- subject (logic)
history of logic: Categorical forms: …negative quantifier “no”), (2) a subject, (3) a copula, (4) perhaps a negation (“not”), (5) a predicate. Propositions analyzable in this way were later called categorical propositions and fall into one or another of the following forms:
- subject catalog (library science)
library: Cataloging by author and subject: …by the development of a subject catalog.
- subject collection (library)
book collecting: Styles of collecting: The subject collection could range from fields as sweeping as classics or American literature to books on chess, coffee, prizefighting, detective fiction, or the development of nuclear energy. Two collections formed by tobacco businessman George Arents and now in the New York Public Library illustrate the…
- subject matter (art)
painting: Devotional: The range and interpretation of subjects in different forms of devotional painting express a particular attitude to the relationship between human beings and God. Early Christian and Buddhist murals, for example, portrayed an all-powerful, remote, and mysterious being, painted as a flat, formalized head or figure whose stern gaze dominated…
- Subject of the Artist (art school)
Barnett Newman: …cofounded the school called “Subject of the Artist” (1948), which held open sessions and lectures for other artists.
- subject political culture (political science)
political culture: In a subject political culture, citizens see themselves not as participants in the political process but as subjects of the government. In a participant political culture, citizens believe both that they can contribute to the system and that they are affected by it. Almond and Verba’s work…
- Subject Was Roses, The (film by Grosbard [1968])
Jack Albertson: …supporting actor in the 1968 motion-picture version of that play, two Emmy Awards (1975 and 1976) for his portrayal of the cranky gas station–garage owner in the television series Chico and the Man, and another Emmy for a guest appearance on the Cher show in 1975. His last theatrical motion…
- Subjection of Women, The (work by Mill)
John Stuart Mill: The later years of John Stuart Mill: …and in 1869 he published The Subjection of Women (written 1861), the classical theoretical statement of the case for women’s suffrage. His last public activity was concerned with the starting of the Land Tenure Reform Association, for which he wrote in The Examiner and made a public speech a few…
- subjective fundamental (physics)
sound: The ear as spectrum analyzer: This effect, known as the missing fundamental, subjective fundamental, or periodicity pitch, is used by the ear to create the fundamental in sound radiating from a small loudspeaker that is not capable of providing low frequencies.
- subjective idealism (philosophy)
subjective idealism, a philosophy based on the premise that nothing exists except minds and spirits and their perceptions or ideas. A person experiences material things, but their existence is not independent of the perceiving mind; material things are thus mere perceptions. The reality of the
- subjective probability (probability)
probability theory: An alternative interpretation of probability: …to say that someone has subjective probability p that a proposition is true means that for any integers r and b with r/(r + b) < p, if that individual is offered an opportunity to bet the same amount on the truth of the proposition or on “red in a…
- Subjective Spirit (Hegelianism)
Western philosophy: The idealism of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel: Therefore, what began in Hegel as a metaphysics of the Absolute ended by becoming a total philosophy of human…
- subjective tinnitus (physiology)
tinnitus: …are two types of tinnitus: subjective, which is the most common form, and objective, which is relatively rare. In subjective tinnitus, only the person with the condition can hear the noise. In objective tinnitus, a physician can detect the ringing, buzzing, or clicking sound.
- subjective tone (acoustics)
combination tone, in musical acoustics, faint tone produced in the inner ear by two simultaneously sounded musical tones. Because such tones are caused by the ear rather than by the external source of the sound, they are sometimes called subjective, or resultant, tones. There are two varieties:
- subjective well-being
happiness, in psychology, a state of emotional well-being that a person experiences either in a narrow sense, when good things happen in a specific moment, or more broadly, as a positive evaluation of one’s life and accomplishments overall—that is, subjective well-being. Happiness can be
- subjectivism (philosophy)
Western philosophy: The rationalism of Descartes: From the indubitability of the self, Descartes inferred the existence of a perfect God; and, from the fact that a perfect being is incapable of falsification or deception, he concluded that the ideas about the physical world that God has implanted in human beings…
- Subjects of Desire: Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (work by Butler)
Judith Butler: Butler’s first book, Subjects of Desire: Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (1987), a revised version of their doctoral dissertation, was a discussion of the concept of desire as it figures in G.W.F. Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit and its subsequent interpretations by various 20th-century French philosophers.
- subjunctive mood (grammar)
mood: indicative, the imperative, and the subjunctive. The indicative is generally used for factual or neutral situations, as in English “John did his work” and Spanish “Juan hizo su trabajo.” The imperative conveys commands or requests—for example, “Do your work.” It is distinguished by the absence of an explicit subject, the…
- Sublaqueum (Italy)
Subiaco, town, Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy. It lies along the Aniene River, 1,345 feet (410 m) above sea level, about 45 miles (73 km) east of Rome. Its ancient name recalls its position below three small lakes where the emperor Nero built a villa. An inundation destroyed the lakes in
- Sublett, John William (American dancer)
tap dance: Vaudeville: John Bubbles, for instance, went down in history as the “Father of Rhythm Tap.” Though he may not have been the very first tap dancer to use the heel tap to push rhythm from the 1920s jazz beat to the 1930s swing beat, he certainly…
- sublevel caving
mining: Sublevel caving: This method owes the first part of its name to the fact that work is carried out on many intermediate levels (that is, sublevels) between the main levels. The second half of the name derives from the caving of the hanging wall and…
- sublevel stoping
mining: Blasthole stoping: In sublevel stoping, shorter blastholes are drilled from sublevels located at shorter vertical intervals along the vertical stope. A fairly typical layout is shown in the figure. In vertical retreat mining the stope does not take the shape of a vertical slot. Instead, the trough serves…
- sublimation (phase change)
sublimation, in physics, conversion of a substance from the solid to the gaseous state without its becoming liquid. An example is the vaporization of frozen carbon dioxide (dry ice) at ordinary atmospheric pressure and temperature. The phenomenon is the result of vapour pressure and temperature
- sublimation (psychology)
defense mechanism: Sublimation is the diversion or deflection of instinctual drives, usually sexual ones, into noninstinctual channels. Psychoanalytic theory holds that the energy invested in sexual impulses can be shifted to the pursuit of more acceptable and even socially valuable achievements, such as artistic or scientific endeavours.…
- sublimation curve (physics)
liquid: Phase diagram of a pure substance: …triple point is called the sublimation curve. It represents the equilibrium between solid and gas, and when the sublimation curve is crossed, the substance changes directly from solid to gas. This conversion occurs when dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) vaporizes at atmospheric pressure to form gaseous carbon dioxide because the…
- sublimation line (physics)
liquid: Phase diagram of a pure substance: …triple point is called the sublimation curve. It represents the equilibrium between solid and gas, and when the sublimation curve is crossed, the substance changes directly from solid to gas. This conversion occurs when dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) vaporizes at atmospheric pressure to form gaseous carbon dioxide because the…
- sublimation nucleus (meteorology)
precipitation: …atmospheric dust particles known as sublimation nuclei. In natural clouds, ice crystals form at temperatures colder than about −15 °C (+5 °F). The exact temperature of ice crystal formation depends largely on the physical-chemical nature of the sublimation nucleus.
- sublimation, heat of (physics)
carbon group element: Crystal structure: … energies associated with fusion (melting), sublimation (change from solid to gas), and vaporization (change from liquid to gas) among these four elements, with increasing atomic number and atomic size, indicate a parallel weakening of the covalent bonds in this type of structure. The actual or probable arrangement of valence electrons…
- sublime (art)
sublime, in literary criticism, grandeur of thought, emotion, and spirit that characterizes great literature. It is the topic of an incomplete treatise, On the Sublime, that was for long attributed to the 3rd-century Greek philosopher Cassius Longinus but now believed to have been written in the
- Sublime Faith, Book of (work by Ibn Daud)
Abraham ben David Halevi ibn Daud: …for his major philosophic work, Sefer ha-emuna ha-rama (“Book of Sublime Faith”), extant only in Hebrew and German translations.
- Sublime Object of Ideology, The (work of Zižek)
Slavoj Žižek: The Sublime Object of Ideology: The influence of Hegel is apparent in Žižek’s first major work, Le Plus Sublime des Hystériques: Hegel Passe (1988; “The Most Sublime of Hysterics: Hegel Passes”), a revision of his second dissertation. German idealism was subsequently an abiding interest for…
- Sublime Porte (Ottoman government)
Sublime Porte, the government of the Ottoman Empire. The name is a French translation of Turkish Bâbıâli (“High Gate,” or “Gate of the Eminent”). which was the official name of the gate giving access to the block of buildings in Constantinople, or Istanbul, that housed the principal state
- Sublime Porte (government building, Istanbul, Turkey)
vizier: …official residence known as the Babıâli (Sublime Porte), which replaced the palace as the effective centre of Ottoman government. Beginning in the 19th century, the grand viziers presided over the council of ministers, appointed by the sultan; and after 1908 they acquired the right to appoint the cabinet ministers. The…
- Sublime Porte Incident (Ottoman history)
Ottoman Empire: Rise of the CUP: …23, 1913), known as the Sublime Porte Incident, to force the resignation of the grand vizier Mehmed Kâmil Paşa and establish a new cabinet under Şevket Paşa. Şevket Paşa, however, was not a Unionist, and it was only after his assassination (June 11, 1913) that the CUP at last succeeded…
- sublingual gland (anatomy)
human digestive system: Salivary glands: The sublingual glands lie directly under the mucous membrane covering the floor of the mouth beneath the tongue.
- sublingual nicotine tablet (drug)
smoking: Sublingual nicotine tablets: The sublingual nicotine tablet is approved for use in several European countries. Each tablet commonly contains 2 mg of nicotine and is placed under the tongue until it dissolves; the nicotine is absorbed through the oral mucosa. Common side effects include irritation…
- sublingual tablet (drug)
pharmaceutical industry: Tablets: Sublingual tablets generally do not have a coating and are designed so that they will dissolve when placed under the tongue.
- sublitharenite (geology)
sedimentary rock: Classification of sandstones: Sublithic arenites likewise contain more rock fragments than feldspar, but the amount of rock fragments is lower, ranging from 5 to 25 percent. Lithic arenites can be further subdivided according to the nature of the rock fragments, as shown in the smaller triangle of Figure…
- sublittoral zone (marine ecology)
marine ecosystem: Geography, oceanography, and topography: The sublittoral is the environment beyond the low-tide mark and is often used to refer to substrata of the continental shelf, which reaches depths of between 150 and 300 metres. Sediments of the continental shelf that influence marine organisms generally originate from the land, particularly in…
- submachine gun (weapon)
submachine gun, lightweight automatic small-arms weapon chambered for relatively low-energy pistol cartridges and fired from the hip or shoulder. Most types utilize simple blowback actions. Using cartridges of such calibres as .45 inch or 9 mm, they usually have box-type magazines that hold from 10
- submain entry (mining)
coal mining: Ground control and roof support: Submain entries can be regarded as feeders from the mains that subdivide each major area. From the submains, panel entries take off to subdivide further a block of coal into panels for orderly coal extraction.
- submandibular ganglion (physiology)
human nervous system: Facial nerve (CN VII or 7): …facial nerve) and to the submandibular ganglion by way of the chorda tympani nerve (another branch of the facial nerve, which joins the lingual branch of the mandibular nerve). Postganglionic fibers from the pterygopalatine ganglion innervate the nasal and palatine glands and the lacrimal gland, while those from the submandibular…
- submandibular gland (anatomy)
human digestive system: Salivary glands: …serous type; those of the submandibular glands, of both serous and mucous types, with the serous cells outnumbering the mucous cells by four to one. The acini of the sublingual glands are composed primarily of mucous cells.
- Submarine (film by Ayoade [2010])
Gemma Chan: Early roles on television, stage, and film: …movies as Exam (2009) and Submarine (2010).
- submarine (naval vessel)
submarine, any naval vessel that is capable of propelling itself beneath the water as well as on the water’s surface. This is a unique capability among warships, and submarines are quite different in design and appearance from surface ships. Submarines first became a major factor in naval warfare
- submarine cable (communications)
undersea cable, assembly of conductors enclosed by an insulating sheath and laid on the ocean floor for the transmission of messages. Undersea cables for transmitting telegraph signals antedated the invention of the telephone; the first undersea telegraph cable was laid in 1850 between England and
- submarine canyon (geology)
submarine canyon, any of a class of narrow steep-sided valleys that cut into continental slopes and continental rises of the oceans. Submarine canyons originate either within continental slopes or on a continental shelf. They are rare on continental margins that have extremely steep continental
- submarine fan (geology)
submarine fan, accumulation of land-derived sediment on the deep seafloor; in configuration, a fan is like the section of a very low cone, with its apex at the lower mouth of a submarine canyon incised into a continental slope. Submarine canyons have steep courses with high walls and funnel
- submarine fracture zone (geology)
submarine fracture zone, long, narrow, and mountainous submarine lineation that generally separates ocean-floor ridges that differ in depth by as much as 1.5 km (0.9 mile). The largest fracture zones, in the eastern Pacific, are several thousand kilometres long, 100 to 200 km (60 to 125 miles)
- submarine gap (geology)
submarine gap, steep-sided furrow that cuts transversely across a ridge or rise; such a passageway has a steeper slope than either of the two abyssal plains it connects. Grooves known as interplain channels exist in many submarine gaps; the sediments in these channels are continuously graded. The
- Submarine Geology (work by Shepard)
Francis P. Shepard: Among his principal works are Submarine Geology (1948) and, with R.F. Dill, Submarine Canyons and Other Sea Valleys (1966).
- submarine landform (geology)
mountain: Mid-ocean ridges and rises: Thus, such submarine landforms comprise very long, narrow volcanic centres. Although volcanoes do form as isolated seamounts along the axes of mid-ocean ridges, they constitute only a small fraction of the erupted material. Moreover, areas along the ridges and rises where volcanism is particularly abundant are considered…
- submarine mine (weapon)
submarine mine, underwater weapon designed to explode when a target presents itself. See
- submarine photometer
undersea exploration: Collection of biological samples: …transparency and absorption include the submarine photometer, the hydrophotometer, and the Secchi disk. The submarine photometer records directly to depths of about 150 metres the infrared, visible, and ultraviolet portions of the spectrum. The hydrophotometer has a self-contained light source that allows greater latitude in observation because it can be…
- submarine plateau (geology)
oceanic plateau, large submarine elevation rising sharply at least 200 m (660 feet) above the surrounding deep-sea floor and characterized principally by an extensive, relatively flat or gently tilted summit. Most oceanic plateaus were named early in the 20th century prior to the invention of sonic
- submarine rocket (missile)
tactical weapons system: Surface-to-surface systems: Subroc and the Soviet SS-N-15. These missiles break the ocean surface, streak through the air at supersonic speed for about 30 miles (50 km), and then release a nuclear depth bomb that drops back into the water and sinks to the level of the target…
- submarine sandwich (food)
hoagie, submarine sandwich containing Italian meats, cheeses, and other fillings and condiments. The name likely comes from the Philadelphia area where, during World War I, Italian immigrants who worked at the Hog Island shipyard began making sandwiches; they were originally called “hoggies” before
- submarine slump (geology)
submarine slump, in a submarine canyon or on a continental slope, relatively rapid and sporadic downslope composed of sediment and organic debris that has built up slowly into an unstable or marginally stable mass. The greatest documented distance that an individual slump has transported sediment
- submarine volcanic cone (geology)
seamount, large submarine volcanic mountain rising at least 1,000 m (3,300 feet) above the surrounding deep-sea floor; smaller submarine volcanoes are called sea knolls, and flat-topped seamounts are called guyots. Great Meteor Tablemount in the northeast Atlantic, standing more than 4,000 m
- submarine volcano
volcano: Submarine volcanoes: These structures occur in various forms, but many are cone-shaped seamounts. Some ancient island volcanoes were eroded flat or covered with a coral cap at sea level before they sank below the sea surface as they and the crust supporting them cooled and…
- submarine-launched ballistic missile (military technology)
arms control: The Cold War: Soviet and U.S.-led arms-control agreements: …of each side’s ICBMs and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) at current levels. The SALT II agreement (1979) set limits on each side’s store of multiple independent reentry vehicles (MIRVs), which were strategic missiles equipped with multiple nuclear warheads capable of hitting different targets on the ground. This agreement placed limits…
- submaturity (geology)
sedimentary rock: Texture: Submature sandstones are created by the removal of the clay matrix by current action. The sand grains are, however, still poorly sorted in these rocks. Submature sandstones are common as river-channel sands, tidal-channel sands, and shallow submarine sands swept by unidirectional currents. Mature sandstones are…
- submaxillary gland (anatomy)
human digestive system: Salivary glands: …serous type; those of the submandibular glands, of both serous and mucous types, with the serous cells outnumbering the mucous cells by four to one. The acini of the sublingual glands are composed primarily of mucous cells.
- submerged smelting (metallurgy)
lead processing: Direct smelting: …divided into two categories: (1) submerged smelting, as in the QSL and Isasmelt processes, in which the refining reactions occur in a liquid (i.e., molten metal, matte, or slag), and (2) suspension smelting, as in the KIVCET process, in which the reactions occur between gases and solids.
- Submergence (film by Wenders [2017])
Alicia Vikander: …on a holiday together; and Submergence, Wim Wenders’s romance about a bio-mathematician and an undercover MI6 agent (played by James McAvoy). She later starred as Lara Croft in the 2018 film adaptation of the rebooted video game franchise Tomb Raider.
- submersible (vessel)
hydrologic sciences: Remote sensing of the oceans: …on special surface vessels and submersibles for direct measurements. It can be very costly to operate either type of vessel on long deep-sea expeditions. Moreover, observations from such craft can provide only a partial picture of oceanic phenomena and processes in terms of both space and time. Consequently, there has…
- Submillimeter Array (telescope array, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, United States)
radio telescope: Radio telescope arrays: …Sinica of Taiwan, completed the Submillimeter Array (SMA), located near the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, at an elevation of 4,080 metres (13,385 feet). This is an eight-element array of 6-metre (20-foot) dishes designed to work at wavelengths as short as 0.3 mm (0.01 inch). A major new international facility—managed…
- subminiature camera (photography)
technology of photography: The ultraminiature or subminiature: This camera takes narrow roll film (16-mm or 9.5-mm) in special cartridges or film disks. The picture size ranges from 8 × 10 mm to 13 × 17 mm. These formats are used for making millions of snapshooting pocket-size cameras; special versions may be…
- Submission (film by van Gogh [2004])
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: …Theo van Gogh to create Submission, a jarring, incendiary film depicting Islam as a religion that sanctions the abuse of women. Several weeks after the film aired on Dutch television, van Gogh was murdered—shot and stabbed, with a knife pinning to his body a letter that called for the death…
- submission (animal)
submissive behaviour, form of animal behaviour in which one individual attempts through appeasement displays to avoid injury by a dominant member of its own species. Appeasement displays are commonly found in species that are well armed (e.g., carnivores) and social. The displays, even when
- Submission (novel by Houellebecq)
Michel Houellebecq: Soumission (2015; Submission) was a dystopian work of speculative fiction in which France has become an Islamic state. The novel was published on the day of the attacks on the Paris offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which had that week published an issue featuring a caricature…
- Submission of the Clergy, Act of (England [1533])
Convocations of Canterbury and York: At the Reformation, the Act of Submission of the Clergy (1533) provided that convocation was not to meet without the permission of the king. For the next 140 years the convocations were busy with the Reformation settlement, working with the monarch and Parliament. After the Restoration of Charles II…
- submissive behaviour (animal)
submissive behaviour, form of animal behaviour in which one individual attempts through appeasement displays to avoid injury by a dominant member of its own species. Appeasement displays are commonly found in species that are well armed (e.g., carnivores) and social. The displays, even when
- submontane plateau (region, Pakistan)
Pakistan: The submontane plateau: Lying south of the northern mountain rampart, the submontane plateau has four distinct divisions—the Trans-Indus plains, the Potwar Plateau, the Salt Range, and the Sialkot region.
- submucous plexus (anatomy)
digestive nerve plexus: …and the submucous plexus (Meissner’s plexus). The myenteric plexus is situated between the circular muscle layer and the longitudinal muscle layer in the lower esophagus, stomach, and intestines. The submucous plexus, as its name implies, is located in the submucosal tissue, which connects the surface mucous membrane lining to…
- submuscular bursa (anatomy)
bursa: Submuscular bursas are located between muscles and bony prominences and, in some instances, between neighbouring muscles.
- suboptimization, error of (industrial engineering)
systems engineering: A design example: …a framework is called the error of suboptimization.
- suborbital space tourism
space tourism: Suborbital space tourism: Although the orbital space tourism industry garnered much media attention following Tito’s flight, other companies were also hard at work trying to make space tourism a profitable proposition by developing suborbital vehicles designed to take passengers to an altitude of 100 km…
- subordinated debenture (finance)
business finance: Long-term debt: …more junior lien is the subordinated debenture, which is secondary (in terms of ability to reclaim capital in the event of a business liquidation) to all other debentures and specifically to short-term bank loans.
- subordinating construction (linguistics)
linguistics: Syntax: …constructions fall into two types: subordinating and coordinating. If attention is confined, for simplicity, to constructions composed of no more than two immediate constituents, it can be said that subordinating constructions are those in which only one immediate constituent is of the same form class as the whole construction, whereas…
- subordinationism (Christianity)
patristic literature: Late 2nd to early 4th century: …final restoration, and a deeply subordinationist doctrine of the Trinity—i.e., one in which the Son is subordinate to the Father. For his spiritual teaching, with its emphasis on the battle against sin, on freedom from passions, and on the soul’s mystical marriage with the Logos, his Commentary on Canticles provides…
- suboscine (bird)
suboscine, in general, any bird of the suborder Tyranni of the order Passeriformes (perching birds, or passerines) as distinguished from an oscine, or songbird, a member of the suborder Passeri. The term suboscine implies, perhaps rightly, that birds of this group are more primitive in anatomy and
- Subotica (Serbia)
Subotica, town in the northern part of the autonomous province of Vojvodina in northern Serbia. It lies along the Belgrade-Budapest railway line near the Hungarian border. Subotica was first mentioned in 1391, and it was included in Austria’s military frontier after the defeat of the Turks in the
- Subotnik, Morton (American composer)
electronic music: Music synthesizers: …closely associated with synthesizers is Morton Subotnik, who has produced a series of extended electronic music compositions, starting with Silver Apples of the Moon (1967). These pieces were created on the Buchla synthesizer, and any one of them demonstrates in relatively unmodified form the types of sounds one may obtain…
- Subpannonia (region, Europe)
Slovenia: Relief: …the country) is the fertile Subpannonia; it is located in eastern and northeastern Slovenia and includes the valleys of the Sava, Drava, and Mura rivers. Its basins contain the cities of Maribor (on the Drava) and Celje (on the Savinja River, a tributary of the Sava). Subpannonia corresponds in part…
- subpharyngeal ganglion (anatomy)
nervous system: Annelids: …the most anterior ganglion, the subpharyngeal ganglion, being the most prominent. Two to five pairs of lateral nerves leave each ganglion to innervate the body wall of that segment. A subepidermal nerve plexus occurs over the whole body. Another plexus, called the enteric, stomodaeal, or sympathetic system, is found in…
- subpoena (law)
subpoena, formal instrument issued by a court, grand jury, legislative body or committee, or duly authorized administrative agency commanding an individual to appear before it at a specific time to give testimony, oral or written, in the matter identified in the document. The subpoena is used only
- subpoena duces tecum (law)
evidence: Documentary evidence: …court for a writ of sub poena duces tecum compelling the third party to produce the document in court. If the original is not produced after this, secondhand evidence of its existence is then permitted. In Continental law there is no similar obligation to produce documents. The adversary or third…
- subpolar glacier
glacier: Mass balance: …for the entire year; a subpolar (or polythermal) glacier contains ice below the freezing temperature, except for surface melting in the summer and a basal layer of temperate ice; and a temperate glacier is at the melting temperature throughout its mass, but surface freezing occurs in winter. A polar or…
- subpolar gyre
subpolar gyre, an area of cyclonic ocean circulation that sits beneath a persistent region of low atmospheric pressure. In contrast to subtropical gyres, the movement of ocean water within the Ekman layer of subpolar gyres forces upwelling and surface water divergence. In the North Atlantic the
- subprefect (law)
China: Unification: …there were district magistrates (subprefects) in charge of areas corresponding roughly in size to counties. The duties of these subprefects were catholic, for they were supposed to see to all aspects of the welfare of the people in their area. This was the lowest level of major direct imperial…
- subprime lending (finance)
subprime lending, the practice of extending credit to borrowers with low incomes or poor, incomplete, or nonexistent credit histories. Subprime mortgage loans, the most common form of subprime lending, are characterized by higher interest rates and more-stringent requirements to compensate lenders
- subprime mortgage
subprime mortgage, a type of home loan extended to individuals with poor, incomplete, or nonexistent credit histories. Because the borrowers in that case present a higher risk for lenders, subprime mortgages typically charge higher interest rates than standard (prime) mortgages. The most common
- subprogram (computer science)
computer programming language: Control structures: …is an example of a subprogram (also called a procedure, subroutine, or function). A subprogram is like a sauce recipe given once and used as part of many other recipes. Subprograms take inputs (the quantity needed) and produce results (the sauce). Commonly used subprograms are generally in a collection or…
- Subrahmaṇya (Hindu deity)
Skanda, Hindu god of war who was the firstborn son of Shiva. The many legends giving the circumstances of his birth are often at variance with one another. In Kalidasa’s epic poem Kumarasambhava (“The Birth of the War God”; 5th century ce), as in most versions of the story, the gods wished for
- Subramaniam, Gopala Ratnam (Indian filmmaker)
Mani Ratnam is an Indian filmmaker noted for his popular films in both Tamil and Hindi cinema. Ratnam was the son of film producer Ratnam Iyer. He obtained a management degree at the Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management Studies at the University of Bombay (now the University of Mumbai) before
- subrevolutionary terrorism (violence)
terrorism: Types of terrorism: Subrevolutionary terrorism is rather less common. It is used not to overthrow an existing regime but to modify the existing sociopolitical structure. Since this modification is often accomplished through the threat of deposing the existing regime, subrevolutionary groups are somewhat more difficult to identify. An…
- Subroc (missile)
tactical weapons system: Surface-to-surface systems: Subroc and the Soviet SS-N-15. These missiles break the ocean surface, streak through the air at supersonic speed for about 30 miles (50 km), and then release a nuclear depth bomb that drops back into the water and sinks to the level of the target…
- subrogation
insurance: Limits of liability: …element in liability policies is subrogation: the insurer retains the right to bring an action against a liable third party for any loss this third party has caused.
- subroutine (computer science)
computer programming language: Control structures: …is an example of a subprogram (also called a procedure, subroutine, or function). A subprogram is like a sauce recipe given once and used as part of many other recipes. Subprograms take inputs (the quantity needed) and produce results (the sauce). Commonly used subprograms are generally in a collection or…