- speed skating (sport)
speed skating, the sport of racing on ice skates that originated in the Netherlands, possibly as early as the 13th century. Organized international competition developed in the late 19th century, and the sport was included as a men’s event in the first Winter Olympics in 1924. At the 1960 Games in
- speed skiing (sport)
speed skiing, competitive skiing event in which racers equipped with special short skis, skintight suits, and aerodynamic helmets compete to achieve the fastest speed on a steep, straight, and meticulously prepared track. A dangerous pastime, it is frequently billed as “the fastest nonmotorized
- Speed the Plough (play by Morton)
Mrs. Grundy: …onstage) in Thomas Morton’s play Speed the Plough (produced 1798), in which one character, Dame Ashfield, continually worries about what her neighbour Mrs. Grundy will say of each development. Since then the term Mrs. Grundy has passed into everyday speech as a criterion of rigid respectability, especially in contexts in…
- speed trial (industry)
ship construction: Trials: Formal speed trials, necessary to fulfill contract terms, are often preceded by a builder’s trial. Contract terms usually require the speed to be achieved under specified conditions of draft and deadweight, a requirement met by runs made over a measured course.
- speed, film (photography)
speed: …(3) the sensitivity of the film to light.
- speed, shutter (photography)
speed: The shutter speed regulates the length of time that the shutter is open during an exposure. Varying the shutter speed controls the film’s exposure to light and determines the speed of action that the photograph can “freeze,” or reproduce without blurring the image. Shutter speeds generally…
- Speed-the-Plow (play by Mamet)
David Mamet: …explores the teacher-student relationship; and Speed-the-Plow (produced 1988) is a black comedy about avaricious Hollywood scriptwriters.
- speed-to-length ratio (ship design)
ship: Design of the hull: …impossible to operate at a speed-to-length ratio (speed in nautical miles per hour, divided by the square root of the waterline length in feet) higher than approximately 1.3. Beyond that realm even a trivial increase in speed requires a virtually infinite increase in power in order to fulfill the energy…
- Speedboat (novel by Adler)
Renata Adler: …previously published short fiction into Speedboat (1976), her first novel, for which she won the Ernest Hemingway Prize (1976) for best first novel. Set primarily in New York City, Speedboat consists mainly of a series of disparate sketches and vignettes of impressions, musings, and slices of life, all distilled through…
- speedboating (sport)
motorboat: History.: In 1903 Alfred Harmsworth (later Lord Northcliffe) donated to the Royal Motor Yacht Club the British International Trophy for Motor Boats, popularly called the Harmsworth Cup (q.v.), which has been intermittently contested for by international teams since that year. In 1904 the American Power Boat…
- speedlight (photography)
flashtube, electric discharge lamp giving a very bright, very brief burst of light, useful in photography and engineering. See flash
- speedometer (vehicle instrument)
speedometer, instrument that indicates the speed of a vehicle, usually combined with a device known as an odometer that records the distance traveled. British inventor Charles Babbage invented an early type of speedometer made for locomotives, though Croation inventor Josip Belušić is credited with
- speedup (industry)
history of the organization of work: The assembly line: Such speedups became a serious point of contention between labour and management. Furthermore, the dull, repetitive nature of many assembly-line jobs bored employees, reducing their output.
- Speedway (film by Taurog [1968])
Norman Taurog: Elvis movies: (1966), Double Trouble (1967), Speedway (1968), and Live a Little, Love a Little (1968).
- speedway racing (sports)
speedway racing, automobile or motorcycle racing on a racecourse or track, usually oval and flat. Both speedway racing and Grand Prix racing, which is done on closed highways or other courses partly simulating road conditions, began in 1906. Speedway racing became the dominant kind of automobile
- Speedwell (ship)
Mayflower: …brought from Holland on the Speedwell, a smaller vessel that accompanied the Mayflower on its initial departure from Southampton, England, on August 15, 1620. When the Speedwell proved unseaworthy and was twice forced to return to port, the Mayflower set out alone from Plymouth, England, on September 16, after taking…
- speedwell (plant)
speedwell, any plant of the genus Veronica (order Lamiales), especially the small, sometimes weedy, herbaceous types. There are about 450 species, which are found mostly in the Northern Hemisphere. Speedwells are grown as ornamentals. Their small blossoms are usually white, blue, purple, or
- Speedwriting (writing system)
Speedwriting, shorthand system using the letters of the alphabet and punctuation marks. The name is a registered trademark for the system devised in the United States by Emma Dearborn about 1924. In Speedwriting, words are written as they sound, and only long vowels are expressed. Thus, “you” is
- Speedy (comic book character)
Green Arrow: …with a Robin-like sidekick named Speedy, Green Arrow became a regular feature in titles such as Adventure Comics and World’s Finest Comics. Throughout World War II, Green Arrow and Speedy also served as members of the Seven Soldiers of Victory in Leading Comics. The duo fought minor villains like the…
- speedy à la mode (calligraphy)
calligraphy: Writing manuals and copybooks (16th to 18th century): …documents: the financière and the italienne bastarde. (Barbedor had been given the task of revising the official government scripts by the king’s minister of finance, Jean-Baptiste Colbert.) Barbedor’s instructions for writing the italienne bastarde (which he saw as a near-universal hand for all sorts of nonfinancial documents) are precise: small…
- Speelman, Cornelis Janszoon (governor general of Dutch East Indies)
Cornelis Janszoon Speelman was a Dutch military leader and governor-general of the Dutch East Indies (1681–84) who spurred the transformation of the Dutch commercial empire in the Indies into an expanding territorial one. Speelman went to the Indies in 1645 as a clerk for the Dutch East Indies
- Speenhamland system (British relief system)
Speenhamland system, practice of economic relief for the poor that was adopted over much of England following a decision by local magistrates at the Pelican Inn, Speenhamland, near Newbury, Berkshire, on May 6, 1795. Instead of fixing minimum wages for poor labourers, the practice was to raise
- Speer, Albert (German architect and Nazi official)
Albert Speer was a German architect who was Adolf Hitler’s chief architect (1933–45) and minister for armaments and war production (1942–45). Speer studied at the technical schools in Karlsruhe, Munich, and Berlin, and acquired an architectural license in 1927. After hearing Hitler speak at a
- Speer, Albert, Jr. (German architect)
Chinese architecture: Into the 21st century: …firms such as that of Albert Speer, Jr., and providing city dwellers with free-standing single-family homes that feature all the amenities of the suburban European or American lifestyle.
- Spegel, Haquin (Swedish author)
Swedish literature: The 17th century: …the works of the bishops Haquin Spegel and Jesper Swedberg, the latter the father of the Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg. Spegel contributed to Swedberg’s new hymnbook of 1695, which became the poetry book of the Swedish people and was of lasting influence. Even the lyric poet Lucidor (pseudonym of Lars…
- Speier (Germany)
Speyer, city, Rhineland-Palatinate Land (state), southwestern Germany. Speyer is a port on the left bank of the Rhine River at the mouth of the Speyer River, south of Ludwigshafen. An ancient Celtic settlement, about 100 bce it became a Roman military and trading town, Noviomagus, and later became
- Speight, George (Fijian businessman)
George Speight is a Fijian businessman who was convicted of treason and sentenced to life in prison for leading a coup against the government in 2000. Speight’s mother was an ethnic Fijian, and his father was a well-to-do farmer of Fijian-European descent who later became a member of Parliament.
- Speirín, Sliabh (mountains, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Sperrin Mountains, mountain range disposed along an arc about 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Londonderry city, Northern Ireland. The highest peaks—Sawel, Mullaclogher, and Mullaghaneany—all exceed 2,000 feet (608 m) and are capped with crystalline limestone. The Sperrins were extensively glaciated
- Špejbl (puppetry)
puppetry: Styles of puppet theatre: …Hurvínek, a precocious boy, and Špejbl, his slow-witted father. In France the prominent artists who designed for Les Comédiens de Bois included the painter Fernand Léger. Yves Joly stripped the art of the puppet to its bare essentials by performing hand puppet acts with his bare hands, without any puppets.…
- Speke Gulf (gulf, Tanzania)
East African lakes: Physiography: …on the southern shores the Speke, Mwanza, and Emin Pasha gulfs lie amid rocky granitic hills. Ukerewe, situated in the southeast, is the largest island in the lake; in the northwest the Sese Islands constitute a major archipelago. At the entrance to the channel leading to Jinja, Ugan., lies Buvuma…
- Speke Parrot (poem by Skelton)
John Skelton: …major political and clerical satires, Speke Parrot (written 1521), Collyn Clout (1522), and Why come ye nat to courte (1522), were all directed against the mounting power of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, both in church and in state, and the dangers—as Skelton saw them—of the new learning of the Humanists. Wolsey…
- Speke’s gazelle (mammal)
gazelle: African gazelles: The third indigenous species, Speke’s gazelle (G. spekei), inhabits the coastal plain of Somalia.
- Speke’s pectinator (rodent)
gundi: The East African gundi, or Speke’s pectinator (Pectinator spekei), is geographically isolated from all other gundi species and lives in Ethiopia and Somalia.
- Speke, John Hanning (British explorer)
John Hanning Speke was a British explorer who was the first European to reach Lake Victoria in East Africa, which he correctly identified as a source of the Nile. Commissioned in the British Indian Army in 1844, he served in the Punjab and travelled in the Himalayas and Tibet. In April 1855, as a
- Spektr (Soviet space module)
Mir: … (1990), a materials-sciences laboratory; and Spektr (1995) and Priroda (1996), two science modules containing remote-sensing instruments for ecological and environmental studies of Earth. With the exception of its first occupants, Mir’s cosmonaut crews traveled between the station and Earth in upgraded Soyuz TM spacecraft, and supplies were transported by robotic…
- Spelaeogriphacea (crustacean)
crustacean: Annotated classification: Order Spelaeogriphacea Holocene; carapace short, fused to first and covering part of second thoracic segment; 4 pairs of well-developed abdominal appendages; about 8 mm; cave-dwelling; South Africa; freshwater; 1 species. Order Mictacea Holocene; no functional eyes; carapace forms small lateral folds covering bases of mouthparts and…
- Spelaeornis chocolatinus (bird)
wren-babbler: An example is the streaked long-tailed wren-babbler (Spelaeornis chocolatinus) of northern Indochina, where it is found in small restless flocks in thickets.
- Spelce, Neal (American broadcast journalist)
Texas Tower shooting of 1966: The aftermath and legacy: Neal Spelce, the news director and anchor for KTBC, a combined radio and television station in Austin, was on the scene early (the station was only blocks from the tower). He described the events over the radio as they happened while crouching behind KTBC’s news…
- speleology (geology and hydrology)
speleology, scientific discipline that is concerned with all aspects of caves and cave systems. Exploration and description of caves and their features are the principal focus of speleology, but much work on the chemical solution of limestone, rates of formation of stalagmites and stalactites, the
- speleothem (speleology)
cave deposit, any of the crystalline deposits that form in a solution cave after the creation of the cave itself. These deposits are generally composed of calcium carbonate dissolved from the surrounding limestone by groundwater. Carbon dioxide carried in the water is released as the water
- spell (magic)
spell, words uttered in a set formula with magical intent. The correct recitation, often with accompanying gestures, is considered to unleash supernatural power. Some societies believe that incorrect recitation can not only nullify the magic but cause the death of the practitioner. The language of
- Spell, The (novel by Broch)
The Spell, allegorical novel by Hermann Broch, published posthumously in 1953 as Der Versucher. It was the only completed volume of a projected trilogy to have been called Bergroman (“Mountain Novel”). The author wrote it in the mid-1930s and then, dissatisfied, completely rewrote it twice more; by
- Spellbound (album by Abdul)
Paula Abdul: Music and acting: ” In 1991 she released Spellbound, which featured two more number one singles: “Rush Rush” and “The Promise of a New Day.” Head over Heels (1995), however, failed to match the success of her earlier albums.
- Spellbound (film by Hitchcock [1945])
Alfred Hitchcock: The Hollywood years: Rebecca to Dial M for Murder: …returned to Hollywood to make Spellbound (1945). A psychological (and psychiatric) mystery adapted by Ben Hecht from a Francis Beeding novel, it starred Ingrid Bergman as an analyst who finds herself falling in love with the new director of the asylum (Gregory Peck), whom she begins treating after realizing that…
- spelldown (contest)
spelling bee, contest or game in which players attempt to spell correctly and aloud words assigned them by an impartial judge. Competition may be individual, with players eliminated when they misspell a word and the last remaining player being the winner, or between teams, the winner being the team
- spelling (linguistics)
Baltic languages: Orthography: The Lithuanian alphabet is based on the Roman (Latin) alphabet. It has 33 letters, several employing diacritical marks, and is phonetic. In linguistic literature an acute accent is used for falling tones and a tilde for rising tones; the grave accent is used for…
- spelling and grammar checkers (word processing)
spelling and grammar checkers, computer programs that identify apparent misspellings and grammatical errors by reference to an incorporated dictionary and a list of rules for proper usage. They often appear as components of word-processing programs for personal computers or as stand-alone Web
- spelling bee (contest)
spelling bee, contest or game in which players attempt to spell correctly and aloud words assigned them by an impartial judge. Competition may be individual, with players eliminated when they misspell a word and the last remaining player being the winner, or between teams, the winner being the team
- spelling match (contest)
spelling bee, contest or game in which players attempt to spell correctly and aloud words assigned them by an impartial judge. Competition may be individual, with players eliminated when they misspell a word and the last remaining player being the winner, or between teams, the winner being the team
- Spelling Reform, The (work by March)
Francis Andrew March: The Spelling Reform (1881) was his chief contribution to the reform of English orthography. With his son Francis Andrew March (1863–1928), he edited A Thesaurus Dictionary of the English Language (1903; 2nd ed., 1980).
- Spellman, Carolyn (American astronomer)
Carolyn Shoemaker was an American astronomer who became an expert at identifying comets. With her husband, Gene Shoemaker, and David H. Levy, she discovered the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet in 1993. Spellman received bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Chico (California) State College, having studied
- Spellman, Francis (American Roman Catholic prelate)
Francis Spellman was an archbishop and cardinal who was one of the most influential American Roman Catholic prelates during the middle decades of the 20th century. After graduating (1911) from Fordham University in New York, Spellman studied at the seminary for the archdiocese of Boston and at the
- Spellman, Francis Joseph (American Roman Catholic prelate)
Francis Spellman was an archbishop and cardinal who was one of the most influential American Roman Catholic prelates during the middle decades of the 20th century. After graduating (1911) from Fordham University in New York, Spellman studied at the seminary for the archdiocese of Boston and at the
- Spelman College (college, Atlanta, Georgia, United States)
Spelman College, private, historically black institution of higher learning for women in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. A liberal arts college, Spelman offers bachelor’s degrees in more than 20 fields, including arts, sciences, psychology, computer science, economics, languages, philosophy, political
- Spelman Seminary (college, Atlanta, Georgia, United States)
Spelman College, private, historically black institution of higher learning for women in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. A liberal arts college, Spelman offers bachelor’s degrees in more than 20 fields, including arts, sciences, psychology, computer science, economics, languages, philosophy, political
- Spelman, Laura Celestia (American educator and philanthropist)
Laura Spelman Rockefeller was an American educator and philanthropist who was the wife of John D. Rockefeller of the famed Rockefeller family. Both of Spelman’s parents were active in social causes; her father, a wealthy businessman, was an abolitionist involved in the Underground Railroad, and her
- Spelman, Sir Henry (English historian)
Sir Henry Spelman was an English antiquary, ecclesiastical and legal historian best known for his Concilia, Decreta, Leges, Constitutiones, in Re Ecclesiarum Orbis Britannici (“Councils, Decrees, Laws, and Constitutions of the English Church”), which was perhaps the first systematic compilation of
- spelt (plant)
spelt, (Triticum spelta), species of wheat (family Poaceae) grown for livestock forage and used in baked goods and cereals. Although spelt has an ancient history and was once an important crop in Europe during the Middle Ages, it has been largely supplanted by common wheat (Triticum aestivum).
- spelter (metallurgy)
spelter, zinc in the form of slabs cast from the liquid obtained in the process of reducing the ores. Spelter is the most common commercial form of zinc metal. See
- Spelthorne (district, England, United Kingdom)
Spelthorne, borough (district), administrative county of Surrey, historic county of Middlesex, southeastern England. It is bounded to the south and west by the River Thames and to the north and east by Greater London. Staines is the principal settlement and the district headquarters. Other
- Spelvin, George (theatrical conventional name)
George Spelvin, U.S. theatrical convention used in the credits commonly to conceal dual roles or for a corpse or other anthropomorphic props. Spelvin first “appeared” on Broadway in the cast list of Charles A. Gardiner’s Karl the Peddler in 1886. Winchell Smith employed the character in many of his
- Spem in alium nunquam habui (motet by Tallis)
Spem in alium nunquam habui, motet (short musical setting of a sacred text) by English composer Thomas Tallis, noted for its complex use of counterpoint in a composition for 40 voices. It is a 10-minute panorama of shifting tone colours and a tour de force of Renaissance polyphony that is
- Spemann, Hans (German embryologist)
Hans Spemann was a German embryologist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1935 for his discovery of the effect now known as embryonic induction, the influence exercised by various parts of the embryo that directs the development of groups of cells into particular tissues
- Spence + Lila (novel by Mason)
Bobbie Ann Mason: In 1988 Mason published Spence + Lila, the story of a long-married couple. Later novels included Feather Crowns (1993), An Atomic Romance (2005), The Girl in the Blue Beret (2011), and Dear Ann (2020). Among her other short-story collections were Love Life: Stories (1989), Midnight Magic
- Spence, A. Michael (American economist)
A. Michael Spence is an American economist who, with George A. Akerlof and Joseph E. Stiglitz, won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2001 for laying the foundations for the theory of markets with asymmetric information. Spence studied at Yale University (B.A., 1966), the University of Oxford (B.A.,
- Spence, Catherine Helen (Australian author)
Catherine Helen Spence, was a writer and activist who sought to improve educational and welfare programs in Australia and to reform the country’s voting system. An immigrant from Scotland, she was a major progressive force for women’s voting rights in Australia during the late 19th and early 20th
- Spence, Kenneth Wartinbee (American psychologist)
Kenneth Wartinbee Spence was an American psychologist who attempted to construct a comprehensive theory of behaviour to encompass conditioning and other simple forms of learning and behaviour modification. Spence was raised and educated in Canada, returning to the United States in 1930 to study at
- Spence, Sir Basil (British architect)
Sir Basil Spence was an architect best known for the new Coventry cathedral, built to replace the cathedral that had been gutted during a World War II bombing raid. He was educated at the schools of architecture of London and Edinburgh universities and worked in Sir Edwin Lutyens’ office on
- Spence, Thomas (British pamphleteer)
Thomas Spence was a British pamphleteer known for his early advocacy of the socialization of land. Spence came of Scottish working class origins. At 25 he presented to the Newcastle Philosophical Society his paper The Real Rights of Man, advocating that land be owned by democratically organized
- Spencer carbine (weapon)
Spencer carbine, any of a family of rim-fire repeating arms—both carbines and rifles—that were widely used in the American Civil War. The carbine was invented by Christopher M. Spencer of Connecticut and was patented in 1860. Its buttstock contained a magazine carrying seven cartridges that could
- Spencer Davis Group, the (British musical group)
Island Records: Chris Blackwell’s Rock and Reggae Circus: …string of hits by the Spencer Davis Group, the Birmingham band whose teenage organ player, Stevie Winwood, had one of the most distinctive voices of the era.
- Spencer Gulf (gulf, South Australia, Australia)
Spencer Gulf, triangular inlet of the Indian Ocean, indenting the southeastern coast of South Australia, between the Eyre and Yorke peninsulas. Its maximum width is 80 miles (130 km) and overall length 200 miles (320 km). The Sir Joseph Banks, Thistle, Gambier, and Neptune islands are located in
- Spencer Jones, Sir Harold (British astronomer)
Sir Harold Spencer Jones was the 10th astronomer royal of England (1933–55), who organized a program that led to a more accurate determination of the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun. After studies at the University of Cambridge, Jones became chief assistant at the Royal Observatory in
- Spencer v. Kugler (law case)
Spencer v. Kugler, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on January 17, 1972, summarily (without argument or briefs) affirmed a lower court’s ruling that the state of New Jersey’s practice of aligning school districts with municipal boundaries was constitutional. Unusually, the court did not
- Spencer’s Definition of Mind as Correspondence (work by James)
pragmatism: The Metaphysical Club: …published a paper in 1878, “Spencer’s Definition of Mind as Correspondence,” in which his pragmatism and analysis of thought and belief are clearly discernible, and two decades later, he introduced pragmatism to the public in a lecture. Although he fully credited Peirce with the idea, James’s exposition became famous and…
- Spencer’s Mountain (film by Daves [1963])
Delmer Daves: Later films: In 1963 Daves directed Spencer’s Mountain, a precursor to The Waltons TV series. The family drama featured Henry Fonda and Maureen O’Hara as a rural couple overcoming adversity. After Youngblood Hawke (1964), an adaptation of Herman Wouk’s best seller, Daves made his last picture, The Battle of the Villa…
- Spencer, Baldwin (prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda)
Baldwin Spencer is an Antiguan trade unionist and politician who served as prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda from 2004 to 2014. His election marked the end of a dynasty in Antiguan politics; since the country’s independence in 1981, the office of prime minister had been held by a member of the
- Spencer, Christopher M. (American inventor and manufacturer)
Christopher M. Spencer was an American inventor and manufacturer. In 1860 he patented a repeating carbine whose seven cartridges could be fired in 18 seconds. It was quickly adopted by the U.S. government for cavalry use, and Spencer built his own factory, which produced 200,000 Spencer carbines
- Spencer, Christopher Miner (American inventor and manufacturer)
Christopher M. Spencer was an American inventor and manufacturer. In 1860 he patented a repeating carbine whose seven cartridges could be fired in 18 seconds. It was quickly adopted by the U.S. government for cavalry use, and Spencer built his own factory, which produced 200,000 Spencer carbines
- Spencer, Edward John Spencer, 8th Earl (British statesman)
Diana, princess of Wales: Early life and education: …child and youngest daughter of Edward John Spencer, Viscount Althorp, heir to the 7th Earl Spencer, and his first wife, Frances Ruth Burke Roche (daughter of the 4th Baron Fermoy), she was part of British nobility. Her parents’ troubled marriage ended in divorce when Diana was a child, and she,…
- Spencer, Elizabeth (American author)
American literature: Southern fiction: …in the Southern tradition include Elizabeth Spencer, whose short fiction was collected in The Southern Woman (2001), and Reynolds Price, whose best novels were A Long and Happy Life (1961) and Kate Vaiden (1986). Initially known for his lyrical portraits of Southern eccentrics (Other Voices, Other Rooms [1948]), Truman Capote
- Spencer, Ellen (American lawyer, educator and reformer)
Ellen Spencer Mussey was an American lawyer, educator, and reformer who, self-tutored in the law, helped establish educational opportunities for women in that field and campaigned to improve women’s legal rights. Ellen Spencer was the daughter of Platt Rogers Spencer, reformer and promoter of the
- Spencer, Herbert (British philosopher)
Herbert Spencer was an English sociologist and philosopher, an early advocate of the theory of evolution, who achieved an influential synthesis of knowledge, advocating the preeminence of the individual over society and of science over religion. His magnum opus, The Synthetic Philosophy (1896), was
- Spencer, Jeremy (British musician)
Fleetwood Mac: …2020, Canvey Island, Sussex), and Jeremy Spencer (b. July 4, 1948, West Hartlepool, Durham, England). Later members included Danny Kirwan (b. May 13, 1950, London—d. June 8, 2018, London), Christine McVie (original name Christine Perfect; b. July 12, 1943, Bouth, Lancashire, England—d. November 30, 2022), Bob Welch (b. August 31,…
- Spencer, John Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl (British statesman)
John Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer was a statesman, leader of the British House of Commons and chancellor of the Exchequer from 1830 to 1834. He greatly aided Lord John Russell (afterward 1st Earl Russell), chief author of the Reform Bill of 1832, in securing its passage in the Commons.
- Spencer, Lady Diana Frances (British princess)
Diana, princess of Wales was the princess of Wales, former consort (1981–96) of Charles, prince of Wales (later Charles III); mother of the heir apparent to the British throne, Prince William; and one of the foremost celebrities of her day. (Read Britannica’s interview with Tina Brown about
- Spencer, Lilly Martin (American painter)
Lilly Martin Spencer was an American painter who created enormously popular genre paintings, illustrations, and portraits. Angelique Martin was the daughter of French parents who emigrated from England to the United States in 1830. She grew up in Marietta, Ohio, and received a thorough education at
- Spencer, Octavia (American actress)
Octavia Spencer is an American actress who was known for her numerous small, generally comic roles before she shot to stardom as one of the lead characters in the film The Help (2011). Spencer won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a BAFTA Award for her performance as an outspoken domestic
- Spencer, Octavia Lenora (American actress)
Octavia Spencer is an American actress who was known for her numerous small, generally comic roles before she shot to stardom as one of the lead characters in the film The Help (2011). Spencer won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a BAFTA Award for her performance as an outspoken domestic
- Spencer, Platt Rogers (American calligrapher)
Spencerian penmanship: …style of handwriting developed by Platt Rogers Spencer (died 1864) of Geneva, Ohio. Energetically promoted by Spencer’s five sons and a nephew, the Spencerian method became the most widely known system of writing instruction in the United States after about 1850.
- Spencer, Robert Sunderland, 2nd Earl of, Baron Spencer of Wormleighton (English statesman)
Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland was an English statesman who was one of the most influential advisers during the reigns of Charles II, James II, and William III. His ability to shift allegiances was both the secret of his success and the cause of his unpopularity. Spencer was the only son
- Spencer, Sir Baldwin (British anthropologist)
Sir Baldwin Spencer was an English biologist and anthropologist, and the first trained and experienced scientist to enter the field of Australian anthropology. After briefly studying art, Spencer went to Owens College and in 1881 to Exeter College, Oxford, receiving his B.A. with first-class
- Spencer, Sir Stanley (English painter)
Sir Stanley Spencer was one of the leading painters in England between the World Wars. He used an expressively distorted style of drawing and often drew upon Christian subjects. Spencer studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in London from 1908 to 1912, and he first exhibited at the New English
- Spencer, Sir Walter Baldwin (British anthropologist)
Sir Baldwin Spencer was an English biologist and anthropologist, and the first trained and experienced scientist to enter the field of Australian anthropology. After briefly studying art, Spencer went to Owens College and in 1881 to Exeter College, Oxford, receiving his B.A. with first-class
- Spencer, Thomas (British businessman)
Marks & Spencer PLC: ” In 1894 he took Thomas Spencer as a business partner. Marks’s son Simon transformed the business from a number of outdoor stalls in various markets in northern England to a number of indoor shops, and he launched the company’s St. Michael brand name—a popular label for decades. In 1988…
- Spencer, Wallis Warfield (American socialite)
Wallis Simpson was an American socialite who became the wife of Prince Edward, duke of Windsor (Edward VIII), after the latter had abdicated the British throne in order to marry her. Wallis Warfield was born into an old established American family and attended the Oldfields School in Cockeysville,
- Spencer, Winston Baldwin (prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda)
Baldwin Spencer is an Antiguan trade unionist and politician who served as prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda from 2004 to 2014. His election marked the end of a dynasty in Antiguan politics; since the country’s independence in 1981, the office of prime minister had been held by a member of the
- Spencerian penmanship (calligraphy)
Spencerian penmanship, style of handwriting developed by Platt Rogers Spencer (died 1864) of Geneva, Ohio. Energetically promoted by Spencer’s five sons and a nephew, the Spencerian method became the most widely known system of writing instruction in the United States after about 1850. The first
- Spender, Sir Stephen (English poet)
Sir Stephen Spender was an English poet and critic, who made his reputation in the 1930s with poems expressing the politically conscience-stricken, leftist “new writing” of that period. A nephew of the Liberal journalist and biographer J.A. Spender, he was educated at University College School,
- Spender, Sir Stephen Harold (English poet)
Sir Stephen Spender was an English poet and critic, who made his reputation in the 1930s with poems expressing the politically conscience-stricken, leftist “new writing” of that period. A nephew of the Liberal journalist and biographer J.A. Spender, he was educated at University College School,