- Se7en (film by Fincher [1995])
David Fincher: …the relatively small-scale crime drama Se7en (1995), which revolves around two detectives (played by Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt) searching for a serial killer (played by Kevin Spacey) who bases his murders on the seven deadly sins. The moody Se7en earned positive reviews and was a box-office success, establishing Fincher…
- SEA (1987)
Single European Act (SEA), agreement enacted by the European Economic Community (EEC; precursor to the European Community and, later, the European Union) that committed its member countries to a timetable for their economic merger and the establishment of a single European currency and common
- sea and land breeze (meteorology)
climate: Local wind systems: The so-called sea and land breeze circulation is a local wind system typically encountered along coastlines adjacent to large bodies of water and is induced by differences that occur between the heating or cooling of the water surface and the adjacent land surface. Water has a higher…
- Sea and the Mirror (work by Auden)
W. H. Auden: Life: …aesthetic in the same volume’s Sea and the Mirror (a quasi-dramatic “commentary” on William Shakespeare’s The Tempest); and social-psychological in The Age of Anxiety (1947), the “baroque eclogue” that won Auden the Pulitzer Prize in 1948. Auden wrote no long poems after that.
- sea anemone (invertebrate)
sea anemone, any member of the invertebrate order Actiniaria (class Anthozoa, phylum Cnidaria), soft-bodied, primarily sedentary marine animals resembling flowers. They are found from the tidal zone of all oceans to depths of more than 10,000 metres (about 33,000 feet). Some live in brackish water.
- sea arch (natural bridge)
coastal landforms: Sea arches: Another spectacular type of erosional landform is the sea arch, which forms as the result of different rates of erosion typically due to the varied resistance of bedrock. These archways may have an arcuate or rectangular shape, with the opening extending below water…
- Sea Around Us, The (book by Carson)
Rachel Carson: The Sea Around Us (1951) became a national best seller, won a National Book Award, and was eventually translated into 30 languages. Her third book, The Edge of the Sea, was published in 1955.
- sea ash (plant, Zanthoxylum clava-herculis)
prickly ash: clava-herculis, variously called the Hercules’-club, the sea ash, or the pepperwood. West Indian satinwood, or yellowheart (Z. flavum), produces shiny golden brown timber for cabinetwork. Some species are cultivated as bonsai.
- Sea at L’Estaque, The (painting by Cézanne)
Paul Cézanne: Development of his mature style: …from this period, such as The Sea at L’Estaque (1878–79), are perhaps the first masterpieces of the mature Cézanne. These landscapes contain compositions of grand and calm horizontals in which the even up-and-down strokes create a clean prismatic effect and an implacable blue sea spreads wide across the canvases. Like…
- sea bass (fish)
sea bass, (family Serranidae), any of the numerous fishes of the family Serranidae (order Perciformes), most of which are marine, found in the shallower regions of warm and tropical seas. The family includes about 475 species, many of them well-known food and sport fishes. Although the term sea
- sea bat (echinoderm)
sea star: The sea bat (Patiria miniata) usually has webbed arms; it is common from Alaska to Mexico. Sun stars of the genera Crossaster and Solaster are found in northern waters; they have numerous short rays and a broad, often sunburst-patterned disk. The widely distributed S. endeca is…
- sea battle tomorrow (philosophy)
laws of thought: …that there will be a naval battle tomorrow but that the complex proposition that either there will be a naval battle tomorrow or that there will not is (now) true. In the epochal Principia Mathematica (1910–13) of Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell, this law occurs as a theorem rather…
- sea bear (mammal)
polar bear, (Ursus maritimus), great white northern bear (family Ursidae) found throughout the Arctic region. The polar bear travels long distances over vast desolate expanses, generally on drifting oceanic ice floes, searching for seals, its primary prey. The polar bear is the largest and most
- Sea Beggars (Dutch rebels)
Battle on the Zuiderzee: …sailors who called themselves the Sea Beggars, and who regularly disrupted Spanish shipping to Amsterdam through the Zuiderzee. Seeking to crush this seaborne rebellion, the Spanish sent a fleet of thirty ships into the Zuiderzee under the command of Maximilien de Hénin-Liétard, Count of Boussu (1542–1578), the Walloon head of…
- sea bird
Arctic: Marine fauna: Marine birds are abundant in summer, all of them migrants except, apparently, for a small proportion of the black guillemot population that winters in the Arctic, using the open water, such as the polynyas, for feeding areas. The seabirds in the true Arctic zone are…
- Sea Birds Are Still Alive, The (short stories by Bambara)
Toni Cade Bambara: …Gorilla, My Love (1972) and The Sea Birds Are Still Alive (1977), as well as the novels The Salt Eaters (1980) and If Blessing Comes (1987). She edited and contributed to The Black Woman: An Anthology (1970) and to Tales and Stories for Black Folks (1971). She also collaborated on…
- sea bream (fish)
porgy, any of about 100 species of marine fishes of the family Sparidae (order Perciformes). Porgies, sometimes called sea breams, are typically high-backed snapper- or grunt-like fishes. They have a single dorsal fin, and their small mouths, equipped with strong teeth, can handle a diet of fishes
- sea breeze (meteorology)
sea breeze, a local wind system characterized by a flow from sea to land during the day. Sea breezes alternate with land breezes along the coastal regions of oceans or large lakes in the absence of a strong large-scale wind system during periods of strong daytime heating or nighttime cooling. Those
- sea buckthorn (shrub and fruit)
sea buckthorn, (Hippophae rhamnoides, family Elaeagnaceae), willowlike shrub growing to about 2.5 m (about 8 feet) high with narrow leaves that are silvery on the underside and globose, orange-yellow fruits about 8 mm (13 inch) in diameter. It is common on sand dunes along the eastern and
- sea butterfly (mollusk)
pteropod, small marine gastropods of the subclass Opisthobranchia (phylum Mollusca) characterized by a foot modified to form a pair of winglike flaps (parapodia) that are used for swimming. They live at or near the sea surface; most are less than 1 cm (0.4 inch) long. Those that lack a shell and
- sea catfish (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Ariidae (sea catfishes) Nasal barbels lacking; oral incubation of eggs. Food fishes. Marine, a few entering fresh water. Tropical coasts, worldwide. About 21 genera, about 150 species. Family Plotosidae (eeltail catfishes) Lack adipose fin; long anal and caudal fins confluent. Marine, brackish and freshwater, Indo-Pacific. 10
- sea cave (geology)
sea cave, cave formed in a cliff by wave action of an ocean or lake. Sea caves occur on almost every cliffed headland or coast where the waves break directly on a rock cliff and are formed by mechanical erosion rather than the chemical solution process that is responsible for the majority of inland
- Sea Change (album by Beck)
Beck: …and spare, the melancholic follow-up, Sea Change (2002), containing some of Beck’s most personal lyrics, met with some of the best reviews of his career. The tour in support of the album found the Flaming Lips sharing the bill and the stage (as backing band) with Beck. With his 2005…
- Sea Change (poetry by Graham)
Jorie Graham: Sea Change (2008) furthers those themes with poems warning of the dangers of global warming and environmental irresponsibility, among other issues. In 2012 Graham published Place, which won the Forward Poetry Prize for best collection. The Taken-Down God: Selected Poems 1997–2008 (2013) and From the…
- Sea Change, A (novel by Dennis)
Nigel Dennis: title A Sea Change), Dennis explored the Adlerian notion that each individual’s personality adapts to fit the social context. Both Cards of Identity and A House in Order (1966) retained some of his original concerns. The Making of Moo, a satirical play on the psychological power…
- Sea Change, The (novel by Howard)
Elizabeth Jane Howard: …by The Long View (1956), The Sea Change (1959), After Julius (1965), and Something in Disguise (1969). The last two were later adapted as television plays for which Howard wrote the scripts. She was perhaps best known for the semiautobiographical novels known as the Cazalet Chronicles—The Light Years (1990), Marking…
- sea chub (fish)
perciform: Annotated classification: Families Kyphosidae (sea chubs) All similar families recognized by combination of ovate body, small mouth, strong caudal fin that is usually weakly forked; and, especially, a spinous dorsal fin with low spines followed by a higher evenly curved or falcate soft dorsal fin; about 45 species, many…
- sea cliff (geology)
cave: Sea caves, eolian caves, rock shelters, and talus caves: …weaknesses in the bedrock of sea cliffs along coastlines. They may be mere crevices in the cliff or roomy chambers. Some can be entered only by boat at low tide, while others, occurring along beaches, can be walked into. A sea cave may have an opening to the surface at…
- Sea Cloud (yacht)
yacht: Kinds of power yachts: …was the four-masted, steel, barque-rigged Sea Cloud (1931), 2,323 tons.
- sea coal (coal classification)
bituminous coal, the most abundant form of coal, intermediate in rank between subbituminous coal and anthracite according to the coal classification used in the United States and Canada. In Britain bituminous coal is commonly called “steam coal,” and in Germany the term Steinkohle (“rock coal”) is
- sea coot (bird)
scoter, (genus Melanitta), any of three species of sea duck of the family Anatidae. Within the divisions of true duck species, the scoter belongs in the diving duck group. Scoters are good swimmers and divers and are mainly marine except during the breeding season. The males are generally shiny
- sea cow (extinct mammal)
sea cow, (Hydrodamalis gigas), very large aquatic mammal, now extinct, that once inhabited nearshore areas of the Komandor Islands in the Bering Sea. Steller’s sea cows were wiped out by hunters in the 18th century less than 30 years after they were first discovered by Arctic explorers. Today, the
- sea crayfish (crustacean)
lobster: Unlike true lobsters, spiny lobsters (Palinuridae), so called because of their very spiny bodies, do not have large claws. People eat the abdomen, which is marketed as lobster tail. The antennae are long. Most species live in tropical waters; Palinurus elephas, however, is found from Great Britain to…
- Sea Cruise (song by Smith)
Huey Smith: …the 1959 Smith song “Sea Cruise,” sung by a white youth, Frankie Ford. Smith’s performances grew increasingly infrequent, and in the early 1980s his focus turned to religion as he became a Jehovah’s Witness.
- sea cucumber (echinoderm)
sea cucumber, (class Holothuroidea), any of 1,200 species of marine invertebrates that constitute a class within the phylum Echinodermata. The soft cylindrical body, 2 to 200 cm (about 0.75 inch to 6.5 feet) long and 1 to 20 cm (0.4–8 inches) thick, is usually a dull, dark colour and often warty,
- Sea Dayak (people)
Brunei: Ethnic groups: …indigenous peoples, such as the Iban (or Sea Dayak); various peoples of South Asian descent; and temporary workers, primarily from Asia and Europe.
- Sea Devils (film by Walsh [1953])
Raoul Walsh: Last films: …gunman John Wesley Hardin, but Sea Devils (1953), filmed in England, used Hudson less well as a Channel Islands smuggler in about 1800 who gets mixed up with a spy (Yvonne De Carlo). Although the thinly disguised Huey Long drama A Lion Is in the Streets (1953) did not deliver…
- sea drum (fish)
drum: …an air bladder; and the sea drum, or black drum (Pogonias cromis), a gray or coppery red, western Atlantic fish.
- sea duck (bird)
diving duck: …a bay duck or a sea duck.
- Sea Eagle (missile)
rocket and missile system: Antiship: The turbojet-powered British Sea Eagle weighed somewhat more than the Harpoon and employed active radar homing. The West German Kormoran was also an air-launched missile. The Norwegian Penguin, a rocket-powered missile weighing between 700 and 820 pounds and employing technology derived from the U.S. Maverick air-to-surface missile, had…
- sea eagle (bird)
sea eagle, any of various large fish-eating eagles (especially in the genus Haliaeetus), of which the bald eagle is best known. Sea eagles (sometimes called fish eagles or fishing eagles) live along rivers, big lakes, and tidewaters throughout the world except South America. Some reach 1 metre (3.3
- sea ecosystem
marine ecosystem, complex of living organisms in the ocean environment. Marine waters cover two-thirds of the surface of the Earth. In some places the ocean is deeper than Mount Everest is high; for example, the Mariana Trench and the Tonga Trench in the western part of the Pacific Ocean reach
- sea eel (fish)
conger eel: The American conger, or sea eel (C. oceanicus), is a fierce game fish.
- sea elephant (mammal)
elephant seal, either of the two largest pinnipeds (aquatic mammals of the suborder Pinnipedia): the northern elephant seal (species Mirounga angustirostris), now found mainly on coastal islands off California and Baja California; or the southern elephant seal (M. leonina), found throughout
- sea fan (invertebrate)
sea fan, (genus Gorgonia), any member of a genus of invertebrate marine animals of the suborder Holaxonia (class Anthozoa, phylum Cnidaria). It is a variety of coral composed of numerous polyps—cylindrical sessile (attached) forms—that grow together in a flat fanlike pattern. Each polyp in the
- sea festival (Japanese festival)
Shiogama: The annual sea festival in July centres on the Shiogama Shrine, which stands on a wooded hill in the centre of the city. On March 11, 2011, the city and surrounding area were seriously damaged by a large tsunami generated by a severe earthquake centred in the…
- sea fig (plant, Carpobrotus species)
ice plant: Highway ice plant (Carpobrotus edulis, formerly Mesembryanthemum edule) is one of the most commonly grown species and is named for the transparent glistening swellings on its edible leaves. It is cultivated in gardens and as an indoor potted plant. It is naturalized in California, where…
- Sea Fury (British aircraft)
Typhoon: …of the Tempest II, the Sea Fury, entered service as a carrier-fighter with the Royal Navy in 1948 and saw combat in the Korean War (1950–53). Export Sea Furies served in air forces of less-developed countries well into the 1960s; a Cuban Sea Fury played a significant role in repelling…
- sea gooseberry (invertebrate)
sea gooseberry, either of two cosmopolitan genera of invertebrate marine animals in the phylum Ctenophora: the Hormiphora and the Pleurobrachia. The genera, widely distributed in all the oceans, are represented by 90 species. Sea gooseberries are wholly planktonic in their life cycle, lacking any
- sea grant (United States research program)
sea grant, a grant-in-aid to an American academic or scientific institution to enhance development of coastal and marine resources in the Great Lakes and the oceans around the United States. The sea-grant program was established by act of U.S. Congress in 1966 and was originally administered by the
- sea grape (plant)
Italy: Plant life: …a notable development of pioneer sea grape on the coastal dunes. The Mediterranean foothill area is characterized by the cork oak and the Aleppo pine. Higher up, in southern Italy, there are still traces of the ancient mountain forest, with truffle oak, chestnut, flowering ash, Oriental oak, white poplar, and…
- Sea Grapes (work by Walcott)
Derek Walcott: In Sea Grapes (1976) and The Star-Apple Kingdom (1979), Walcott uses a tenser, more economical style to examine the deep cultural divisions of language and race in the Caribbean. The Fortunate Traveller (1981) and Midsummer (1984) explore his own situation as a black writer in America…
- Sea Gull, The (film by Lumet [1968])
Sidney Lumet: The 1960s: Fail Safe, The Pawnbroker, and The Hill: …Lumet earned mixed reviews for The Sea Gull (1968), an adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s play, with Mason, Vanessa Redgrave, and Simone Signoret. Lumet closed out the decade with the glossy but forgettable melodrama The Appointment (1969), which starred Omar Sharif as an attorney who begins to suspect that his wife…
- sea hare (gastropod)
sea hare, any marine gastropod of the family Aplysiidae (subclass Opisthobranchia, phylum Mollusca) that is characterized by a shell reduced to a flat plate, prominent tentacles (resembling rabbit ears), and a smooth or warty body. Sea hares eat large seaweeds, and all are simultaneous
- Sea Harrier (aircraft)
warship: Light carriers: These 20,000-ton ships carried eight Sea Harriers and about a dozen antisubmarine helicopters. They also incorporated a further British contribution to aircraft carrier design: an upward-sloping “ski jump” at the end of the short (170-metre, or 558-foot) flight deck to assist the Sea Harriers in short takeoff. The Invincible-class ships…
- Sea Hawk, The (film by Curtiz [1940])
Michael Curtiz: The late 1930s and the 1940s: The Sea Hawk became one of 1940’s biggest hits, propelled by Flynn’s cocky portrayal of an adventurer in the mold of Sir Francis Drake, Flora Robson’s canny Elizabeth I, the villainy of Rains and Henry Daniell, and Korngold’s outstanding score. Curtiz’s final effort of 1940,…
- sea hen (fish)
sea hen, fish, a species of lumpsucker
- Sea Hero (racehorse)
Paul Mellon: … (1969) and Kentucky Derby champion Sea Hero (1993) among his successes. In 1998 he was rated 124th richest American by Forbes magazine. Mellon was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1985 and the National Humanities Medal in 1997.
- sea holly (genus of brown algae)
Sargassum, genus of about 150 species of brown algae (family Sargassaceae) generally attached to rocks along coasts in temperate regions or occurring as pelagic (free-floating) algae in the open sea. The Sargasso Sea in the western Atlantic Ocean, which is often characterized by floating masses of
- sea horse (fish)
seahorse, (genus Hippocampus), any of about 50 species of marine fishes allied to pipefishes in the family Syngnathidae (order Gasterosteiformes). Seahorses are found in shallow coastal waters in latitudes from about 52° N to 45° S. Their habitats include coral reefs, mangroves, sea grass beds, and
- sea ice (ice formation)
sea ice, frozen seawater in the Arctic Ocean and its adjacent seas as far south as China and Japan and in the Southern Ocean and its adjacent seas surrounding Antarctica. Most sea ice occurs as pack ice, which is very mobile, drifting across the ocean surface under the influence of the wind and
- Sea Inside, The (film by Amenábar [2004])
Javier Bardem: …Sampedro in Mar adentro (2004; The Sea Inside), Bardem collected his fourth Goya.
- Sea Island Creole (language)
Gullah, English-based creole vernacular spoken primarily by African Americans living on the seaboard of South Carolina and Georgia (U.S.), who are also culturally identified as Gullahs or Geechees (see also Sea Islands). Gullah developed in rice fields during the 18th century as a result of contact
- Sea Islands (islands, United States)
Sea Islands, low-lying chain of about 100 sandy islands off the Atlantic Ocean coast of the southeastern United States. The islands stretch for some 300 miles (480 km), generally southwestward and then southward along the coasts of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida between the mouths of the
- sea kale (plant)
sea kale, (Crambe maritima), perennial plant in the mustard family (Brassicaceae). Native to seashores and cliffs of Eurasia, sea kale can tolerate salty soils and is sometimes cultivated for its edible leaves and shoots. Young or blanched leaves are cooked and eaten like kale or spinach, and the
- sea knoll (geology)
seamount: …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 (13,120 feet) above the surrounding terrain, with a basal diameter of up to 110 km (70 miles), illustrates the size that such features can attain.…
- sea krait (reptile subfamily)
sea snake: …and the sea kraits (subfamily Laticaudinae), which are related to the Asian cobras. Although their venom is the most potent of all snakes, human fatalities are rare because sea snakes are not aggressive, their venom output is small, and their fangs are very short.
- Sea Lady, The (novel by Drabble)
Margaret Drabble: The Sea Lady (2007) traces the relationship of a man and a woman who met as children before either became famous—he as a marine biologist and she as a feminist—and ends with their reunion. The Pure Gold Baby (2013) centres on a young single woman…
- Sea Lake (Victoria, Australia)
Sea Lake, town, Mallee district, northwest Victoria, Australia, located about 6 miles (10 km) south of Lake Tyrrell (a salt-encrusted depression). The first person of European descent to encounter the area around present-day Sea Lake is believed to have been William Edward Stanbridge, who arrived
- sea lamprey (jawless fish)
sea lamprey, (Petromyzon marinus), eel-like, jawless species of fish native to the North Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Adriatic, Baltic, and Mediterranean seas, along with their coastal estuaries and rivers. The species is considered to be among the most primitive of all living vertebrates.
- Sea Launch (international company)
Boeing Company: History of Boeing Company: …and Anglo-Norwegian partners to form Sea Launch, a commercial launch services company that sent satellites into geostationary orbit from a floating platform at an equatorial site in the Pacific Ocean. Commercial launches began in 1999. In 2000 Boeing acquired the satellite business of Hughes Electronics.
- sea lavender (plant)
sea lavender, (genus Limonium), genus of about 300 species of chiefly perennial herbaceous plants of the family Plumbaginaceae. The plants are found in North America, Eurasia, Africa, and Australia, most members being found around the Mediterranean region. Sea lavenders tolerate saline soils and
- sea leopard (mammal)
leopard seal, (Hydrurga leptonyx), generally solitary, earless seal (family Phocidae) that inhabits Antarctic and sub-Antarctic regions. The only seal that feeds on penguins, young seals, and other warm-blooded prey, the leopard seal is a slender animal with a relatively long head and long,
- sea lettuce (green algae)
sea lettuce, (genus Ulva), genus of green algae (family Ulvaceae) usually found growing on rocky shores of seas and oceans around the world. Some species also grow in brackish water rich in organic matter or sewage and can accumulate heavy metals. Sea lettuce, particularly Ulva lactuca, is rich in
- Sea Level (American musical group)
Southern rock: A few acts, such as Sea Level and the Dixie Dregs, even flirted with jazz-rock.
- sea level (Earth science)
sea level, position of the air-sea interface, to which all terrestrial elevations and submarine depths are referred. The sea level constantly changes at every locality with the changes in tides, atmospheric pressure, and wind conditions. Longer-term changes in sea level are influenced by Earth’s
- sea lily (echinoderm)
sea lily, any crinoid marine invertebrate animal (class Crinoidea, phylum Echinodermata) in which the adult is fixed to the sea bottom by a stalk. Other crinoids (such as feather stars) resemble sea lilies; however, they lack a stalk and can move from place to place. The sea lily stalk is
- sea lion (mammal)
sea lion, any of six species of eared seals found primarily in Pacific waters. Sea lions are characterized by a coat of short coarse hair that lacks a distinct undercoat. Except for the California sea lion (Zalophus californianus), males have lion-like manes and constantly roar to defend their
- Sea Lion, Operation (European history)
Battle of Britain: …for such an invasion, christened Operation Sea Lion. Hitler stipulated that the expedition be ready by mid-August.
- Sea Lions, The (novel by Cooper)
James Fenimore Cooper: Novels: …The Red Rover (1827) and The Sea Lions (1849). Never before in prose fiction had the sea become not merely a theatre for, but the principal actor in, moral drama that celebrated man’s courage and skill at the same time that it revealed him humbled by the forces of God’s…
- sea marigold (plant, Carpobrotus species)
ice plant: Highway ice plant (Carpobrotus edulis, formerly Mesembryanthemum edule) is one of the most commonly grown species and is named for the transparent glistening swellings on its edible leaves. It is cultivated in gardens and as an indoor potted plant. It is naturalized in California, where…
- sea marigold (plant, Calendula species)
calendula: Major species and uses: Sea marigold, or trailing calendula (C. maritima), of western Sicily is a critically endangered species.
- sea monster (mythology)
giant squid: …been frequently depicted as a sea monster in literature and by mariners throughout history. The taxonomy of giant squids remains controversial; some scientists divide Architeuthis into several species, whereas others place them into the species A. dux.
- sea moss drink (beverage)
sea moss drink, a Caribbean beverage made from dried sea moss (a type of seaweed), milk, and various sweeteners. In most recipes, the sea moss is soaked in lime juice overnight and then boiled in water, often with a cinnamon stick, until becoming jellylike. After cooling, it is then blended with
- sea moth (fish)
dragonfish, any of about five species of small marine fishes comprising the family Pegasidae and the order Pegasiformes. Dragonfish are found in warm Indo-Pacific waters. They are small (to about 16 centimetres [6 12 inches] long), elongated fish encased in bony rings of armour. The armour is fused
- Sea Mother (Inca god)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Inca gods: …until after 1450, was called Cochamama (Mama Qoca), the Sea Mother.
- sea mouse (annelid)
sea mouse, (Aphrodita), any of a genus of marine worms of the class Polychaeta (phylum Annelida), named for their mouselike appearance and behaviour. Sea mice are usually 7.5–15 centimetres (3–6 inches) long; however, some attain a length of 30 centimetres (12 inches). The slightly arched back is
- sea novel (literature)
Joseph Conrad: …renderings of dangerous life at sea and in exotic places. But his initial reputation as a masterful teller of colourful adventures of the sea masked his fascination with the individual when faced with nature’s invariable unconcern, man’s frequent malevolence, and his inner battles with good and evil. To Conrad, the…
- Sea of Fertility, The (novel by Mishima)
The Sea of Fertility, four-part epic novel by Mishima Yukio, published in Japanese in 1965–70 as Hōjō no umi and widely regarded as his most lasting achievement. Each of the four parts—Haru no yuki (Spring Snow), Homma (Runaway Horses), Akatsuki no tera (The Temple of Dawn), and Tennin gosui (The
- Sea of Grass, The (novel by Richter)
The Sea of Grass, novel by Conrad Richter, published in 1936, presenting in epic scope the conflicts in the settling of the American Southwest. The novel is set in New Mexico in the late 19th century and concerns the often violent clashes between the pioneering ranchers, whose cattle range freely
- Sea of Grass, The (film by Kazan [1947])
Elia Kazan: Films of the 1940s: …Tree Grows in Brooklyn with The Sea of Grass (1947), which featured Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, and Boomerang! (1947), a taut film noir thriller with a cast that included Lee J. Cobb, Arthur Kennedy, and Dana Andrews. Kazan’s next effort, the Darryl F. Zanuck-produced
- Sea of Love (film by Becker [1989])
Al Pacino: Academy Award and later films: Sea of Love (1989), his biggest hit in years, reestablished Pacino as a major film star. In 1990 he reprised the role of Michael Corleone in The Godfather, Part III and gave a hilarious portrayal of grotesque gangster Big Boy Caprice in Dick Tracy. Frankie…
- Sea of Love (song by Phillips and Khouri)
Robert Plant: Solo career: …and showcased renditions of “Sea of Love” by Phil Phillips and Roy Brown’s “Rockin’ at Midnight.” In 1985 Plant released the experimental album Shaken ’n’ Stirred, featuring the top 40 hit “Little by Little,” which appeared on the Miami Vice episode “Junk Love.” That same year, Plant, Page, and…
- Sea of Poppies (novel by Ghosh)
Amitav Ghosh: With Sea of Poppies (2009)—a novel that describes individuals on the Ibis, a ship on the seas of Southeast Asia carrying indentured labourers and opium—Ghosh turned away from his earlier novels’ formal experimentation and toward a more traditional form of storytelling. Sea of Poppies is the…
- Sea of Steps, Wells Cathedral, A (photograph by Evans)
Frederick H. Evans: …in works such as A Sea of Steps, Wells Cathedral (1903).
- Sea of Trees, The (film by Van Sant [2015])
Gus Van Sant: In The Sea of Trees (2015), Matthew McConaughey portrayed a depressed American professor who travels to Japan, where he plans to take his own life. However, while at Aokigahara, known as “suicide forest,” his plans change after he encounters a man in need of his help.…
- sea orach (plant)
Caryophyllales: Amaranthaceae: Sea orach (A. halimus) is cultivated for its beautiful foliage and silvery gray stems; its flowers are green and rather inconspicuous. Garden orach (A. hortensis) was at one time used as a cure for gout. Another interesting ornamental genus is Bassia, which includes summer cypress…
- sea orange (sponge)
sponge: Size range and diversity of structure and colour: …as in Tethya aurantium, the sea orange; others may be cup- or fan-shaped. Calcareous sponges of the genus Scypha are shaped like tubular sacs, with an opening (osculum) at the tip. Members of the Hexactinellida are erect or cylindrical, with a stalklike base.
- sea otter (mammal)
sea otter, (Enhydra lutris), completely marine otter species of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floating on its back, it opens mollusks by smashing them on a stone balanced on its chest. The large hind feet are broad and flipperlike. The thick lustrous coat is reddish to dark
- sea otter’s cabbage (genus of brown algae)
kelp: Members of the genus Nereocystis, commonly called bull kelps, are annual kelps that grow primarily in deep waters and rapid tideways and can attain lengths up to 40 metres (130 feet). The stalk is tough and whiplike, terminating in a single large bladder containing up to 10 percent carbon…