- Songs of Ascents (Old Testament)
biblical literature: Psalms: Other possible collections include the Songs of Ascents, probably pilgrim songs in origin, the Hallelujah Psalms, and a group of 55 psalms with a title normally taken to mean “the choirmaster.”
- Songs of Bilitis (poetry by Louÿs)
Daughters of Bilitis: …written by Pierre Louÿs called Songs of Bilitis. Bilitis was a female character who was romantically associated with Sappho, the female Greek lyric poet.
- Songs of Enchantment (novel by Okri)
Ben Okri: The novels Songs of Enchantment (1993) and Infinite Riches (1998) continue the themes of The Famished Road, relating stories of dangerous quests and the struggle for equanimity in an unstable land. Okri’s other novels included Astonishing the Gods (1995); Dangerous Love (1996), about “star-crossed” lovers in postcolonial…
- Songs of Experience (album by U2)
Bono: With Songs of Experience (2017), its eighth number-one album, U2 became one of the few bands to have a chart-topping album in four consecutive decades. The group received numerous honours, including more than 20 Grammy Awards. In 2022 it was given a Kennedy Center Honor.
- Songs of Experience (work by Blake)
William Blake: Blake as a poet: …year as Europe, Blake published Songs of Experience and combined it with his previous lyrics to form Songs of Innocence and of Experience Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul. The poems of Songs of Experience centre on threatened, unprotected souls in despair. In “London” the speaker, shown…
- Songs of Innocence (album by U2)
U2: In 2014 Songs of Innocence, largely produced by Danger Mouse, was released at no cost to all customers of Apple’s iTunes Store several weeks before its physical release. The move aroused controversy but gained attention, though reviews of the actual music were mixed, with many critics complaining…
- Songs of Innocence and of Experience (poetry by Blake)
Songs of Innocence and of Experience, masterpieces of English lyric poetry, written and illustrated by William Blake. Songs of Innocence, published in 1789, was Blake’s first great demonstration of “illuminated printing,” his unique technique of publishing both text and hand-coloured illustration
- Songs of Jamaica (poetry by McKay)
Claude McKay: …volumes of Jamaican dialect verse, Songs of Jamaica and Constab Ballads (1912).
- Songs of Liberation (work by Dallapiccola)
Luigi Dallapiccola: …basis for much of his Canti di liberazione (1955; Songs of Liberation), a triptych for chorus and orchestra, celebrating the liberation of Italy from Fascist control. An opera, Volo di notte (Night Flight), was first performed in Florence in 1940.
- Songs of March (work by Leino)
Eino Leino: …collection of poems, Maaliskuun lauluja (1896, “Songs of March”), Leino’s mood was gay and his style free and melodic; he was influenced by his compatriot J.L. Runeberg, the German poet Heinrich Heine, and Finnish folk songs. But gradually his mood darkened, and he turned to poems of confession and solitude,…
- Songs of Mirza Schaffy, The (work by Bodenstedt)
Friedrich Martin von Bodenstedt: …Lieder des Mirza Schaffy (1851; The Songs of Mirza Schaffy), a collection of poems written in an Oriental style, was instantly successful. In 1854 he became professor of Slavic languages at the University of Munich. During this period he made numerous translations from Russian authors, notably Aleksandr Pushkin, Ivan Turgenev,…
- Songs of Nisibis (work by Ephraem Syrus)
patristic literature: The schools of Edessa and Nisibis: His Carmina Nisibena (“Songs of Nisibis”) make a valuable sourcebook for historians, especially for information about the frontier wars.
- Songs of Prison (work by Dallapiccola)
Luigi Dallapiccola: …triptych Canti di prigionia (1938–41; Songs of Prison) marked him as a mature composer; this work, for chorus with an orchestra of percussion, harps, and pianos, was a protest against Fascist doctrine and was based in part on the chant “Dies Irae” (“Day of Wrath”) from the mass for the…
- Songs of sundrie natures (work by Byrd)
William Byrd: Life: …of Sadnes and Pietie (1588), Songs of Sundrie Natures (1589), and two further books of Cantiones sacrae (1589 and 1591). The two secular volumes were dedicated, respectively, to Sir Christopher Hatton, the lord chancellor, and to Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon, the lord chamberlain and first cousin to the queen.…
- Songs of the Coast Dwellers (work by Skinner)
Constance Lindsay Skinner: …for adults, Red Willows (1929); Songs of the Coast Dwellers (1930), a highly praised collection of poems inspired by the legends of the Squamish Indians of British Columbia; and Beaver, Kings and Cabins (1933), a history of the fur trade.
- Songs of the Free (album by Gang of Four)
Gang of Four: The group’s third album, Songs of the Free, released during the Falkland Islands War (1982), was more accessible and even more dance-oriented than its predecessors but included the antimilitarist “I Love a Man in Uniform” and the dour “We Live as We Dream, Alone.” Critically but not commercially successful,…
- Songs of the Sierras (work by Miller)
Joaquin Miller: Songs of the Sierras (1871), upon which his reputation mainly rests, was loudly acclaimed in England, while generally derided in the United States for its excessive romanticism. His other books of poetry included Songs of the Sunlands (1873), The Ship in the Desert (1875), The…
- Songs of the South, The (Chinese literary anthology)
Chuci, compendium of ancient Chinese poetic songs from the southern state of Chu during the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bce). The poems were collected in the 2nd century ce by Wang Yi, an imperial librarian during the latter part of the Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce). Many of the poems are attributed to
- Songs to Krishna (poetry by Bharati)
Subramania Bharati: …works included Kaṇṇan pāṭṭu (1917; Songs to Krishna), Panchali sapatham (1912; Panchali’s Vow), and Kuyil pāṭṭu (1912; Kuyil’s Song). Many of his English works were collected in Agni and Other Poems and Translations and Essays and Other Prose Fragments (1937).
- Songs Without Words (work by Mendelssohn)
Songs Without Words, collection of 48 songs written for solo piano rather than voice by German composer Felix Mendelssohn. Part of the collection—consisting of 36 songs—was published in six volumes during the composer’s lifetime. Two further volumes—with 12 more songs—were published after
- Songs, The Book of (work by Heine)
The Book of Songs, collection of verse by Heinrich Heine, published as Buch der Lieder in 1827. The work contains all his poetry to the time of publication and features bittersweet, self-ironic verses about unrequited love that employ Romantic sensibilities but are at the same time suspicious of
- songshrike (bird group)
songshrike, any of several birds of the family Cracticidae (order Passeriformes) including the bell-magpie, butcherbird, and currawong
- Songstress, The (album by Baker)
Anita Baker: …Beverly Glen Records, she recorded The Songstress (1983), a solo album that sold more than 300,000 copies and spent more than a year on the charts. Moving to Elektra, she served as executive producer of her next album, Rapture (1986), which won two Grammy Awards, sold more than five million…
- Songwriters Hall of Fame (organization and hall of fame)
Johnny Mercer: …the first president of the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame.
- Songyue Temple (ancient temple, China)
pagoda: …oldest surviving pagodas is at Songyue Monastery on Mount Song in Henan province. It is a 12-sided stone structure built during the Bei (Northern) Wei dynasty (386–534/535 ce) of the Six Dynasties period. The Hōryū Temple in Nara prefecture, Japan, rebuilt after a fire in 670, is part of a…
- Songze culture (anthropology)
China: 4th and 3rd millennia bce: …4th millennium by that of Songze. The pots, increasingly wheel-made, were predominantly clay-tempered gray ware. Tripods with a variety of leg shapes, serving stands, gui pitchers with handles, and goblets with petal-shaped feet were characteristic. Ring feet were used, silhouettes became more angular, and triangular and circular perforations were cut…
- sonic boom (physics)
sonic boom, shock wave that is produced by an aircraft or other object flying at a speed equal to or exceeding the speed of sound and that is heard on the ground as a sound like a clap of thunder. When an aircraft travels at subsonic speed, the pressure disturbances, or sounds, that it generates
- Sonic the Hedgehog (film by Fowler [2020])
Jim Carrey: …screen with the family comedy Sonic the Hedgehog, in which he played the villainous Dr. Ivo Robotnik. He reprised the role for the 2022 sequel.
- Sonic the Hedgehog (electronic game)
electronic platform game: …success with platform games before Sonic the Hedgehog (1991), which featured the company’s new mascot, a hedgehog with “attitude” that helped to establish the console with a slightly older audience.
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (film by Fowler [2022])
Jim Carrey: …reprised the role for the 2022 sequel.
- Sonic Youth (American rock group)
Sonic Youth, American avant-garde noise band and highly influential forerunner of the alternative rock groups of the 1980s and ’90s. The principal members were Kim Gordon (b. April 28, 1953, Rochester, New York, U.S.), Lee Ranaldo (b. February 3, 1956, Glen Cove, New York), Thurston Moore (b. July
- Sonin (Chinese courtier)
Kangxi: Early life: …government was first administered by Sonin, Suksaha, Ebilun, and Oboi—four conservative Manchu courtiers from the preceding reign. One of the first political acts of the four imperial advisers was to replace the so-called Thirteen Offices (Shisan Yanmen) with a Neiwufu (Dorgi Yamun), or Office of Household. The Thirteen Offices, all…
- Soninke (people)
Soninke, a people located in Senegal near Bakel on the Sénégal River and in neighbouring areas of West Africa. They speak a Mande language of the Niger-Congo family. Some Senegalese Soninke have migrated to Dakar, but the population in the Bakel area remain farmers whose chief crop is millet. The
- Soninke–Marabout Wars (African history)
The Gambia: European colonization: …of religious conflicts, called the Soninke-Marabout Wars, lasting a half century. Only one Muslim leader, Maba, emerged who could have unified the various kingdoms, but he was killed in 1864. By 1880 the religious aspect had all but disappeared, and the conflicts were carried on by war chiefs such as…
- sonioù (poetry)
sonioù, lyrical poem in the Breton language that may serve as a love song, satire, carol, or marriage lay. One of the major types of folk poetry in Breton literature, sonioù were first collected at the end of the 18th century. The first great authenticated collection was made in 1890 by François
- Soniou Breiz-Izel (collection by Luzel and Le Braz)
Celtic literature: The revival of Breton literature: …collaboration with Anatole Le Braz, Soniou Breiz-Izel (2 vol., 1890; “Folk Songs of Lower Brittanyrdquo;). In the 1980s Donatien Laurent, the first to have had access to Villemarqué’s papers, demonstrated that some of the poems were authentic.
- Sonipat (India)
Sonipat, city, east-central Haryana state, northern India. It is situated about 25 miles (40 km) north of Delhi. The city was probably founded by early Aryan settlers about 1500 bce and flourished on the banks of the Yamuna River, which now has receded 9 miles (14 km) to the east. Mentioned in the
- Sonja (queen of Norway)
Harald V: Harald’s courtship of a commoner, Sonja Haraldsen, caused some controversy, and he reportedly threatened to never wed if the couple were prevented from marrying. Olav eventually gave his consent, and, after some nine years of dating, the pair were married on August 29, 1968. Harald and Sonja had two children,…
- Sonko, Ousmane (prime minister of Senegal)
Bassirou Diomaye Faye: Faye met Ousmane Sonko, also a tax inspector, at work. Sonko had founded and at the time was leading a trade union, the Autonomous Union of Tax and Domain Agents, which Faye joined. In 2014 Sonko formed a political party, African Patriots of Senegal for Labor, Ethics…
- SonLife Broadcasting Network (television network)
Jimmy Swaggart: …Jimmy Swaggart Ministries launched the SonLife Broadcasting Network, an international Christian television network to air both live and prerecorded programs.
- sonnambula, La (work by Bellini)
Vincenzo Bellini: …and Juliet; La sonnambula (1831; The Sleepwalker); and Norma (1831). La sonnambula, an opera semiseria (serious but with a happy ending), became very popular, even in England, where an English version appeared. Bellini’s masterpiece, Norma, a tragedy set in ancient Gaul, achieved lasting success despite an initial failure.
- Sonneck, Oscar (American musicologist, librarian, and editor)
Oscar Sonneck was an American musicologist, librarian, and editor. Sonneck was mainly educated in Germany and attended the universities of Heidelberg and Munich, studying philosophy, composition, conducting, and, especially, musicology. A significant portion of his studies on American musical life
- Sonnenfels, Joseph von (political theorist)
Austria: Conflicts with revolutionary France, 1790–1805: …Leopold adopted a proposal of Joseph von Sonnenfels, an official often considered the leading enlightened political theorist in the monarchy, to make the police a service institution rather than an instrument of control. He put them in charge of local health measures and authorized them to settle minor disputes so…
- Sonnenwirt, Der (work by Kurz)
Hermann Kurz: … (1843; “Schiller’s Homeland Years”) and Der Sonnenwirt (1855; “The Proprietor of the Sun Inn”), both critical of the existing social order, and for his satirically humorous tales of Swabian life in Erzählungen (1858–63; “Tales”).
- sonnet (poetic form)
sonnet, fixed verse form of Italian origin consisting of 14 lines that are typically five-foot iambics rhyming according to a prescribed scheme. The sonnet is unique among poetic forms in Western literature in that it has retained its appeal for major poets for five centuries. The form seems to
- Sonnet des voyelles (poem by Rimbaud)
Voyelles, sonnet by Arthur Rimbaud, published in Paul Verlaine’s Les Poètes maudits (1884). Written in traditional alexandrine lines, the poem is far from traditional in its subject matter; it arbitrarily assigns to each of the vowels a different, specific colour. Suggestions as to the inspiration
- Sonnets from the Portuguese (poetry by Browning)
Sonnets from the Portuguese, collection of love sonnets by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, published in 1850. The poet’s reputation rests largely upon these sonnets, which constitute one of the best-known series of English love poems. Elizabeth Barrett Browning presented this volume of 44 sonnets to
- Sonnets of a Handsome and Well-Mannered Rogue, The (work by Angiolieri)
Cecco Angiolieri: The Sonnets of a Handsome and Well-Mannered Rogue, translated by Thomas Chubb, appeared in 1970.
- Sonnets pour Hélène (work by Ronsard)
Pierre de Ronsard: …Amours de Marie; and the Sonnets pour Hélène. In the latter, which is now perhaps the most famous of his collections, the veteran poet demonstrates his power to revivify the stylized patterns of courtly love poetry. Even in his last illness, Ronsard still wrote verse that is sophisticated in form…
- Sonnets to Orpheus (work by Rilke)
Sonnets to Orpheus, series of 55 poems in two linked cycles by Rainer Maria Rilke, published in German in 1923 as Die Sonette an Orpheus. The Sonnets to Orpheus brought Rilke international fame. The Sonnets to Orpheus are concerned with the relationship of art and poetry to life. In them Rilke
- Sonnevi, Göran (Swedish author)
Swedish literature: Political writing: …conventions of the 1950s, while Göran Sonnevi’s poem “Om kriget i Vietnam” (1965; “On the War in Vietnam”) served as a forceful call to action for the young generation. While remaining true to his quest for social justice, Sonnevi later moved toward intellectual mysticism and expanded his thematics to love…
- Sonni ʿAlī (West African ruler)
Sonni ʿAlī was a West African monarch who initiated the imperial expansion of the western Sudanese kingdom of Songhai. His conquest of the leading Sudanese trading cities established the basis for Songhai’s future prosperity and expansion. When Sonni ʿAlī ascended the Songhai throne about 1464, the
- Sonni ʿAlī Ber (West African ruler)
Sonni ʿAlī was a West African monarch who initiated the imperial expansion of the western Sudanese kingdom of Songhai. His conquest of the leading Sudanese trading cities established the basis for Songhai’s future prosperity and expansion. When Sonni ʿAlī ascended the Songhai throne about 1464, the
- Sonnino, Sidney, Barone (Italian statesman)
Sidney, Baron Sonnino was an Italian statesman who as foreign minister promoted his country’s entrance into World War I. He was also prime minister in 1906 and 1909–10. Having joined the diplomatic service in the 1860s shortly after the formation of a united Italy, Sonnino left it to devote time to
- Sonnō jōi (political movement)
Yamagata Aritomo: Early career: …convinced the leaders of the Sonnō Jōi movement that their “antiforeign” policy was doomed to failure unless Japan acquired efficient modern armament equal to that of the Western powers.
- Sonntag, Gertrud Walpurgis (German singer)
Henriette Sontag was a German operatic and concert soprano who enjoyed great acclaim both before and after a 19-year hiatus in her career. The child of actor Franz Sonntag and singer Franziska Martloff Sonntag, she received early theatrical training and played juvenile roles in both stage plays and
- Sonny (film by Cage [2002])
Nicolas Cage: …made his directorial debut with Sonny, a film he also produced. After portraying a firefighter in World Trade Center (2006), Oliver Stone’s film about the September 11 attacks, Cage took on roles as an astrophysicist in the science-fiction thriller Knowing (2009) and a police detective struggling with drug and gambling…
- Sonny and Cher (American musical duo)
Sonny Bono: Sonny and Cher: In 1963 Bono met a 16-year-old girl named Cherilyn Sarkisian, who went by the name Cher. Bono was 27 at the time and separated from his first wife; the couple later divorced. Cher was smitten, telling Elle magazine in 2018, “He was…
- Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour, The (American television series)
Sonny Bono: Sonny and Cher: …to the TV variety show The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour, which debuted in 1971. The couple’s comedic exchanges proved popular with viewers—as did their colourful clothing. Cher often appeared in sequined outfits designed by Bob Mackie, and Sonny wore bell bottoms. The series was canceled in 1974, when Sonny…
- Sonny and Cher Show, The (American television series)
Sonny Bono: Sonny and Cher: …they reunited—on television at least—for The Sonny and Cher Show in 1976–77. Bono subsequently made a few sporadic TV and film appearances, but he was mostly done as an entertainer.
- Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge (refuge, California, United States)
El Centro: The Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge, adjacent to the Salton Sea, also is north of the city. Inc. 1908. Pop. (2000) 37,835; El Centro Metro Area, 142,361; (2010) 42,598; El Centro Metro Area, 174,528.
- Sono otoko, kyōbō ni tsuki (film by Kitano)
Kitano Takeshi: …otoko, kyōbō ni tsuki (Violent Cop), in which he also played the title role. The film, about a Tokyo detective trying to crack a yakuza (“gangster”)-run drug ring, drew comparisons to Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry (1971) and was the first in a series of crime epics that included 3–4x…
- sonobuoy (device)
sonar: …be deployed from an air-launched sonobuoy, hull-mounted on a vessel, or suspended in the sea from a helicopter. Usually the receiving and transmitting transducers are the same. Passive systems are usually hull-mounted, deployed from sonobuoys, or towed behind a ship. Some passive systems are placed on the seabed, often in…
- sonoluminescence (physics)
ultrasonics: Applications in research: This effect, called sonoluminescence, can create instantaneous temperatures hotter than the surface of the Sun.
- Sonoma (California, United States)
Sonoma, city, Sonoma county, western California, U.S. It lies about 50 miles (80 km) northeast of San Francisco and 20 miles (30 km) southeast of Santa Rosa, in the Sonoma Valley (made famous by Jack London as the “Valley of the Moon”). It was founded in 1835 by military officer Mariano Guadalupe
- Sonoma orogeny (geology)
Sonoma orogeny, an orogenic event that affected the eugeosynclinal (deepwater) portion of the Cordilleran Geosyncline in northwestern Nevada occurring between Middle Permian and Early Triassic times (270 million to 245 million years ago). Evidence for the orogeny consists of an angular unconformity
- Sonoma tree vole (rodent)
vole: Arboreal red and Sonoma tree voles (Arborimus longicaudus and A. pomo, respectively) are found only in humid coastal old-growth forests of northern California and Oregon, where they live and nest in the tops of Douglas fir, grand fir, and Sitka spruce trees and eat the outer parts of…
- Sonora (state, Mexico)
Sonora, estado (state), northwestern Mexico. It is bounded by the United States (Arizona and New Mexico) to the north, by the states of Chihuahua to the east and Sinaloa to the south, and by Baja California state and the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez) to the west. Hermosillo is the state
- Sonora Matancera, La (Cuban music group)
Celia Cruz: …Silva of the popular orchestra La Sonora Matancera. She was the ensemble’s first Black front person since its founding about 25 years earlier. Cruz sang regularly with the ensemble on radio and television, toured extensively, and appeared with it in five films produced in Mexico. She also recorded with La…
- Sonora River (river, Mexico)
Sonora River, river in Sonora state, northwestern Mexico. It rises south of Cananea, near the U.S. border, and flows southward and then southwestward through the western flanks of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Below Hermosillo, the state capital, the river crosses the coastal lowlands, but, because
- Sonora, Río (river, Mexico)
Sonora River, river in Sonora state, northwestern Mexico. It rises south of Cananea, near the U.S. border, and flows southward and then southwestward through the western flanks of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Below Hermosillo, the state capital, the river crosses the coastal lowlands, but, because
- Sonora, University of (university, Hermosillo, Mexico)
Hermosillo: …and the site of the University of Sonora (1938). It is also a market and service centre for nearby copper mines and farmlands where cattle are raised and irrigated crops of fruit, wheat, cotton, corn (maize), and beans are grown.
- Sonoran Desert (desert, North America)
Sonoran Desert, arid region covering 120,000 square miles (310,800 square km) in southwestern Arizona and southeastern California, U.S., and including much of the Mexican state of Baja California Sur, part of Baja California state, and the western half of the state of Sonora. Subdivisions of the
- Sonoran languages
Uto-Aztecan languages: The languages of the Southern Uto-Aztecan division are as follows:
- sonorant (phonetics)
sonorant, in phonetics, any of the nasal, liquid, and glide consonants that are marked by a continuing resonant sound. Sonorants have more acoustic energy than other consonants. In English the sonorants are y, w, l, r, m, n, and ng. See also nasal;
- Sonrhai (people)
Songhai, ethnolinguistic group having more than three million members who inhabit the area of the great bend in the Niger River in Mali, extending from Lake Debo through Niger to the mouth of the Sokoto River in Nigeria. Some nomadic Songhai groups live in Mali, Niger, and southeastern Algeria. The
- Sons and Lovers (film by Cardiff [1960])
Trevor Howard: …a British Academy Award, and Sons and Lovers (1960). In his later years he often portrayed a stiff-necked English military officer, notably in Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), and Gandhi (1982) and in a television adaptation of Paul Scott’s Staying On (1980).
- Sons and Lovers (novel by Lawrence)
Sons and Lovers, semiautobiographical novel by D.H. Lawrence, published in 1913. His first mature novel, it is a psychological study of the familial and love relationships of a working-class English family. The novel revolves around Paul Morel, a sensitive young artist whose love for his mother,
- Sons of Anarchy (American television series)
Henry Rollins: …roles in the television series Sons of Anarchy (2009), The Legend of Korra (2014), Con Man (2015–17), and Z Nation (2017). He also hosted (2013–14) the history series 10 Things You Don’t Know About.
- Sons of Daniel Boone (American youth organization)
Daniel Beard: …Daniel Boone later became the Boy Pioneers of America, and in 1910 it was incorporated, along with other similar scouting groups, into the Boy Scouts of America. Beard served as the organization’s first national commissioner and was active in youth scouting until his death. He was the author of more…
- Sons of Iraq (United States-backed Sunni militia in Iraq)
al-Qaeda in Iraq: …form militias known as “Awakening Councils” to expel the organization from their territories. Although those militias, coupled with an increasingly successful effort by U.S. and Iraqi forces to kill al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders, greatly diminished the organization’s power, the network continued for several years to operate on a reduced…
- Sons of Katie Elder, The (film by Hathaway [1965])
Henry Hathaway: Later work: …show, was less successful, but The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) put Wayne back where he belonged, in a saddle. The box-office hit was followed by Nevada Smith (1966), a sequel to The Carpetbaggers (1964). The western proved highly popular, thanks in large part to the performance of Steve McQueen.…
- Sons of Sam: A Descent into Darkness, The (American television documentary miniseries)
Paul Giamatti: …voice to the documentary miniseries The Sons of Sam: A Descent into Darkness, about a journalist who doggedly pursued various theories regarding serial killer David Berkowitz and his murders. Giamatti’s other credits that year include the action comedy Jungle Cruise, which was based on a theme park ride. In 2023…
- Sons of the Desert (film by Seiter [1933])
Sons of the Desert, American comedy film, released in 1933, that was widely considered to be one of the comedy duo Laurel and Hardy’s best movies. The film’s title inspired the long-standing international Laurel and Hardy fan society of the same name. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy play their typical
- Sons of the Pioneers (American music group)
Roy Rogers: …a radio announcer’s mistake, became Sons of the Pioneers. They recorded such hits as "Tumbling Tumbleweeds," their theme song, and "Cool Water,"and they were said to have put the "western" in country-and-western music. By 1935 the Sons of the Pioneers were appearing in motion pictures.
- Sons of the Steppe (work by Baumann)
children’s literature: War and beyond: , Sons of the Steppe, 1958), a tale about two grandsons of Genghis Khan. His narrative history of some exciting archaeological discoveries, Die Höhlen der grossen Jäger (1953; Eng. trans., The Caves of the Great Hunters, 1954; rev. ed., 1962), is a minor classic. Mention should…
- Sonsonate (department, El Salvador)
El Salvador: The colonial period: …(comprising the present-day regions of Sonsonate, Santa Ana, and Ahuachapán), which the Pipil called Izalcos, was organized in 1558 as the autonomous province of Sonsonate and would not be incorporated as a part of El Salvador until 1823.
- Sonsonate (El Salvador)
Sonsonate, city, western El Salvador, on the Río Grande de Sonsonate. Founded in 1524, it served as the provisional national capital in 1833–34. During the Spanish colonial period, it conducted a thriving cacao trade. Linked by road and rail with the Pacific port of Acajutla, 12 miles (19 km)
- Sontag, Henriette (German singer)
Henriette Sontag was a German operatic and concert soprano who enjoyed great acclaim both before and after a 19-year hiatus in her career. The child of actor Franz Sonntag and singer Franziska Martloff Sonntag, she received early theatrical training and played juvenile roles in both stage plays and
- Sontag, Susan (American writer)
Susan Sontag was an American intellectual and writer best known for her essays on modern culture. Sontag (who adopted her stepfather’s name) was reared in Tucson, Arizona, and in Los Angeles. She attended the University of California at Berkeley for one year and then transferred to the University
- Sontheimer, Carl (American engineer and inventor)
food processor: Carl Sontheimer, an American engineer and inventor, refined Verdon’s machines to produce the Cuisinart. The widespread success of the Cuisinart following its exhibition in Chicago in 1973 led a number of other manufacturers to design competing models, and hundreds of thousands of food processors were…
- Sonthonax, Léger-Félicité (French colonial official)
Toussaint Louverture: Elimination of rivals: Léger-Félicité Sonthonax, a terrorist French commissioner, allowed Louverture to rule and made him governor-general. But the ascetic Black general was repelled by the proposals of the European radical to exterminate the Europeans, and he was offended by Sonthonax’s atheism, coarseness, and immorality. After some devious…
- Sony (Japanese corporation)
Sony, major Japanese manufacturer of consumer electronics products whose diverse activities have included films, music, and financial services, among other ventures. It has been one of the most successful and multifaceted brands in marketing history. The company was incorporated by Ibuka Masaru and
- Sony Corporation (Japanese corporation)
Sony, major Japanese manufacturer of consumer electronics products whose diverse activities have included films, music, and financial services, among other ventures. It has been one of the most successful and multifaceted brands in marketing history. The company was incorporated by Ibuka Masaru and
- Sony Corporation of America (Japanese-United States corporation)
Sony: Electronics giant: …had prompted the creation of Sony Corporation of America, with headquarters in New York City. When the company opened its store on Fifth Avenue in 1962, it unfurled the first Japanese flag to be flown in the United States since the beginning of World War II.
- Sony KK (Japanese corporation)
Sony, major Japanese manufacturer of consumer electronics products whose diverse activities have included films, music, and financial services, among other ventures. It has been one of the most successful and multifaceted brands in marketing history. The company was incorporated by Ibuka Masaru and
- Sony Walkman (electronics)
Morita Akio: …at Morita’s urging that the Sony Walkman portable tape player was developed and marketed (company insiders doubted that there was enough consumer demand for the device). The Walkman was one of Sony’s most popular consumer products in the 1980s and ’90s.
- Sony’r Ra, Le (American musician and composer)
Sun Ra was an American jazz composer and keyboard player who led a free jazz big band known for its innovative instrumentation and the theatricality of its performances. Sun Ra, who claimed to have been born on the planet Saturn, grew up in Birmingham, studied piano under noted teacher Fess
- sōō (Japanese aesthetics)
aesthetics: Japan: …must follow the rule of sōō (“consonance”), according to which every object, gesture, and expression has to be appropriate to its context.
- Soo Canals (canals, North America)
Saint Marys River: Marie Canals (or Soo Canals), containing five locks, provide a bypass for the heavy shipping. Four of the five locks are on the U.S. side and are operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Large islands divide the river into a series of lakes (Nicolet, George, and…