodgers while playing for Compton Junior College.
- Snider, Edwin Donald (American baseball player)
Duke Snider was an American professional baseball player who was best known for playing centre field on the famed “Boys of Summer” Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s. Snider was raised in Compton, California, where he came to the attention of the Dodgers while playing for Compton Junior College.
- Snider-Pellegrini, Antonio (French scientist)
continental drift: Some 50 years later, Antonio Snider-Pellegrini, a French scientist, argued that the presence of identical fossil plants in both North American and European coal deposits could be explained if the two continents had formerly been connected, a relationship otherwise difficult to account for. In 1908 Frank B. Taylor of…
- Śnieżka, Mount (mountain, Poland)
Dolnośląskie: Geography: …point in the province is Mount Śnieżka (5,256 feet [1,602 metres]) in the Giant Mountains (Karkonosze). The main rivers are the Oder (Odra), Neisse (comprising the Nysa Łużycka and Nysa Kłodzka), Kaczawa, and Bystrzyca. Forests, composed mainly of coniferous trees, cover approximately one-fourth of the province. In the lowlands winters…
- sniff (domino game)
muggins: Sniff, a very popular domino game in the United States, is essentially muggins, but the first double played is called sniff and may be put down endwise or sidewise (à cheval), at the holder’s option. Thereafter, one may play to this piece both endwise and…
- Snijders, Frans (Flemish painter)
Frans Snyders was a Baroque artist who was the most-noted 17th-century painter of animals. His subjects included still lifes of markets and pantries (featuring both live animals and dead game), animals in combat, and hunting scenes. A highly skilled painter who was celebrated for his ability to
- snipe (bird)
snipe, any of about 20 species belonging to the shorebird family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). Snipes frequent wet meadows and marshes and occur in temperate and warm regions worldwide. They are short-legged, long-billed, chunky birds that are striped and barred in brown, black, and white.
- snipe eel (fish)
eel: Annotated classification: Family Nemichthyidae (snipe eels) Jaws greatly extended, minute teeth. 3 genera with about 9 species. Bathypelagic (deepwater), worldwide. Family Serrivomeridae (sawtooth snipe eels) Jaws moderately extended; bladelike teeth on vomer bones. 2 genera with about 10 species. Bathypelagic, worldwide. Family
- snipe fly (insect)
snipe fly, (family Rhagionidae), any member of a family of insects in the fly order, Diptera, that are dark-coloured and between 8 and 15 mm (0.3 and 0.6 inch) long and have a rounded head, posteriorly tapering abdomen, and long legs. Adults are usually found in wooded areas, and the larvae are
- snipefish (fish)
snipefish, any of about 18 species of marine fishes of the family Centriscidae (order Gasterosteiformes) found in deeper tropical and subtropical waters of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Snipefishes are small deep-bodied fishes that grow to 30 cm (12 inches) in length. They are commonly
- Sniper, The (play by Krige)
Uys Krige: …The Wall of Death (1960), The Sniper (1962), and The Two Lamps (1964) solidified his international reputation as a dramatist.
- sniperscope (military science)
warning system: Infrared: The sniperscope, an early device that used infrared illumination and an infrared viewer, has been largely replaced by the image intensifier and by laser illuminators.
- Snipes, Wesley (American actor)
Wesley Snipes is an American actor best known for his action films, many of which feature martial arts. Snipes spent his early years in New York City’s South Bronx. He studied martial arts from age seven, initially because he was small for his age and needed to defend himself. At age 12, after
- Snitch (film by Waugh [2013])
Susan Sarandon: …attorney in the action-filled drama Snitch and had a role in the multigenerational-family farce The Big Wedding. Sarandon then assumed the role of the alcoholic grandmother of the title character in the comedy Tammy (2014). She was acidly funny as the supportive lesbian grandmother of a transgender teenager in About…
- Snits (Netherlands)
Sneek, gemeente (municipality), northern Netherlands, on the small Geeuw River. Sneek was founded in 1294 on the shores of the Middelzee (an arm of the sea that once covered the area, since drained) and was chartered in 1456. It has developed as the water-sports (especially yachting) centre for the
- Snizhne (Ukraine)
Snizhne, city, eastern Ukraine, in the Donets Basin coalfield. Established in 1784 as the village of Vasylivka, from 1900 it grew with the discovery of anthracite deposits nearby. It was incorporated in 1938 and, in addition to mining, has specialized in the manufacture of equipment for the
- SNL (political organization, Somalia)
Somalia: Independence and union: …League (SYL) and the northern-based Somali National League (SNL).
- SNL (American television program)
Saturday Night Live (SNL), American sketch comedy and variety television series that has aired on Saturday nights on the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) network since 1975, becoming one of the longest-running programs in television. The series is a fixture of NBC programming and a landmark in
- SNM (political organization, Somalia)
Somalia: Civil war: …in central Somalia, and the Somali National Movement (SNM), based on the Isaaq clan of the northern regions. Formed in 1982, both organizations undertook guerrilla operations from bases in Ethiopia. These pressures, in addition to pressure from Somalia’s Western backers, encouraged Siad to improve relations with Kenya and Ethiopia. But…
- SNO (research center, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada)
Arthur B. McDonald: …the first director of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO).
- Snø Mountain (mountain, Norway)
Dovre Mountains: The highest peak is Snø Mountain (Snøhetta; 7,500 feet [2,286 metres]). The Dovre Mountains are traversed from south to north by the main rail and road links between Oslo and Trondheim. Some of the peaks overlook centres of winter sports activities.
- Snob, Der (work by Sternheim)
Carl Sternheim: …Maske family also appear in Der Snob (published and performed 1914), 1913 (published 1915 and performed 1919), and Das Fossil (published 1925 and performed 1923), the four plays forming the Maske Tetralogy. The plays portray the family as self-indulgent social climbers masked by bourgeois propriety. Sternheim’s later plays were less…
- Snob, The (work by Sternheim)
Carl Sternheim: …Maske family also appear in Der Snob (published and performed 1914), 1913 (published 1915 and performed 1919), and Das Fossil (published 1925 and performed 1923), the four plays forming the Maske Tetralogy. The plays portray the family as self-indulgent social climbers masked by bourgeois propriety. Sternheim’s later plays were less…
- Snobs of England, by One of Themselves, The (work by Thackeray)
William Makepeace Thackeray: Early writings: The Book of Snobs (1848) is a collection of articles that had appeared successfully in Punch (as “The Snobs of England, by One of Themselves,” 1846–47). It consists of sketches of London characters and displays Thackeray’s virtuosity in quick character-drawing. The Rose and the Ring,…
- Snodgrass, W.D. (American poet)
W.D. Snodgrass was an American poet whose early work is distinguished by a careful attention to form and by a relentless yet delicate examination of personal experiences. Snodgrass was educated at Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa., and the University of Iowa. He taught at Cornell University
- Snodgrass, William DeWitt (American poet)
W.D. Snodgrass was an American poet whose early work is distinguished by a careful attention to form and by a relentless yet delicate examination of personal experiences. Snodgrass was educated at Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa., and the University of Iowa. He taught at Cornell University
- Snohallow (American Indian leader)
Smohalla was a North American Indian prophet, preacher, and teacher, one of a series of such leaders who arose in response to the menace presented to Native American life and culture by the encroachment of white settlers. He founded a religious cult, the Dreamers, that emphasized traditional Native
- Snøhetta (mountain, Norway)
Dovre Mountains: The highest peak is Snø Mountain (Snøhetta; 7,500 feet [2,286 metres]). The Dovre Mountains are traversed from south to north by the main rail and road links between Oslo and Trondheim. Some of the peaks overlook centres of winter sports activities.
- Snohomish River (river, United States)
Everett: …at the mouth of the Snohomish River, across from Whidbey Island (west), 28 miles (45 km) north of Seattle. Originally inhabited by Snohomish and other Indians, the area was settled in 1862 and the city was laid out in 1890. It became the western terminus of the Northern Pacific Railway…
- Snoilsky, Carl Johan Gustaf, Greve (Swedish poet)
Carl Johan Gustaf, Count Snoilsky was a Swedish poet who was the most notable of a group of early realist poets. While a student at the University of Uppsala, Snoilsky gained repute for his great poetic talent. His Dikter (1869; “Poems”), written during an extended tour of the European continent
- Snømannen (novel by Nesbø)
Jo Nesbø: …serial killer in Snømannen (2007; The Snowman). Panserhjerte (2009; “Armoured Heart”; The Leopard) has Hole tracked down in Hong Kong and persuaded to reengage in police work. Gjenferd (2011; “Ghost”; Phantom) treats the drug scene in Oslo and examines Hole’s experience of fatherhood, and Politi (2013; Police) continues the story…
- snood (hair accessory)
snood, either of two types of hair ornament worn by women. The Scottish snood was a narrow circlet or ribbon fastened around the head and worn primarily by unmarried women, as a sign of chastity. During the Victorian era, hairnets worn for decoration were called snoods, and this term came to mean a
- snook (fish)
snook, any of about eight species of marine fishes constituting the genus Centropomus and the family Centropomidae (order Perciformes). Snooks are long, silvery, pikelike fishes with two dorsal fins, a long head, and a rather large mouth with a projecting lower jaw. Tropical fishes, they are found
- Snook, Sarah (Australian actress)
Succession: Cast and characters: …Roy, played by Australian actress Sarah Snook, at first seems driven to find success outside the family confines as a political consultant but eventually owns up to her desire to take the reins at Waystar. She keeps everyone, including her husband, at an emotional distance. Logan’s youngest child, Roman Roy,…
- snooker (game)
snooker, popular billiards game of British origin, played on a table similar in size and markings to that used in English billiards. The game arose, presumably in India, as a pastime for soldiers in the 1870s. Snooker is played with 22 balls, made up of one white ball (the cue ball); 15 red balls,
- Snoop Dogg (American rapper and actor)
Snoop Dogg is an American rapper and songwriter who became one of the best-known figures in gangsta rap in the 1990s and was for many the epitome of West Coast hip-hop culture. Snoop Dogg’s signature drawled lyrics took inspiration from his early encounters with the law. After high school he was in
- Snoop Dogg Presents Bible of Love (album by Snoop Dogg)
Snoop Dogg: …double album of gospel music, Snoop Dogg Presents Bible of Love (2018). After that detour, he released the rap album I Wanna Thank Me (2019). In 2022 Snoop was among a group of hip-hop stars—which included Dr. Dre, Eminem, and Mary J. Blige—who performed at the Super Bowl halftime show.
- Snoop Doggy Dogg (American rapper and actor)
Snoop Dogg is an American rapper and songwriter who became one of the best-known figures in gangsta rap in the 1990s and was for many the epitome of West Coast hip-hop culture. Snoop Dogg’s signature drawled lyrics took inspiration from his early encounters with the law. After high school he was in
- Snoop Lion (American rapper and actor)
Snoop Dogg is an American rapper and songwriter who became one of the best-known figures in gangsta rap in the 1990s and was for many the epitome of West Coast hip-hop culture. Snoop Dogg’s signature drawled lyrics took inspiration from his early encounters with the law. After high school he was in
- Snoopy (cartoon character)
Snoopy, comic-strip character, a spotted white beagle with a rich fantasy life. The pet dog of the hapless Peanuts character Charlie Brown, Snoopy became one of the most iconic and beloved characters in the history of comics. Although Charlie Brown was ostensibly the main character in Charles
- Snopes family (fictional characters)
Snopes family, recurring characters in the Yoknapatawpha novels and stories of William Faulkner, notably The Hamlet (1940), The Town (1957), and The Mansion (1959). Snopes family members also appear in Sartoris (1929), As I Lay Dying (1930), and The Unvanquished (1938). Faulkner contrasted the
- Snoqualmie Falls (falls, Washington, United States)
Snoqualmie River: Snoqualmie Falls (268 feet [82 metres] high) is the site of a hydroelectric power plant. The place name is that of an Indian tribe that once dominated the region; the name is Nisqually and means “people of little account, but strong.”
- Snoqualmie River (river, Washington, United States)
Snoqualmie River, river in west-central Washington, U.S. It rises in the Cascade Range east of Seattle at the juncture of North Fork, Middle Fork, and South Fork and flows 45 miles (72 km) west and northwest, joining the Skykomish River to form the Snohomish River near Monroe. Snoqualmie Falls (268
- snoring (sleep disorder)
snoring, a rough, hoarse noise produced upon the intake of breath during sleep and caused by the vibration of the soft palate and vocal cords. It is often associated with obstruction of the nasal passages, which necessitates breathing through the mouth. Snoring is more common in the elderly because
- snorkel (ventilation device)
snorkel, ventilating tube for submerged submarines, introduced in German U-boats during World War II. A basic problem of submarines powered by internal-combustion engines was that of recharging the batteries, which were used for propelling the boat when it was fully submerged. Because the generator
- snorkeling (sport)
skin diving, swimming done underwater, usually with a face mask and flippers but without portable oxygen equipment. See underwater
- Snörmakare Lekholm får en idé (work by Hellström)
Gustaf Hellström: …Lekholm får en idé (1927; Lacemaker Lekholm Has an Idea), considered his masterpiece, is a family chronicle covering three generations of life in a provincial garrison town. He also wrote a fictionalized autobiography, Stellan Petreus: en man utan humor (1921–52; “Stellan Petreus: A Man Without Humour”).
- Snorra Edda (work by Snorri Sturluson)
elf: In the Prose, or Younger, Edda, elves were classified as light elves (who were fair) and dark elves (who were darker than pitch); these classifications are roughly equivalent to the Scottish seelie court and unseelie court. The notable characteristics of elves were mischief and volatility. They were…
- Snorri (son of Thorfinn Karlsefni)
Thorfinn Karlsefni: Thorfinn’s and Gudrid’s son, Snorri, born in Vinland about 1005, was the first European born in North America (excluding North America-associated Greenland).
- Snorri Sturluson (Icelandic writer)
Snorri Sturluson was an Icelandic poet, historian, and chieftain, author of the Prose Edda and the Heimskringla. Snorri, a descendant of the great poet and hero of the Egils saga, Egill Skallagrímsson, was brought up at Oddi from the age of three in the home of Jón Loptsson, the most influential
- Snotingaham (city and unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Nottingham, city and unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Nottinghamshire, England. The city lies along the River Trent. The original site, on a sandstone hill commanding a crossing of the Trent, was occupied by the Anglo-Saxons in the 6th century. Colonizing the area by river, they
- snotty (naval rank)
midshipman, title used in the Royal Navy from about 1660 for “young gentlemen” in training at sea to qualify for service as commissioned officers. Continental and U.S. navies adopted the title and system. The equivalent French title is aspirant, and the Spanish is guardia marina. In the early 21st
- Snouck Hurgronje, Christiaan (Dutch professor)
Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje was a professor and Dutch colonial official, a pioneer in the scientific study of Islam. While serving as a lecturer at the University of Leiden (1880–89), Snouck Hurgronje visited Arabia (1884–85), stopping at Mecca. His classic work Mekka, 2 vol. (1888–89),
- snout (anatomy)
beaked whale: …whales that have an extended snout, including the bottlenose whales. Little is known about this family of cetaceans; one species was first described in 1995, two others are known only from skeletal remains, and the bodies of undescribed species occasionally drift ashore.
- snout beetle (insect)
weevil, (family Curculionidae), true weevil of the insect order Coleoptera (beetles and weevils). Curculionidae is one of the largest coleopteran families (about 40,000 species). Most weevils have long, distinctly elbowed antennae that may fold into special grooves on the snout. Many have no wings,
- snout butterfly (insect)
lepidopteran: Annotated classification: …rear; spin crude cocoons; the Libytheinae (snout butterflies) are so named because of their long protruding palps; the very large Brassolinae and iridescent Morphinae are Neotropical, as are the highly distasteful, aposematic Heliconiinae and Ithomiinae that, with the worldwide Danainae, are models in many mimicry complexes; most of the pantropical…
- snout moth (insect)
pyralid moth: …of these species are called snout moths because their larvae are characterized by elongated snoutlike mouthparts. The larval stage of the European corn borer (Pyrausta nubilalis; also called Ostrinia nubilalis) is the most important insect pest of maize throughout the world. It also infests other plants, including hemp, potatoes, and…
- Snow (novel by Banville)
John Banville: Benjamin Black books and mystery series: …series, beginning with the novel Snow (2020), published under Banville’s name. Strafford also appeared in April in Spain, and the book is considered to be the second in the Strafford and Quirke series (as well as the eighth in the Quirke series), in which the two popular characters partner up…
- snow (weather)
snow, the solid form of water that crystallizes in the atmosphere and, falling to the Earth, covers, permanently or temporarily, about 23 percent of the Earth’s surface. A brief treatment of snow follows. For full treatment, see climate: Snow and sleet. Snow falls at sea level poleward of latitude
- snow (television)
noise: …static and in television as snow.
- Snow (novel by Pamuk)
Orhan Pamuk: In Kar (2002; Snow) a Turkish poet living in exile in Germany faces the tensions between East and West when he travels to a poor town in a remote area of Turkey. Masumiyet müzesi (2008; The Museum of Innocence) investigates the relationship between an older man and his…
- snow and ice climate (climatology)
snow and ice climate, major climate type of the Köppen classification characterized by bitterly cold temperatures and scant precipitation. It occurs poleward of 65° N and S latitude over the ice caps of Greenland and Antarctica and over the permanently frozen portion of the Arctic Ocean. It is
- Snow at Estaque (painting by Cézanne)
Paul Cézanne: Impressionist years: …two landscapes from this time, Snow at Estaque (1870–71) and The Wine Market (1872), the composition is that of his early style, but already more disciplined and more attentive to the atmospheric, rather than dramatic, quality of light.
- snow blindness (visual condition)
goggles: …the Inuit to protect against snow blindness. Typically made of bone or walrus ivory, they fit tightly to the face and had a slit to allow a minimum of light for vision. Modern goggles are worn in winter sports to protect against snow blindness and glare, against cold and wind,…
- snow bunting (bird)
bunting: They include the snow bunting (P. nivalis), sometimes called “snowflake,” as their flocks seem to swirl through the air and then settle on winter fields. The whitest North American songbird, McKay’s bunting (P. hyperboreus), nests on the remote Bering Sea islands of St. Matthew and Hall.
- snow cellar (refrigeration)
refrigeration: Wealthy families made use of snow cellars, pits that were dug into the ground and insulated with wood and straw, to store the ice. In this manner, packed snow and ice could be preserved for months. Stored ice was the principal means of refrigeration until the beginning of the 20th…
- Snow Country (novel by Kawabata)
Snow Country, short novel by Kawabata Yasunari, published in Japanese in 1948 as Yukiguni. The work was begun in 1935 and completed in 1937, with a final version completed in 1947. It deals with psychological, social, and erotic interaction between an aesthete and a beautiful geisha and is set
- Snow Crash (novel by Stephenson)
metaverse: …term metaverse in his novel Snow Crash (1992), in which characters enjoy themselves as digital avatars in the “Metaverse” as an escape from the grim reality of the 21st century. The concept of an immersive digital world became popular in late 20th- and early 21st-century science fiction, such as Lana…
- snow crystal (weather)
snow: Snowflakes are formed by crystals of ice that generally have a hexagonal pattern, often beautifully intricate. The size and shape of the crystals depend mainly on the temperature and the amount of water vapour available as they develop. At temperatures above about −40 °C (−40…
- Snow Falling on Cedars (film by Hicks [1999])
Ethan Hawke: …robbers in 1920s Texas; and Snow Falling on Cedars (1999), a love story set against the backdrop of Japanese-American internment during World War II. He then starred as the title character in Hamlet (2000), a modern adaptation of the Shakespeare play.
- snow flake (weather)
snow: Snowflakes are formed by crystals of ice that generally have a hexagonal pattern, often beautifully intricate. The size and shape of the crystals depend mainly on the temperature and the amount of water vapour available as they develop. At temperatures above about −40 °C (−40…
- snow flea (arthropod)
springtail: Certain springtails known as snow fleas are active at near-freezing temperatures and may appear in large numbers on snow surfaces. Springtails live in soil and on water and feed on decaying vegetable matter, sometimes damaging garden crops and mushrooms. The small (2 mm long), green-coloured lucerne flea (Sminthurus viridis),…
- Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (film by Wang [2011])
Wayne Wang: Career: …other works include the dramas Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (2011), While the Women Are Sleeping (2016), and Coming Home Again (2019).