- Strigops habroptilus (bird)
kakapo, (Strigops habroptilus), giant flightless nocturnal parrot (family Psittacidae) of New Zealand. With a face like an owl, a posture like a penguin, and a walk like a duck, the extraordinarily tame and gentle kakapo is one of strangest and rarest birds on Earth. Heaviest of the world’s
- Strijdom, Johannes Gerhardus (prime minister of South Africa)
Johannes Gerhardus Strijdom was the prime minister of the Union of South Africa (1954–58) noted for his uncompromising Afrikaner sympathies. As head of the government, he translated this attitude into a vigorous program of apartheid, or separation of the races. After graduating from Victoria
- Strike (film by Eisenstein)
Sergei Eisenstein: Thus, in Strike, which recounts the repression of a strike by the soldiers of the tsar, Eisenstein juxtaposed shots of workers being mowed down by machine guns with shots of cattle being butchered in a slaughterhouse. The effect was striking, but the objective reality was falsified.
- strike (geology)
strike, in geology, direction of the line formed by the intersection of a fault, bed, or other planar feature and a horizontal plane. Strike indicates the attitude or position of linear structural features such as faults, beds, joints, and folds. Trend is the direction of the line formed by the
- strike (industrial relations)
strike, collective refusal by employees to work under the conditions required by employers. Strikes arise for a number of reasons, though principally in response to economic conditions (defined as an economic strike and meant to improve wages and benefits) or labour practices (intended to improve
- strike (bowling)
bowling: Principles of play: …on the first for a strike. If pins are left standing after the first delivery, the fallen or “dead” wood is removed and a second delivery permitted. If all remaining pins are knocked down, a spare is recorded. A split can occur on the first ball when two or more…
- strike (baseball)
baseball: The putout: The batter is allowed two strikes; a third strike results in an out, commonly called a strikeout. A strike occurs when a batter swings at a pitch and misses, when the batter does not swing at a pitched ball that passes through the strike zone, or when the ball is…
- Strike (film by Schlöndorff [2006])
Volker Schlöndorff: …subsequent films included Strajk (2006; Strike), about one of the founders of Poland’s Solidarity trade union, and the romantic drama Return to Montauk (2017).
- Strike and Hunger (work by Ogunde)
Hubert Ogunde: …Nigeria by his timely play Strike and Hunger (performed 1946), which dramatized the general strike of 1945. In 1946 the name of Ogunde’s group was changed to the African Music Research Party, and in 1947 it became the Ogunde Theatre Company. Many of Ogunde’s early plays were attacks on colonialism,…
- Strike Eagle (aircraft)
F-15: …fighter-bomber version, known as the Strike Eagle, a weapons officer seated behind the pilot controls the delivery of a number of guided missiles and bombs. The Strike Eagle carried out much of the nighttime precision bombing of Iraqi installations during the Persian Gulf War of 1990–91.
- strike stream (geology)
valley: Drainage patterns: Another term for a strike stream, which parallels the structural grain, is a longitudinal stream. In contrast, transverse streams cut across structural trends. Streams flowing down the tilted sediments of the cuesta are called dip streams because they parallel the structural dip of the strata. Streams draining the cuesta…
- Strike Up the Band (film by Berkeley [1940])
Busby Berkeley: Later films: Strike Up the Band (1940) was another Rooney-Garland vehicle, with the duo as high schoolers determined that their band will win a nationwide radio contest held by band leader Paul Whiteman. Forty Little Mothers (1940) had Eddie Cantor playing it straight as a teacher at…
- Strike Up the Band (musical)
musical: …Kay! (1926), Funny Face (1927), Strike Up the Band (1930), and others. Cole Porter wrote timeless and sophisticated compositions for such musicals as Anything Goes (1934) and Dubarry Was a Lady (1939). Other notable composers and lyricists of this period were Richard Rodgers and Oscar
- strike valley (geology)
valley: Drainage patterns: These strike valleys are paralleled by ridges of the tilted sediments called cuestas. Another term for a strike stream, which parallels the structural grain, is a longitudinal stream. In contrast, transverse streams cut across structural trends. Streams flowing down the tilted sediments of the cuesta are…
- strike zone (sports)
baseball: Records and statistics: …increasing the size of the strike zone called by the umpires. Lowering the pitching mound and reducing the size of the strike zone in 1969, along with the advent of the designated hitter rule (replacing the pitcher in the batting order with a better-hitting player) in the American League in…
- Strike! (work by Vorse)
Gastonia: …trials inspired several novels, notably Strike! (1930) by Mary Heaton Vorse and To Make My Bread (1932) by Grace Lumpkin.
- strike, riot, and civil commotion warranty
insurance: Inland marine insurance: …exclude losses resulting from pilferage, strike, riot, civil commotion, war, delay of shipments, loss of markets, illegal trade, or leakage and breakage.
- strike-anywhere match (tinder)
match: …of modern friction matches: (1) strike-anywhere matches and (2) safety matches. The head of the strike-anywhere match contains all the chemicals necessary to obtain ignition from frictional heat, while the safety match has a head that ignites at a much higher temperature and must be struck on a specially prepared…
- strike-slip fault (geology)
strike-slip fault, in geology, a fracture in the rocks of Earth’s crust in which the rock masses slip past one another parallel to the strike, the intersection of a rock surface with the surface or another horizontal plane. These faults are caused by horizontal compression, but they release their
- strike-slip plate boundary (geology)
Earth: The outer shell: …type of plate boundary, the transform variety, two plates slide parallel to one another in opposite directions. These areas are often associated with high seismicity, as stresses that build up in the sliding crustal slabs are released at intervals to generate earthquakes. The San Andreas Fault in California is an…
- strikeout (baseball)
baseball: The putout: …an out, commonly called a strikeout. A strike occurs when a batter swings at a pitch and misses, when the batter does not swing at a pitched ball that passes through the strike zone, or when the ball is hit foul. A ball hit foul can count as only the…
- striker (cricket position)
cricket: Rules of the game: The first batsman (the striker) guards his wicket by standing with at least one foot behind the popping crease. His partner (the nonstriker) waits behind the popping crease at the bowler’s end. The bowler tries to hit the batsman’s wicket or to dismiss him in other ways.
- Striker, Fran (American author)
Green Hornet: …the Lone Ranger, and writer Fran Striker was given the job of fleshing out the details. The Green Hornet was the alter ego of Britt Reid, the owner and publisher of the Daily Sentinel, a major newspaper for an unnamed big city. Reid’s father, Dan, was the Lone Ranger’s nephew,…
- striking (metallurgy)
coin: Ancient minting: Striking—the impression of the die designs on the blanks—was startlingly simple. The lower die, set in the anvil, was covered by the blank; the upper die, which was positioned above, was then given one or more hammer blows. A two-pound hammer, wielded by one hand,…
- Strimón, Potamós (river, Europe)
Struma River, river in western Bulgaria and northeastern Greece, rising in the Vitosha Massif of the Rhodope Mountains in Bulgaria, southwest of Sofia. It follows a course of 258 miles (415 km) south-southeast via Pernik to the Aegean Sea, which it enters 30 miles (50 km) west-southwest of Kavála.
- Strindberg, August (Swedish dramatist)
August Strindberg was a Swedish playwright, novelist, and short-story writer, who combined psychology and Naturalism in a new kind of European drama that evolved into Expressionist drama. His chief works include The Father (1887), Miss Julie (1888), Creditors (1888), A Dream Play (1902), and The
- Strindberg, Johan August (Swedish dramatist)
August Strindberg was a Swedish playwright, novelist, and short-story writer, who combined psychology and Naturalism in a new kind of European drama that evolved into Expressionist drama. His chief works include The Father (1887), Miss Julie (1888), Creditors (1888), A Dream Play (1902), and The
- string (architecture)
staircase: …riser; steps are placed between strings that are inclined to the angle of the staircase; strings are supported by newel posts that also support the handrail, forming a balustrade.
- string (solid)
sound: Standing waves: …in such systems as stretched strings, air columns, and stretched membranes. The principles discussed here are directly applicable to the operation of string and wind instruments.
- String Along (album by the Kingston Trio)
the Kingston Trio: …We Go Again (1959), and String Along (1960)—before breaking up in 1967.
- string bass (musical instrument)
double bass, stringed musical instrument, the lowest-pitched member of the orchestra, sounding an octave lower than the cello. It has two basic designs—one shaped like a viol (or viola da gamba) and the other like a violin—but there are other designs, such as that of a guitar. It varies
- string bean (vegetable)
green bean, widely cultivated, edible-podded legume of the species Phaseolus vulgaris. See
- string course (architecture)
stringcourse, in architecture, decorative horizontal band on the exterior wall of a building. Such a band, either plain or molded, is usually formed of brick or stone. The stringcourse occurs in virtually every style of Western architecture, from Classical Roman through Anglo-Saxon and Renaissance
- string instrument
stringed instrument, any musical instrument that produces sound by the vibration of stretched strings, which may be made of vegetable fibre, metal, animal gut, silk, or artificial materials such as plastic or nylon. In nearly all stringed instruments the sound of the vibrating string is amplified
- String Octet in E Flat Major (work by Mendelssohn)
Felix Mendelssohn: Early life and works: …of this period was the String Octet in E Flat Major (1825), displaying not only technical mastery and an almost unprecedented lightness of touch but great melodic and rhythmic originality. Mendelssohn developed in this work the genre of the swift-moving scherzo (a playful musical movement) that he would also use…
- string puppet
marionette, any of several types of puppet figures manipulated from above by strings or threads attached to a control. In a simple marionette, the strings are attached in nine places: to each leg, hand, shoulder, and ear and at the base of the spine. By adding strings, more sensitive control of
- string quartet (music)
string quartet, musical composition for two violins, viola, and cello in several (usually four) movements. It has been the predominant genre of chamber music since about 1750. See quartet; chamber
- String Quartet (work by Barber)
Samuel Barber: In 1936 Barber composed his String Quartet. Its slow movement, arranged for string orchestra, was performed under the title Adagio for Strings by the NBC Symphony Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini in 1938 and acquired extraordinary popularity in the United States and Europe.
- String Quartet in A Minor (work by Schubert)
Franz Schubert: Maturity of Franz Schubert: …three masterly chamber works: the String Quartet in A Minor, a second string quartet in D Minor containing variations on his song “Der Tod und das Mädchen” (“Death and the Maiden”), and the Octet in F Major for strings and wind instruments. His dejection is manifest in a letter of…
- String Quartet in C Major, Op. 76, No. 3 (work by Haydn)
Emperor Quartet, string quartet in four movements by Austrian composer Joseph Haydn that provided the melody for the national anthems of both Austria (1797–1918) and Germany (beginning in 1922). The work draws its nickname from that melody—composed specifically for the Austrian monarchy and thus
- String Quartet No. 1 (work by Carter)
Elliott Carter: …rhythmic technique culminated in his String Quartet No. 1 (1951), characterized by the densely woven counterpoint that became a hallmark of his style. Both that quartet and the String Quartet No. 2 (1959; Pulitzer Prize, 1960) became part of the standard repertory. The Variations for Orchestra (1955) marked another phase…
- String Quartet No. 1 in D minor, Opus 7 (work by Schoenberg)
Arnold Schoenberg: First major works: …next major work was the String Quartet No. 1 in D Minor, Op. 7 (1904). The composition’s high density of musical texture and its unusual form (the conventional four movements of a “classic” string quartet blended into one vast structure played without interruption for nearly 50 minutes) caused difficulties in…
- String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96 (work by Dvořák)
American Quartet, string quartet by Bohemian composer Antonín Dvořák. Written during the composer’s residency in the United States, it premiered on January 1, 1894, in Boston. Although he quotes no actual American melodies, in his American Quartet Dvořák set out to capture the spirit of American
- String Quartet No. 19 in C Major, K 465 (work by Mozart)
Dissonance Quartet, string quartet (a type of chamber music for two violins, viola, and cello) in four movements by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It was completed on January 14, 1785, and it was noted especially for its divergence—especially in the slow introduction—from the then-standard rules of
- String Quartet No. 2 (work by Carter)
String Quartet No. 2, string quartet (two violins, a viola, and a cello) by American composer Elliott Carter, in which each instrument is treated as a unique personality engaged in an ongoing exchange of musical ideas—and fragments of ideas—with the other members of the ensemble. The work was
- String Quartet No. 4 (work by Schoenberg)
12-tone music: … (1924) is E♭–G–A–B–C♯–C–B♭–D–E–F♯–A♭–F; for his String Quartet No. 4 (1936) it is D–C♯–A–B♭–F–E♭–E–C–A♭–G–F♯–B.
- String Quartets, Nos. 7–9 (works by Beethoven)
Razumovsky Quartets, three string quartets by Ludwig van Beethoven composed in 1805–06 for the Russian ambassador to Vienna, Count Andreas Razumovsky. They premiered in Vienna in February 1807 and were published as a set the following year. The Razumovsky Quartets reflect a sharp departure from
- string quintet (musical form)
Luigi Boccherini: Early life: …together the first public string quartet performance, with an extraordinary string quartet made up of outstanding Tuscan virtuosos, including himself, Pietro Nardini, Nardini’s pupil Filippo Manfredi, and Giuseppe Cambini.
- String Quintet in C Major (work by Schubert)
Franz Schubert: Last years of Franz Schubert: …B-flat Major, and the great String Quintet in C Major—the swan song of the Classical era in music.
- string theory (physics)
string theory, in particle physics, a theory that attempts to merge quantum mechanics with Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. The name string theory comes from the modeling of subatomic particles as tiny one-dimensional “stringlike” entities rather than the more conventional approach
- string trio (music)
trio: The string trio, normally for violin, viola, and cello, includes notable examples by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Beethoven. Joseph Haydn’s 20 string trios are for two violins and cello. Two notable 20th-century string trios are by Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern. As the piano became more…
- stringcourse (architecture)
stringcourse, in architecture, decorative horizontal band on the exterior wall of a building. Such a band, either plain or molded, is usually formed of brick or stone. The stringcourse occurs in virtually every style of Western architecture, from Classical Roman through Anglo-Saxon and Renaissance
- stringed instrument
stringed instrument, any musical instrument that produces sound by the vibration of stretched strings, which may be made of vegetable fibre, metal, animal gut, silk, or artificial materials such as plastic or nylon. In nearly all stringed instruments the sound of the vibrating string is amplified
- stringer (engineering)
beam: …loaded longitudinal beams are the stringers; the heavier, transverse members are called floor beams.
- stringer (journalism)
stringer, part-time or freelance journalist, videographer, or photographer typically assigned by a news organization to cover areas that are considered less newsworthy or that are deemed peripheral to the news organization’s coverage area. A local newspaper may have stringers in surrounding small
- Stringer, Howard (American business executive)
Howard Stringer is a Welsh-born American business executive who became the first non-Japanese chairman and CEO (2005–12) of the technology and entertainment corporation Sony. In 1965, shortly after receiving a master’s degree in modern history from Merton College, Oxford, Stringer moved to the
- Stringer, Sir Howard (American business executive)
Howard Stringer is a Welsh-born American business executive who became the first non-Japanese chairman and CEO (2005–12) of the technology and entertainment corporation Sony. In 1965, shortly after receiving a master’s degree in modern history from Merton College, Oxford, Stringer moved to the
- Stringocephalus (fossil brachiopod genus)
Stringocephalus, extinct genus of large brachiopods, or lamp shells, found as fossils in Devonian marine rocks (416 million to 359 million years old). Stringocephalus is widely distributed and occurs in western North America, Asia, and northern Europe. Several forms are known. The shell is
- strings (stringed musical instrument part)
sound: In stretched strings: For a stretched string of a given mass per unit length (μ) and under a given tension (F), the speed (v) of a wave in the string is given by the following equation:
- stringybark pine (plant)
cypress pine: Major species: …pine, and scrub pine; the Port Macquarie pine, or stringybark (C. macleayana), of southeastern Australia; and the common cypress pine (C. preissii) of southern Australia, often shrubby near the seacoast, with one subspecies called slender pine and another known as turpentine pine. Most of these timber trees are about 25…
- stringybark tree (plant)
eucalyptus, (genus Eucalyptus), large genus of more than 660 species of shrubs and tall trees of the myrtle family (Myrtaceae), native to Australia, Tasmania, and nearby islands. In Australia the eucalypti are commonly known as gum trees or stringybark trees. Many species are cultivated widely
- strip (metallurgy)
copper processing: Sheet and strip: The term copper strip as distinct from copper sheet is usually applied to material less than 60 cm (24 inches) wide that is supplied in long lengths. The majority of the strip used is less than 30 cm wide. In the preliminary stages of…
- strip lining (art restoration)
art conservation and restoration: Paintings on canvas: The practice of edge lining (sometimes referred to as “strip lining”), which has been increasingly used as an alternative to overall lining, aims to reinforce weak and torn edges where the canvas is prone to give way. This treatment is often used in conjunction with local or overall…
- strip mining
strip mining, removal of soil and rock (overburden) above a layer or seam (particularly coal), followed by the removal of the exposed mineral. The common strip-mining techniques are classified as area mining or contour mining on the basis of the deposit geometry and type. The cycle of operations
- strip test (agriculture)
agricultural technology: Determining nutrient needs: …a greenhouse or by making strip tests in the field. In strip tests, the fertilizer elements suspected of being deficient are added, singly or in combination, and the resulting plant growth observed. Next, it is necessary to determine the extent of the deficiency.
- strip-chart recorder (measurement instrument)
chromatography: Elution chromatography: …as a peak on a strip-chart recorder. The recorder trace where solute is absent is the baseline. A plot of the solute concentration along the migration coordinate of development chromatograms yields a similar solute peak. Collectively the plots are the concentration profiles; ideally they are Gaussian (normal, bell, or error…
- strip-cropping (agriculture)
contour farming: …conjunction with such practices as strip cropping, terracing, and water diversion.
- striped bass (fish)
sea bass: …these fishes, such as the striped bass (Morone, or Roccus, saxatilis), enter rivers to spawn. The white perch (M. americana, or R. americanus), which also enters fresh water to breed, is in some areas permanently landlocked in certain streams and ponds.
- striped button quail (bird)
button quail: …widely distributed species is the striped button quail, or Andalusian hemipode (Turnix sylvatica). It occurs in southern Spain, Africa, and southeastern Asia to the Philippines. The red-backed button quail (T. maculosa) is its counterpart in the Australo-Papuan region. The Andalusian hemipode, 15 cm (6 in.) long, has streaked, reddish-gray upperparts…
- striped cucumber beetle (insect)
cucumber beetle: The striped cucumber beetle (Acalymma vittata) has two black stripes on each wing cover (elytron), and the spotted cucumber beetle (D. undecimpunctata) has black spots on each wing cover. They both feed on garden plants, and their larvae feed on the roots. The green-coloured D. longicornis…
- striped dwarf hamster (rodent)
hamster: …hamster (Phodopus sungorus) and the striped dwarf hamster (Cricetulus barabensis) have a dark stripe down the middle of the back. Dwarf desert hamsters (genus Phodopus) are the smallest, with a body 5 to 10 cm (about 2 to 4 inches) long. The largest is the common hamster (Cricetus cricetus), measuring…
- striped field mouse (rodent)
hantavirus: …and is carried by the striped field mouse (Apodemus agrarius), a type of wood mouse that is prevalent in Asia and eastern Europe. A second HFRS disease, nephropathia epidemica, is usually not fatal. It is caused by the Puumala virus, which is carried by the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). Nephropathia…
- striped flea beetle
flea beetle: The striped flea beetle (Phyllotreta striolata) infests cabbage and similar plants. The cucumber beetle (Epitrix cucumeris) feeds on cucumbers and melon vines, E. hirtipennis attacks tobacco plants, and E. fuscula eats tomatoes and potatoes. The flea beetle Aphthona flava has been released in the United States…
- striped ground cricket (insect)
cricket: The striped ground cricket (Nemobius vittatus) has three dark stripes on its abdomen.
- striped hairy-footed hamster (rodent)
hamster: The Dzhungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus) and the striped dwarf hamster (Cricetulus barabensis) have a dark stripe down the middle of the back. Dwarf desert hamsters (genus Phodopus) are the smallest, with a body 5 to 10 cm (about 2 to 4 inches) long. The largest is…
- striped headstander (fish)
headstander: The striped headstander (Anostomus anostomus) has two yellowish orange stripes on each side alternating with black ones. The tail and all fins are bright orange. Some species of headstanders are kept as aquarium fish.
- striped hyena (mammal)
hyena: Five races of striped hyenas live in scrub woodland as well as in arid and semiarid open country from Morocco to Egypt and Tanzania, Asia Minor, the Arabian Peninsula, the Caucasus, and India. These small hyenas average 30–40 kg. Colour is pale gray with black throat fur and…
- striped jungle babbler (bird)
jungle babbler: An example is the striped jungle babbler, or spotted babbler (Pelloreum ruficeps), of Southeast Asia—16 centimetres (614 inches) long, with reddish cap, white eyeline, dark greenish back, and streaked white breast. It is usually detected by its loud two-note whistle.
- striped maple (plant)
maple: These trees are the striped maple (A. pennsylvanicum), the red snake-bark maple (A. capillipes), the Her’s maple (A. hersii), and the David’s maple (A. davidii). The chalk maple, with whitish bark, is sometimes classified as A. leucoderme, although some authorities consider it a subspecies of sugar maple.
- striped marlin (fish)
marlin: The striped marlin (Kajikia audax), another Indo-Pacific fish, is bluish above and white below, with pale vertical bars; it normally does not exceed 125 kg (275 pounds). The white marlin (K. albida, or K. albidus) is limited to the Atlantic and is blue-green, with a paler…
- striped mud turtle (reptile)
mud turtle: …some species, such as the striped mud turtle (K. baurii), survive drought periods through estivation (dormancy) under a shallow layer of mud.
- striped mullet (fish)
mullet: The common, or striped, mullet (Mugil cephalus), cultivated in some areas because of its rapid growth rate, is a well-known species found worldwide. The red surmullet, also called red mullet, is an unrelated species of the goatfish family.
- striped muscle (anatomy)
skeletal muscle, in vertebrates, most common of the three types of muscle in the body. Skeletal muscles are attached to bones by tendons, and they produce all the movements of body parts in relation to each other. Unlike smooth muscle and cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle is under voluntary control.
- striped pipsissewa (plant)
pipsissewa: …called striped pipsissewa, rheumatism root, dragon’s tongue, and spotted wintergreen, occurs in North America from Canada to the southern United States. The name pipsissewa derives from a Cree Indian word referring to the diuretic properties of the leaves when eaten.
- striped polecat (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- striped skink (reptile)
skink: In many of the striped skinks, such as the five-lined skink (P. fasciatus) and the broad-headed skink (P. laticeps), stripes fade after the skinks reach sexual maturity. Plestiodon is the dominant genus of skink in north temperate regions of the New World as well as Japan and surrounding areas;…
- striped skunk (mammal)
skunk: The common striped skunk is found from central Canada southward throughout the United States to northern Mexico. Adults grow to be about 47 to 82 cm (about 18 to 32 inches) long and may weigh up to 6.3 kg (13 pounds). Their fur is typically black with…
- striped weasel (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- striper (fish)
sea bass: …these fishes, such as the striped bass (Morone, or Roccus, saxatilis), enter rivers to spawn. The white perch (M. americana, or R. americanus), which also enters fresh water to breed, is in some areas permanently landlocked in certain streams and ponds.
- Stripes (film by Reitman [1981])
Bill Murray: (1979), Caddyshack (1980), and Stripes (1981). In 1984 Murray starred with Aykroyd and Harold Ramis in Ghostbusters, which became one of the highest-grossing films of the decade.
- stripes and solids (game)
eight ball, popular American pocket-billiards game in which 15 balls numbered consecutively and a white cue ball are used. Those numbered 1–7 are solid colours; 9–15 are white with a single thick stripe in varying colours; and the eight ball is black. To begin, the balls are racked in a pyramid
- striplight (theatrical device)
stagecraft: Early history: …the stage from above), and striplights (a row of lights usually mounted in a trough reflector and placed in the wings to illuminate specific portions of the stage or setting).
- Stripped (album by Aguilera)
Christina Aguilera: ” Soon after, Aguilera released Stripped (2002), on which she cast off her ingenue image and took on a more provocative sexualized persona, epitomized by her hit single “Dirrty.” Reminiscent of the work of Etta James and Billie Holiday, Back to Basics (2006) paid tribute to Aguilera’s jazz and blues…
- stripped classicism (architectural style)
Western architecture: France: …striking example of the austere trabeated classicism that was the most popular style for public buildings in the 1930s in many parts of the United States and Europe. It is often known as stripped classicism because features such as columns and pilasters were reduced to a grid and deprived of…
- stripper (farm machine)
cereal farming: Harvesting: In 1843 a “stripper” was brought out in Australia that removed the wheat heads from the plants and threshed them in a single operation. Threshing machines were powered first by men or animals, often using treadmills, later by steam and internal-combustion engines. The modern combine harvester, originally introduced…
- Stripper, The (film by Schaffner [1963])
Franklin J. Schaffner: …helmed his first feature film, The Stripper (1963), which was based on William Inge’s play A Loss of Roses. Joanne Woodward starred as a struggling actress who accepts a job as a striptease performer, and Richard Beymer was cast as the wide-eyed teenager who is initially infatuated with her. The…
- stripping film (photography)
photoengraving: Camera and darkroom equipment: Stripping film, a laminated film with a soft adhesive layer between the base and the emulsion layer, is widely used to permit images to be removed from the base and properly oriented on the glass or film flat through which the metal plate will be…
- stripping ratio (mining)
coal mining: Choosing a mining method: …calculated with the aid of stripping ratios, which represent the amount of waste material that must be removed to extract a given amount of coal. Stripping ratios can also consider the selling price of coal, and a certain minimum profit can be added to the total cost of producing and…
- stripping reaction (nuclear physics)
stripping reaction, in nuclear physics, process in which a projectile nucleus grazes a target nucleus such that the target nucleus absorbs part of the projectile. The remainder of the projectile continues past the target. An example is the (d, p) stripping reaction involving an aluminum-27 nucleus
- stripping shovel (tool)
coal mining: Shovels and trucks: …currently used in mines: the stripping shovel, the loading (or quarry-mine) shovel, and the hydraulic shovel. The hydraulic mining shovel has been widely used for coal and rock loading since the 1970s. The hydraulic system of power transmission greatly simplifies the power train, eliminates a number of mechanical components that…