- Soo Kyong Jo (South Korean opera singer)
Sumi Jo is a South Korean soprano known for her light, expressive voice and her virtuosic performance of major coloratura roles of the operatic repertoire. Jo began studying music at an early age. She entered the music school of Seoul National University but left in her second year to attend the
- Soo, The (Michigan, United States)
Sault Sainte Marie, city, seat (1826) of Chippewa county, at the northeastern end of the Upper Peninsula, northern Michigan, U.S. It is situated at the rapids of the St. Marys River. The rapids, harnessed for hydroelectric power generation, connect Lake Superior with Lake Huron, which lies 21 feet
- Soochow (China)
Suzhou, city, southern Jiangsu sheng (province), eastern China. It is situated on the southern section of the Grand Canal on a generally flat, low-lying plain between the renowned Lake Tai to the west and the vast Shanghai metropolis to the east. Surrounded by canals on all four sides and
- Sooglossidae (amphibian family)
frog and toad: Annotated classification: Family Sooglossidae No fossil record; 8 presacral vertebrae; vertebrae procoelous; sacral diapophyses dilated; intercalary cartilages absent; larvae lacking spiracle; Seychelles; 2 genera, 3 species; length about 4 cm (1.5 inches). Superfamily Ranoidea Pectoral girdle firmisternal; ribs absent; amplexus axillary; larvae with single sinistral
- Sooglossus (amphibian genus)
frog and toad: Egg laying on land: The ranid genus Sooglossus of the Seychelles islands and all members of the family Dendrobatidae in the American tropics have terrestrial eggs. Upon hatching, the tadpoles adhere to the backs of adults, usually males. The exact means of attachment is not known. The frogs carry the tadpoles to…
- Soomaaliya
Somalia, easternmost country of Africa, on the Horn of Africa. It extends from just south of the Equator northward to the Gulf of Aden and occupies an important geopolitical position between sub-Saharan Africa and the countries of Arabia and southwestern Asia. The capital, Mogadishu, is located
- Soon to Be a Major Motion Picture (autobiography by Hoffman)
Abbie Hoffman: …Book (1971), and an autobiography, Soon to Be a Major Motion Picture (1980). His life—in particular, his underground period and his efforts to draw attention to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Cointelpro operations—was dramatized in the film Steal This Movie (2000).
- Soon-Shiong, Patrick (South African-born entrepreneur)
Los Angeles Times: …the Los Angeles Times to Patrick Soon-Shiong, a local biotech billionaire, for $500 million. As part of the deal, he also agreed to purchase the San Diego Union-Tribune. The deal was finalized in June 2018, and shortly thereafter Soon-Shiong moved the headquarters of the Times to El Segundo.
- Sooner State (state, United States)
Oklahoma, constituent state of the United States of America. It borders Colorado and Kansas to the north, Missouri and Arkansas to the east, Texas to the south and west, and New Mexico to the west of its Panhandle region. In its land and its people, Oklahoma is a state of contrast and of the
- Soong Ch’ing-ling (Chinese political leader)
Song Qingling was the second wife of the Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen (Sun Zhongshan). She became an influential political figure in China after her husband’s death. A member of the prominent Soong family, Song Qingling was educated in the United States. She married Sun Yat-sen, who was
- Soong family (Chinese family)
Soong family, influential Chinese family that was heavily involved in the political fortunes of China during the 20th century. Among its best-known members were Charlie, the founder of the family, and his children T.V. Soong, financier and politician; Soong Mei-ling, who became Madame Chiang
- Soong Mayling (Chinese political figure)
Soong Mei-ling was a notable Chinese political figure and second wife of the Nationalist Chinese president Chiang Kai-shek. Her family was successful, prosperous, and well-connected: her sister Soong Ch’ing-ling (Song Qingling) was the wife of Sun Yat-sen, and her brother T.V. Soong was a prominent
- Soong Mei-ling (Chinese political figure)
Soong Mei-ling was a notable Chinese political figure and second wife of the Nationalist Chinese president Chiang Kai-shek. Her family was successful, prosperous, and well-connected: her sister Soong Ch’ing-ling (Song Qingling) was the wife of Sun Yat-sen, and her brother T.V. Soong was a prominent
- Soong Tzu-wen (Chinese financier and official)
T.V. Soong was a financier and official of the Chinese Nationalist government between 1927 and 1949, once reputed to have been the richest man in the world. The son of a prominent industrialist, Soong was educated in the United States at Harvard University. He returned to China in 1917 and soon
- Soong, Charles Jones (Chinese businessman)
Soong family: Charlie Soong (1863–1918), also called Charles Jones Soong, was born Han Jiaozhun and was reared until he was nine in Wenchang, a port on the eastern coast of the island of Hainan, China. After a three-year apprenticeship in the East Indies (Indonesia), he spent eight…
- Soong, Charlie (Chinese businessman)
Soong family: Charlie Soong (1863–1918), also called Charles Jones Soong, was born Han Jiaozhun and was reared until he was nine in Wenchang, a port on the eastern coast of the island of Hainan, China. After a three-year apprenticeship in the East Indies (Indonesia), he spent eight…
- Soong, James (Taiwanese politician)
Tsai Ing-wen: …more than 4 percent to James Soong, the standard-bearer for the People First Party.
- Soong, T.V. (Chinese financier and official)
T.V. Soong was a financier and official of the Chinese Nationalist government between 1927 and 1949, once reputed to have been the richest man in the world. The son of a prominent industrialist, Soong was educated in the United States at Harvard University. He returned to China in 1917 and soon
- soot (atmospheric pollutant)
combustion: Special aspects: Formation of soot is a feature of all hydrocarbon flames. It makes the flame luminous and nontransparent. The mechanism of soot formation is accounted for by simultaneous polymerization, a process whereby molecules or molecular fragments are combined into extremely large groupings, and dehydrogenation, a process that eliminates…
- Soothsayer’s Recompense, The (painting by De Chirico)
Giorgio de Chirico: In these works, such as The Soothsayer’s Recompense (1913) and The Mystery and Melancholy of a Street (1914), classical statues, dark arcades, and small, isolated figures are overpowered by their own shadows and by severe, oppressive architecture.
- soothsaying (religion)
divination, the practice of determining the hidden significance or cause of events, sometimes foretelling the future, by various natural, psychological, and other techniques. Found in all civilizations, both ancient and modern, it is encountered most frequently in contemporary mass society in the
- sooty albatross (bird)
albatross: The sooty albatrosses (Phoebetria, 2 species) have a wingspread to about 215 cm (7 feet). They nest on islands in the southern oceans.
- sooty boubou (bird)
shrike: All black forms include the sooty boubou (L. leucorhynchus). Black and white, with red-tinged underparts, is the tropical boubou (L. aethiopicus). Black above and bright red below are the black-headed, or Abyssinian, gonolek (L. erythrogaster) and the Barbary shrike (L. barbarus).
- sooty gull (bird)
gull: The sooty gull (L. hemprichi) of the western Indian Ocean has a dark brown hood and a grayish brown mantle. Ross’s gull (Rhodostethia rosea) is an attractive pinkish white bird that breeds in northern Siberia and wanders widely over the Arctic Ocean. Abounding in the Arctic,…
- sooty mangabey (primate)
mangabey: The sooty mangabey (C. atys), a dark, uniformly gray species with a pale face, is found from the Nzo-Sassandra river system westward to Senegal. Four paler, browner species live in Central and East Africa: the agile mangabey (C. agilis), a slender monkey that has a small…
- sooty mold (plant disease)
sooty mold, plant disease characterized by splotchy black stains or coatings on leaves, stems, and fruit. The black residue of sooty mold is composed of dark fungal threads of a number of ascomycetes, including species of Alternaria, Capnodium, Cladosporium, Fumago, and Scorias. These fungi grow in
- sooty mould (plant disease)
sooty mold, plant disease characterized by splotchy black stains or coatings on leaves, stems, and fruit. The black residue of sooty mold is composed of dark fungal threads of a number of ascomycetes, including species of Alternaria, Capnodium, Cladosporium, Fumago, and Scorias. These fungi grow in
- sooty oystercatcher (bird)
oystercatcher: …western North America, and the sooty oystercatcher (H. fuliginosus), of Australia, are dark except for the pinkish legs.
- sooty shearwater (bird)
shearwater: The sooty shearwater (P. griseus) is about 50 cm (19.5 inches) long with a wingspread of approximately 85 cm (33 inches). It breeds near Australia, New Zealand, and southern South America and winters in the offshore waters of the Atlantic and Pacific. The common, or Manx,…
- sooty tern (bird)
charadriiform: Gulls (suborder Lari): Sooty terns (Sterna fuscata) have attracted considerable attention from biologists because on Ascension Island, in the South Atlantic, they breed every 9.6 months and on Christmas Island, in the Pacific Ocean, every six months. Elsewhere they have an annual cycle.
- SOP
standard operating procedure (SOP), set of written guidelines or instructions for the completion of a routine task, designed to increase performance, improve efficiency, and ensure quality through systemic homogenization. The term was first recorded in the mid-20th century. SOPs are utilized in
- sŏp’yŏnje (Korean music)
p’ansori: Styles and schools of performance: categories: tongp’yŏnje (“east-side singing school”), sŏp’yŏnje (“west-side singing school”), and chunggoje (“middle-high singing school”). Tongp’yŏnje is associated with the eastern Chŏlla region (in southwestern South Korea) and particularly with the singers Song Hŭngnok, Chong Ch’unp’ung, and Kim Sejong. Hallmarks of the style include a deep controlled voice that is projected…
- sopa de albóndiga (food)
Nicaragua: Daily life and social customs: …orange juice and broth), and sopa de albóndiga (meatball soup). The traditional drink known as chicha is made with corn, water, and sugar. Appetizers called rosquillas are made with baked corn dough, cheese, and butter. The Caribbean region has its own traditional dishes, such as rondón (turtle meat, fish, or…
- Sopāra (India)
India: Contacts with the West: …of Ophir, sometimes identified with Sopara, on the west coast. Babylonian builders used Indian teak and cedar in the 7th and 6th centuries bce. The Buddhist jataka literature mentions trade with Baveru (Babylon). After the decline of Babylon, Arab merchants from southern Arabia apparently continued the trade, probably supplying goods…
- Soper, Fred (American physicist)
malaria: Malaria through history: In 1939–40 Fred Soper of the Rockefeller Foundation led a vigorous effort in Brazil that eradicated the Anopheles gambiae mosquito, using a dust larvicide (Paris green) against the larvae and a newly discovered insecticide (pyrethrum) against the adult insects. The entire antimalarial effort was given an enormous…
- Soper, George (American sanitary engineer)
Typhoid Mary: …Department of Health sanitary engineer George Soper, whose specialty was studying typhoid fever epidemics, to investigate the outbreak. Other investigators were brought in as well and concluded that the outbreak likely had been caused by contaminated water. Mallon continued to work as a cook, moving from household to household until…
- Sophar (biblical figure)
Zophar, in the Book of Job (2:11, 11:1, 20:1, 42:9), one of the three comforters of Job, a biblical archetype of the good man whose misfortunes are undeserved. Like the other two comforters, Bildad and Eliphaz, Zophar emphasizes an old Hebrew concept—suffering is the inevitable lot of the evil man;
- Sophat (novel by Rim Kin)
Khmer literature: French influence: Rim Kin’s Sophat, written in 1938 and published in Vietnam in 1941 but not available in Cambodia until January 1942, is widely regarded as the “first” Cambodian novel. It is essentially a poor boy–rich girl romance, in which the hero, Sophat, faces a series of obstacles, misunderstandings,…
- Sophene (ancient kingdom, Middle East)
Tigranes II The Great: …first annexing the kingdom of Sophene (east of the upper Euphrates River). He also entered into alliance with Mithradates VI Eupator of Pontus, whose daughter Cleopatra he married. The interference of the two kings in Cappadocia (in eastern Asia Minor) was successfully countered by Roman intervention in 92 bc.
- sopher (Judaism)
sofer, any of a group of Jewish scholars who interpreted and taught biblical law and ethics from about the 5th century bc to about 200 bc. Understood in this sense, the first of the soferim was the biblical prophet Ezra, even though the word previously designated an important administrator
- sopherim (Judaism)
sofer, any of a group of Jewish scholars who interpreted and taught biblical law and ethics from about the 5th century bc to about 200 bc. Understood in this sense, the first of the soferim was the biblical prophet Ezra, even though the word previously designated an important administrator
- Sophia (religion)
Christianity: The doctrine of the Virgin Mary and holy Wisdom: The doctrine of the heavenly Wisdom (Sophia) represents an Eastern church particularity. In late Judaism, speculations about the heavenly Wisdom—a figure beside God that presents itself to humanity as mediator in the work of creation as well as mediator of the knowledge of God—abounded. In Roman Catholic doctrine, Mary, the…
- Sophia (electress of Hanover)
Sophia was the electress of Hanover and heir to the British throne, whose son became George I of Great Britain. Sophia was the 12th child of Frederick V, elector Palatine of the Rhine, by his wife Elizabeth, a daughter of the English king James I. Residing after 1649 at Heidelberg with her brother,
- Sophia (regent of Russia)
Sophia was the regent of Russia from 1682 to 1689. The eldest daughter of Tsar Alexis (ruled 1645–76) and his first wife, Mariya Miloslavskaya, Sophia was tutored by the Belorussian monk Simeon Polotsky, from whom she received an exceptionally good education. When her brother Fyodor III died (April
- Sophia Dorothea (German princess)
Sophia Dorothea was the wife of George Louis, elector of Hanover (George I of Great Britain), who accused her of infidelity and imprisoned her for 32 years. The only child of George William, duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle, by a Huguenot lady named Eleanore d’Olbreuze, she was married, for
- Sophia Iēsou huiou Sirach (biblical literature)
Ecclesiasticus, deuterocanonical biblical work (accepted in the Roman Catholic canon but noncanonical for Jews and Protestants), an outstanding example of the wisdom genre of religious literature that was popular in the early Hellenistic period of Judaism (3rd century bce to 3rd century ce). This
- Sophia of the Palatinate (electress of Hanover)
Sophia was the electress of Hanover and heir to the British throne, whose son became George I of Great Britain. Sophia was the 12th child of Frederick V, elector Palatine of the Rhine, by his wife Elizabeth, a daughter of the English king James I. Residing after 1649 at Heidelberg with her brother,
- Sophianism (religion)
Christianity: The doctrine of the Virgin Mary and holy Wisdom: …doctrine of the heavenly Wisdom, Sophianism, may be found alongside the doctrine of the mother of God. The numerous great churches of Hagia Sophia, foremost among them the cathedral by that name in Constantinople (Istanbul), are consecrated to that figure of the heavenly Wisdom.
- Sophie Dorothea (German princess)
Sophia Dorothea was the wife of George Louis, elector of Hanover (George I of Great Britain), who accused her of infidelity and imprisoned her for 32 years. The only child of George William, duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle, by a Huguenot lady named Eleanore d’Olbreuze, she was married, for
- Sophie Friederike Auguste, Prinzessin von Anhalt-Zerbst (empress of Russia)
Catherine the Great was a German-born empress of Russia (1762–96) who led her country into full participation in the political and cultural life of Europe, carrying on the work begun by Peter the Great. With her ministers she reorganized the administration and law of the Russian Empire and extended
- Sophie von der Pfalz (electress of Hanover)
Sophia was the electress of Hanover and heir to the British throne, whose son became George I of Great Britain. Sophia was the 12th child of Frederick V, elector Palatine of the Rhine, by his wife Elizabeth, a daughter of the English king James I. Residing after 1649 at Heidelberg with her brother,
- Sophie’s Choice (film by Pakula [1982])
Alan J. Pakula: Films of the 1980s: However, his next film, Sophie’s Choice (1982), was one of his best as a director. Adapted from William Styron’s award-winning novel, it featured Meryl Streep’s Oscar-winning performance as a Holocaust survivor whose postwar life in Brooklyn has been irrevocably damaged by her concentration-camp
- Sophie’s Choice (novel by Styron)
Sophie’s Choice, novel by William Styron, published in 1979, that examines the historical, moral, and psychological ramifications of the Holocaust through the tragic life of a Roman Catholic survivor of Auschwitz. An award-winning film adaptation starring Meryl Streep was released in 1982. Set in
- Sophie’s World (novel by Gaarder)
Jostein Gaarder: His novel Sofies verden (1991; Sophie’s World) was an international best seller.
- Sophie, countess von Chotek (wife of Archduke Francis Ferdinand)
Franz Ferdinand, archduke of Austria-Este: Life until 1914: His desire to marry Sophie, countess of Chotek, a lady-in-waiting, brought him into sharp conflict with the emperor and the court. Only after renouncing his future children’s rights to the throne was the morganatic marriage allowed in 1900.
- Sophilos (Alexandrian artist)
mosaic: Ancient Greek and Hellenistic mosaics: …panel, signed by the artist Sophilos and depicting a personification of Alexandria, that is the earliest known example of miniature mosaic work (called opus vermiculatum, meaning “wormlike work” because of the close-set, undulating rows of small tesserae).
- sophiology (theology)
Sergey Nikolayevich Bulgakov: …development the philosophical system called sophiology, which centred on problems of the creation of the world and stressed the unity of all things.
- sophism (argument)
number game: Paradoxes and fallacies: A sophism is a fallacy in which the error has been knowingly committed, for whatever purpose. If the error introduced into a calculation or a proof leads innocently to a correct result, the result is a “howler,” often said to depend on “making the right mistake.”
- sophismata (logical treatises)
history of logic: The properties of terms and discussions of fallacies: A genre of sophismata (“sophistical”) treatises developed that investigated fallacies in theology, physics, and logic. The theory of “supposition” (see below The theory of supposition) also developed out of the study of fallacies. Whole new kinds of treatises were written on what were called “the properties of terms,”…
- Sophismata (work by Buridan)
history of logic: Developments in the 13th and early 14th centuries: …de dialectica, Buridan’s extremely interesting Sophismata (published separately in early editions) discusses many issues in semantics and philosophy of logic. Among Buridan’s pupils was Albert of Saxony (died 1390), the author of a Perutilis logica (“A Very Useful Logic”) and later first rector of the University of Vienna. Albert was…
- Sophismes économiques (work by Bastiat)
Frédéric Bastiat: …in his Sophismes économiques (1845; Sophisms of Protection), Bastiat concocted a petition brought by candlemakers who asked for protection against the Sun, suggesting that candlemaking and related industries would greatly profit if the Sun were eliminated as a competitor in furnishing light. Bastiat’s petition became so well known that modern…
- Sophisms of Protection (work by Bastiat)
Frédéric Bastiat: …in his Sophismes économiques (1845; Sophisms of Protection), Bastiat concocted a petition brought by candlemakers who asked for protection against the Sun, suggesting that candlemaking and related industries would greatly profit if the Sun were eliminated as a competitor in furnishing light. Bastiat’s petition became so well known that modern…
- Sophist (work by Plato)
Plato: Forms as perfect exemplars: …in the Parmenides and the Sophist he became the first philosopher to demonstrate these problems.
- Sophist (philosophy)
Sophist, any of certain Greek lecturers, writers, and teachers in the 5th and 4th centuries bce, most of whom traveled about the Greek-speaking world giving instruction in a wide range of subjects in return for fees. The term sophist (Greek sophistes) had earlier applications. It is sometimes said
- Sophistic Refutations (work by Aristotle)
Aristotle: The Academy: …disputation, the Topics and the Sophistical Refutations, belong to this early period. The former demonstrates how to construct arguments for a position one has already decided to adopt; the latter shows how to detect weaknesses in the arguments of others. Although neither work amounts to a systematic treatise on formal…
- Sophistical Refutations (work by Aristotle)
Aristotle: The Academy: …disputation, the Topics and the Sophistical Refutations, belong to this early period. The former demonstrates how to construct arguments for a position one has already decided to adopt; the latter shows how to detect weaknesses in the arguments of others. Although neither work amounts to a systematic treatise on formal…
- Sophisticated Lady (song by Ellington)
Duke Ellington: Masterworks and popular songs of the 1930s and ’40s: …great popular songs as “Sophisticated Lady,” “Rocks in My Bed,” and “Satin Doll;” in other songs, such as “Don’t Get Around Much Any More,” “Prelude to a Kiss,” “Solitude,” and “I Let a Song Go out of My Heart,” he made wide interval leaps an Ellington trademark. A number…
- Sophocles (Greek dramatist)
Sophocles was, along with Aeschylus and Euripides, one of classical Athens’s three great tragic playwrights. The best known of his 123 dramas is Oedipus the King. Sophocles was the younger contemporary of Aeschylus and the older contemporary of Euripides. He was born at Colonus, a village outside
- Sophoi (Greek sages)
ethics: Ancient Greece: …and early philosophers as the seven sages, and they are frequently quoted with respect by Plato and Aristotle. Knowledge of the thought of this period is limited, for often only fragments of original writings, along with later accounts of dubious accuracy, remain.
- Sophonias (Hebrew prophet)
Zephaniah was an Israelite prophet, said to be the author of one of the shorter Old Testament prophetical books, who proclaimed the approaching divine judgment. The first verse of the Book of Zephaniah makes him a contemporary of Josiah, king of Judah (reigned c. 640–609 bc). The prophet’s
- Sophonias, Book of (Old Testament)
Book of Zephaniah, the ninth of 12 Old Testament books that bear the names of the Minor Prophets, collected in one book, The Twelve, in the Jewish canon. The book consists of a series of independent sayings, many of which are rightly attributed to Zephaniah, written probably about 640–630 bc. The
- Sophonisbe (play by Mairet)
Pierre Corneille: Early life and career.: …dramatic practice in Jean Mairet’s Sophonisbe (1634), a tragedy that enjoyed considerable success. Corneille, not directly involved in the call for regular tragedy of this kind, nevertheless responded to Sophonisbe by experimenting in the tragic form with Médée (1635). He then wrote Le Cid (performed early 1637), first issued as…
- Sophora japonica (plant)
Japanese pagoda tree, (Styphnolobium japonicum), tree of the pea family (Fabaceae). Despite its name, the Japanese pagoda tree is native to China and was introduced to Japan, where it is commonly found on the grounds of Buddhist temples. The plant is important in traditional medicine, and its
- Sophron Of Syracuse (Greek author)
Sophron Of Syracuse was an author of rhythmical prose mimes in the Doric dialect. Although the mimes survive mostly in fragments of only a few words, it can be seen from their titles—e.g., The Tunny-fisher, The Sempstress, etc.—that they depicted scenes from daily life. One longer fragment deals
- Sophronius (patriarch of Jerusalem)
Sophronius was the patriarch of Jerusalem, monk, and theologian who was the chief protagonist for orthodox teaching in the doctrinal controversy on the essential nature of Christ and his volitional acts. A teacher of rhetoric, Sophronius became an ascetic in Egypt about 580 and then entered the
- Sophronius (Christian scholar)
St. Jerome ; feast day September 30) was a biblical translator and monastic leader, traditionally regarded as the most learned of the Latin Fathers. He lived for a time as a hermit, became a priest, served as secretary to Pope Damasus I, and about 389 established a monastery at Bethlehem. His
- sōphrosynē (philosophy)
Western philosophy: Stoicism: …on right knowledge, self-control (sōphrosynē) being the knowledge of the right choice, fortitude the knowledge of what must be endured and what must not, and justice the right knowledge “in distribution.” The passions, which are the cause of all evil, are the result of error in judging what is…
- Sophy, The (work by Denham)
Sir John Denham: …he made his reputation with The Sophy, a blank-verse historical tragedy acted in 1641, and with Cooper’s Hill, a poem published in 1642. During the English Civil Wars, he was engaged at home and abroad in the cause of Charles I. Made a knight of the Bath and elected to…
- Sopiha family (Polish family)
Sapieha Family, princely family, important in Polish history, that was descended from Ukrainian boyars subject to Lithuania. Lew (1557–1633), a Calvinist in his youth, returned to Roman Catholicism and supported the king of Poland. He served as chancellor of Lithuania in 1589–1623 and encouraged
- Sopoćani, Monastery of (monastery, Novi Pazar, Serbia)
Novi Pazar: …few miles west is the monastery of Sopoćani, built in 1260. Its vast frescoes, done before 1264–65 and painted in the Byzantine manner, portraying the Gospels, are considered by many to be the finest in Europe from this period. The monastery—along with a number of sites on the outskirts of…
- Sopot (Poland)
Sopot, city and port, Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland. It lies on the Gulf of Gdańsk between Gdańsk (Danzig) and Gdynia. One of Poland’s largest and most popular seaside and health resorts, a role it has filled since the 16th century, Sopot is situated in an area of wooded hills.
- Sopplimenti musicali (work by Zarlino)
Gioseffo Zarlino: Zarlino replied with Sopplimenti musicali (1588) and collected his works into a complete edition in 1589. The Sopplimenti reinforces and develops his previous theories. One passage suggests equally tempered tuning for the lute (in advance of 18th-century experiments with equal temperament on keyboard instruments); another gives valuable descriptions…
- Sopra lo stato presente della lingua italiana (work by Cesari)
Italian literature: Opposing movements: He wrote Sopra lo stato presente della lingua italiana (1810; “On the Present State of the Italian Language”) and endeavoured to establish the supremacy of Tuscan and of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio as models. But a Lombard school opposed this Tuscan supremacy. Monti, its leader, issued Proposta…
- soprano (vocal range)
soprano, the highest human vocal register, extending approximately from middle C to the second A above. A voice with a range approximately from the A below middle C to the second F or G above is termed a mezzo-soprano. Soprano generally refers to female voices, although it is also applied to boy
- soprano clef (music)
clef: …the C clef are the soprano clef, with middle C as the bottom line, and the mezzo-soprano clef, with middle C as the second line from the bottom of the staff.
- soprano, alto, tenor, and bass (music)
score: …resulting in the often-used acronym SATB on the title page of scores for four-part vocal works.
- Sopranos, The (American television program)
The Sopranos, American television drama considered a masterpiece by critics and audiences alike. Created and written by David Chase, The Sopranos aired for six seasons (1999–2007) on HBO and earned an international following as a result of its broadcasts abroad. Set in New Jersey, The Sopranos
- Sopron (Hungary)
Burgenland: …(Bratislava), Wieselburg (Moson), Ödenburg (Sopron), and Eisenburg (Vasvár), it became an Austrian Bundesland in 1921. The low-lying parts of northern Burgenland belong to the Pannonian Basin, which is linked with the southern Vienna basin by two gateways situated north and south of the Leitha Mountains; the area is characterized…
- Soputan, Mount (volcano, Indonesia)
North Sulawesi: Geography: …has many active volcanoes, notably Mount Soputan. Mount Klabat on the Minahasa Peninsula rises to an elevation of 6,634 feet (2,022 metres). The coastal lowlands are narrow, the soils are fertile, and there are coral reefs offshore. The uplands are drained by many fast-flowing streams, including the Milango and the…
- Sopwith Camel (British aircraft)
military aircraft: Fighters: …as well as the British Sopwith Camel and new versions of the French Nieuport, powered by improved rotary radial engines.
- Sopwith Camel, No. B6313 (British aircraft)
William Barker: Barker’s Sopwith Camel, No. B6313, was flown almost exclusively by him. With an unprecedented 46 enemy downings in one plane flown by the same pilot, B6313 has been called the single most-successful fighter aircraft in the history of the RAF. Remarkably, Barker never had a wingman…
- Sopwith Cuckoo (British aircraft)
military aircraft: Naval aviation: …October 1918 a squadron of Sopwith Cuckoos, each able to carry an 18-inch (46-cm) torpedo, was embarked on HMS Argus. The war ended before the squadron could go into action, but the RNAS had already used torpedoes dropped from Short seaplanes to sink enemy ships in the Mediterranean, and the…
- Sopwith Pup (British aircraft)
military aircraft: Naval aviation: …1916 the first landplanes (British Sopwith Pups) were flown off the 200-foot (60-metre) decks of primitive carriers that had been converted from merchant ships, and on August 2, 1917, a pilot landed a Pup on the takeoff deck of HMS Furious while the ship was under way. The concept of…
- Sopwith, Sir Thomas Octave Murdoch (British aircraft designer)
Sir Thomas Octave Murdoch Sopwith was a British aircraft designer whose firm was famous for such World War I British military aircraft as the Sopwith Camel and Triplane. Sopwith taught himself to fly in 1910 and in that year won the de Forest prize for the longest flight to the European continent.
- Soqurloq (ancient city, Iran)
Takht-e Soleymān, ancient city and Zoroastrian temple complex of Iran’s Sāsānian dynasty, subsequently occupied by other groups, including the Mongol Il-Khanid dynasty. It is located in northwestern Iran in the southeastern highlands of Western Āz̄arbāyjān province, about 25 miles (40 km) northeast
- Sor, Fernando (Spanish Romantic performer, composer, and teacher of guitar)
Fernando Sor was a Catalan Romantic performer, composer, and teacher of guitar known for being among the first to play the guitar as a classical concert instrument and for writing one of the earliest books of guitar-playing methodology. He was a noted guitar virtuoso. When he was a young boy, Sor
- Sor-Spitsbergen Nasjonalpark (national park, Norway)
South Spitsbergen National Park, national park and bird sanctuary established by Norway in 1973 in the southern corner of the island of Spitsbergen, in the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Ocean. With an area of 2,046 square miles (5,300 square km), the park has four separate bird sanctuaries
- Sora (Italy)
Sora, town, Lazio (Latium) regione, south-central Italy. In ancient times the town was the scene of fighting between the Romans and the Samnites (a warlike Italic tribe) and experienced a turbulent history during the numerous wars that ravaged the Italian peninsula before Rome’s rise to dominance.
- Sora (people)
Savara, tribe of eastern India. They are distributed mainly in the states of Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, and Bihār, with total numbers of about 310,000, most of whom are in Orissa. Most Savara have become Hinduized and generally speak the Oriya language. Their traditional form of Munda
- sora (bird)
crake: …New World counterpart is the sora, or Carolina rail (P. carolina). The sora is about 23 cm (9 inches) long and grayish brown with black on the face and throat, with a short yellow bill. Other Porzana species are Baillon’s crake (P. pusilla), occurring in parts of Europe, Asia, Africa,…