- secondary phosphate (mineralogy)
phosphate mineral: …crystallized from a liquid; (2) secondary phosphates formed by the alteration of primary phosphates; and (3) fine-grained rock phosphates formed at low temperatures from phosphorus-bearing organic material, primarily underwater.
- secondary pollination (plant reproduction)
Asteraceae: Pollination: …pollination known as plunger, or secondary, pollination. In this system the flowers are such that the stamens form a tube around the immature style, with their pollen surfaces facing inward. As the style elongates within the tube of anthers, it pushes the pollen out on specialized hairs located beneath the…
- secondary porosity (geology)
petroleum: Accumulation in reservoir beds: …those in which they are secondary, or induced. Primary porosity and permeability are dependent on the size, shape, and grading and packing of the sediment grains and also on the manner of their initial consolidation. Secondary porosity and permeability result from postdepositional factors, such as solution, recrystallization, fracturing, weathering during…
- secondary prevention (medicine)
therapeutics: Preventive medicine: Secondary prevention is the early detection of disease or its precursors before symptoms appear, with the aim of preventing or curing it. Examples include regular cervical Papanicolaou test (Pap smear) screening and mammography. Tertiary prevention is an attempt to stop or limit the spread of…
- secondary production (biology)
biosphere: Energy transfers and pyramids: …their own biomass is called secondary productivity. The efficiency at which energy is transferred from one trophic level to another is called ecological efficiency. On average it is estimated that there is only a 10 percent transfer of energy (Figure 2).
- secondary productivity (biology)
biosphere: Energy transfers and pyramids: …their own biomass is called secondary productivity. The efficiency at which energy is transferred from one trophic level to another is called ecological efficiency. On average it is estimated that there is only a 10 percent transfer of energy (Figure 2).
- secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (pathology)
multiple sclerosis: Prevalence and types of multiple sclerosis: …types of MS: relapsing-remitting (RRMS), secondary-progressive (SPMS), primary-progressive (PPMS), and progressive-relapsing (PRMS). About 80–85 percent of patients are diagnosed initially with RRMS. In this form of the disease, onset is usually gradual, and there are alternating intervals of symptom exacerbation and complete symptom remission. In many patients with RRMS, symptoms…
- secondary quality (philosophy)
Cartesianism: The way of ideas and the self: …bodies themselves, and sensible, or secondary, properties—such as colours, tactile feelings, sounds, odours, and tastes—which were thought to exist only in the mind. As Descartes assumes in his theory of light and as Locke later argued, secondary properties of bodies do not exist in bodies themselves but are the result…
- secondary rainbow (atmospheric phenomenon)
rainbow: Occasionally, a secondary bow may be observed, which is considerably less intense than the primary bow and has its colour sequence reversed. The secondary rainbow has an angular radius of about 50° and hence is seen outside of the primary bow. This bow results from light that…
- secondary recovery
petroleum production: Secondary recovery: injection of gas or water: When a large part of the crude oil in a reservoir cannot be recovered by primary means, a method for supplying extra energy must be found. Most reservoirs have some gas in a miscible state, similar to that…
- secondary refining (chemistry)
lead processing: Secondary refining: Secondary lead is lead derived from scrap. Accounting for nearly half of the total output of refined lead, it is a significant factor in the lead market because it is easily melted and refined and rarely becomes contaminated by impurities during service. About…
- secondary revision (psychology)
Sigmund Freud: The interpretation of dreams: …function of the dreamwork is secondary revision, which provides some order and intelligibility to the dream by supplementing its content with narrative coherence. The process of dream interpretation thus reverses the direction of the dreamwork, moving from the level of the conscious recounting of the dream through the preconscious back…
- secondary sail (ship part)
sail: …into groups of primary and secondary sails. Primary sails are those that supply the chief propelling force in ordinary weather; secondary sails are those that aid the primary sails either by helping to balance the ship or by providing additional driving power. There are six classes of primary sales: square…
- secondary salinization (drainage problem)
Asia: Effects of human activity on the soil: …in Asia is that of secondary salinization. That process, which is a result of improper agricultural practices, is widespread in the soils of the arid, semiarid, and subhumid zones of Asia that are irrigated without appropriate drainage. Salt-affected soils account for large areas in Central Asia, South Asia, and Southwest…
- secondary screwworm (larva)
blow fly: …formerly, Callitroga americana) and the secondary screwworm (Callitroga macellaria) develop in decaying flesh in surface wounds of domestic animals and occasionally of humans, and the larvae may attack living tissue as well. Each female deposits about 200 to 400 eggs near an open wound. The larvae burrow into the tissue,…
- secondary sedimentary structure (geology)
sedimentary rock: Sedimentary structures: …modification; these are known as secondary structures. Finally, others like stromatolites and organic burrows and tracks, though they may in fact be primary, penecontemporaneous, or even secondary, may be grouped as a fourth category—organic sedimentary structures.
- secondary sensory ending (anatomy)
human nervous system: Muscle spindles: The secondary ending is supplied by a smaller axon. It has less-dramatic “flower spray” terminals lying primarily upon the smaller intrafusal fibers to one side of the primary endings. The reflex action of the secondary endings is incompletely understood. The plate motor endings lie toward the…
- secondary sex character
secondary sex character, physical feature related to the sex of an organism that emerges during puberty, or the phase of sexual maturity. Examples of secondary sex characters in humans include the development of breasts in females and pigmented facial hair in males. Secondary sex characters are
- secondary sex characteristic
secondary sex character, physical feature related to the sex of an organism that emerges during puberty, or the phase of sexual maturity. Examples of secondary sex characters in humans include the development of breasts in females and pigmented facial hair in males. Secondary sex characters are
- secondary standard (public health)
water supply system: Standards: Secondary standards are guidelines or suggested maximum levels of colour, taste, odour, hardness, corrosiveness, and certain other factors.
- secondary station (navigation)
loran: A secondary station, 200–300 miles (320–480 km) away, automatically transmits its own signals, maintaining a frequency and pulse duration in accord with those of the primary station. The secondary station maintains a fixed time difference between its reception of the primary signal pulse and the sending…
- secondary storage (computing)
computer memory: Auxiliary memory: Auxiliary memory units are among computer peripheral equipment. They trade slower access rates for greater storage capacity and data stability. Auxiliary memory holds programs and data for future use, and, because it is nonvolatile (like ROM), it is used to store inactive programs…
- secondary succession (ecology)
secondary succession, type of ecological succession (the evolution of a biological community’s ecological structure) in which plants and animals recolonize a habitat after a major disturbance—such as a devastating flood, wildfire, landslide, lava flow, or human activity (e.g., farming or road or
- secondary symptom (plant pathology)
plant disease: Symptoms: Secondary symptoms result from the physiological effects of disease on distant tissues and uninvaded organs (e.g., wilting and drooping of cabbage leaves in hot weather resulting from clubroot or root knot). Microscopic disease symptoms are expressions of disease in cell structure or cell arrangement seen…
- secondary tillage (agriculture)
agricultural technology: Secondary tillage: Secondary tillage, to improve the seedbed by increased soil pulverization, to conserve moisture through destruction of weeds, and to cut up crop residues, is accomplished by use of various types of harrows, rollers, or pulverizers, and tools for mulching and fallowing. Used for…
- secondary treatment (sanitation engineering)
wastewater treatment: Wastewater treatment and disposal: …as a first step before secondary treatment. Secondary treatment removes more than 85 percent of both suspended solids and BOD. A minimum level of secondary treatment is usually required in the United States and other developed countries. When more than 85 percent of total solids and BOD must be removed,…
- secondary vascular tissue (plant anatomy)
angiosperm: Dermal tissue: …but by the growth of secondary vascular tissue around the entire circumference of the primary plant body. The secondary vascular tissue arises from the vascular cambium, a layer of meristematic tissue insinuated between the primary xylem and primary phloem (see above Vascular tissue). Secondary xylem develops on the inner side…
- secondary wall (plant anatomy)
cell: Mechanical properties of wall layers: …an additional layer, called the secondary wall. The middle lamella serves as a cementing layer between the primary walls of adjacent cells. The primary wall is the cellulose-containing layer laid down by cells that are dividing and growing. To allow for cell wall expansion during growth, primary walls are thinner…
- secondary wave (seismology)
seismic wave: …recording station faster than the secondary, or S, wave. P waves, also called compressional or longitudinal waves, give the transmitting medium—whether liquid, solid, or gas—a back-and-forth motion in the direction of the path of propagation, thus stretching or compressing the medium as the wave passes any one point in a…
- secondary X ray (physics)
X-ray: Production of X-rays: …result in the emission of secondary X-ray photons.
- secondary xylem (plant tissue)
xylem: …large tree, only the outer secondary xylem (sapwood) serves in water conduction, while the inner part (heartwood) is composed of dead but structurally strong primary xylem. In temperate or cold climates, the age of a tree may be determined by counting the number of annual xylem rings formed at the…
- Secondhand Lions (film by McCaniles [2003])
Robert Duvall: …of his young nephew in Secondhand Lions (2003). Duvall won an Emmy for his role as a rancher who rescues five young Chinese girls sold into prostitution in the Old West in the television miniseries Broken Trail (2006). After taking on supporting roles in several films—including We Own the Night…
- secondhand smoke (tobacco)
secondhand smoke, smoke that is released into the air, from tobacco and non-tobacco products, being either exhaled by the smoker (mainstream smoke) or rising directly from a smoldering product (sidestream smoke). Nonsmokers who are routinely exposed to secondhand smoke are at increased risk for
- Seconds (film by Frankenheimer [1966])
Seconds, American psychological thriller film, released in 1966, that was directed by John Frankenheimer. The film was underrated in its day but gained respect years later and attracted a cult following. Burned-out middle-aged businessman Arthur Hamilton (played by John Randolph) is approached by a
- Secord, Laura (Canadian loyalist)
Laura Secord was a Canadian loyalist in the War of 1812. She moved to Canada with her family in the 1780s. On learning of an impending U.S. attack on the British outpost of Beaver Dams (1813), she walked through U.S. lines to warn the British commander; with the advance information, the British
- Secq, Henri Le (French photographer)
history of photography: Landscape and architectural documentation: …inches (51 by 74 cm), Henri Le Secq, Charles Marville, and Charles Nègre produced remarkable calotypes of the cathedrals of Notre-Dame (Paris), Chartres, and Amiens, as well as other structures that were being restored after centuries of neglect. An establishment was set up in Lille,
- Secret Agent (film by Hitchcock [1936])
Alfred Hitchcock: First international releases: The Man Who Knew Too Much to Jamaica Inn: Secret Agent (1936) offers Carroll, John Gielgud, and Lorre as undercover agents for British intelligence, traipsing through the Swiss Alps on the trail of hostile spies. Based on W. Somerset Maugham’s Ashenden, the film subsumes romantic byplay in favour of plentiful mordant humour.
- Secret Agent, The (novel by Conrad)
The Secret Agent, novel by Joseph Conrad, first published serially in the New York weekly Ridgeway’s in 1906–07 and in book form in 1907. This absurdist story is noted for its adept characterizations, melodramatic irony, and psychological intrigue. Adolf Verloc is a languid eastern European secret
- Secret Agent: A Simple Tale, The (novel by Conrad)
The Secret Agent, novel by Joseph Conrad, first published serially in the New York weekly Ridgeway’s in 1906–07 and in book form in 1907. This absurdist story is noted for its adept characterizations, melodramatic irony, and psychological intrigue. Adolf Verloc is a languid eastern European secret
- Secret Army Organization (Algerian-French history)
Raoul Salan: …Organisation de l’Armée Secrète (OAS; Secret Army Organization), in a campaign of terror against the government of Charles de Gaulle in both France and Algeria before being captured, tried, and imprisoned.
- secret ballot (politics)
Australian ballot, the system of voting in which voters mark their choices in privacy on uniform ballots printed and distributed by the government or designate their choices by some other secret means. Victoria and South Australia were the first states to introduce secrecy of the ballot (1856), and
- secret code
cryptography, Practice of the enciphering and deciphering of messages in secret code in order to render them unintelligible to all but the intended receiver. Cryptography may also refer to the art of cryptanalysis, by which cryptographic codes are broken. Collectively, the science of secure and
- Secret Commonwealth, The (novel by Pullman)
Philip Pullman: …second book in the series, The Secret Commonwealth, appeared in 2019.
- Secret Daughter, The (Australian television series)
Jessica Mauboy: …in the television drama series The Secret Daughter (2016–17), and she released a soundtrack album that included her versions of several cover songs as well as some original songs used in the series. The Secret Daughter became the number-one album on the ARIA Charts. In 2017 she helped create the…
- Secret Diary of a Call Girl (British television series)
Lily James: Early television and stage roles: …in the saucy TV series Secret Diary of a Call Girl (2007–11). Meanwhile, James appeared in a series of stage productions, including an adaptation (2011) of DBC Pierre’s Man Booker Prize-winning novel Vernon God Little at the Young Vic Theatre, London, a 2011 staging of William Shakespeare’s Othello at the…
- Secret du roi, le (French history)
Seven Years’ War: The interests of the European powers: …complicated by the existence of le Secret du roi—a system of private diplomacy conducted by King Louis XV. Unbeknownst to his foreign minister, Louis had established a network of agents throughout Europe with the goal of pursuing personal political objectives that were often at odds with France’s publicly stated policies.…
- Secret Garden, The (film by Munden [2020])
Colin Firth: …adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s The Secret Garden and the drama Supernova, about a gay couple taking a road trip after one of them is diagnosed with dementia. After appearing in the World War II film Operation Mincemeat (2021), Firth starred with Toni Collette in The Staircase (2022), a true-crime…
- Secret Garden, The (novel by Burnett)
The Secret Garden, novel for children written by American author Frances Hodgson Burnett and published in book form in 1911 (having previously been serialized in The American Magazine). The pastoral story of self-healing became a classic of children’s literature and is considered to be among
- Secret History (work by Procopius)
Procopius: The Secret History purports to be a supplement to the Wars, containing explanations and additions that the author could not insert into the latter work for fear of Justinian and Theodora. It is a vehement invective against these sovereigns, with attacks on Belisarius and his wife,…
- Secret History of the Mongols (Mongol chronicle)
Genghis Khan: Historical background: …the exception of the saga-like Secret History of the Mongols (1240?), only non-Mongol sources provide near-contemporary information about the life of Genghis Khan. Almost all writers, even those who were in the Mongol service, have dwelt on the enormous destruction wrought by the Mongol invasions. One Arab historian openly expressed…
- Secret History, The (novel by Tartt)
The Secret History, murder mystery novel by Donna Tartt, published in 1992. Tartt’s first novel, begun when she was still at Bennington College and bought for a reported $450,000 by Knopf after a bidding war, quickly became a bestseller and made its author a reluctant star. The critics were not
- Secret in Their Eyes (film by Ray [2015])
Nicole Kidman: Roles from the early 2010s: …a deputy district attorney in Secret in Their Eyes, a thriller that also starred Julia Roberts as an FBI agent whose daughter is raped and murdered.
- Secret Integration, The (story by Pynchon)
Thomas Pynchon: …and scientific metaphors, and “The Secret Integration” (1964), a story in which Pynchon explores small-town bigotry and racism. The collection Slow Learner (1984) contains “The Secret Integration.”
- Secret Intelligence Service (British government)
MI6, British government agency responsible for the collection, analysis, and appropriate dissemination of foreign intelligence. MI6 is also charged with the conduct of espionage activities outside British territory. It has existed in various forms since the establishment of a secret service in 1569
- Secret Life of Bees, The (film by Prince-Blythewood [2008])
Alicia Keys: Acting and other activities: …The Nanny Diaries (2007), and The Secret Life of Bees (2008). She directed one of five segments that made up the cable TV movie Five (2011), about women living with breast cancer. Keys was also a coach (2016–18) on the television singing competition show The Voice. She hosted the Grammy…
- Secret Life of Pets 2, The (film by Renaud [2019])
Harrison Ford: …voice to the animated comedy The Secret Life of Pets 2 (2019) and appeared in The Call of the Wild (2020), which was based on Jack London’s classic novel. He then costarred with Helen Mirren in the TV series 1923 (2022– ), a prequel to the hugely popular Yellowstone. It…
- Secret Life of Pets, The (film by Renaud [2016])
Louis C.K.: …in the computer-animated children’s comedy The Secret Life of Pets (2016). He had a recurring role on the sitcom Parks and Recreation. C.K. also cocreated and wrote the television show Baskets, which premiered in 2016 and featured Zach Galifianakis as a rodeo clown; created, wrote, directed, and costarred in the…
- Secret Life of Walter Mitty, The (film by Stiller [2013])
Ben Stiller: …in the melancholy and fantastical The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, which was adapted from a short story by James Thurber. The film chronicles the reveries and real-life encounters of a floundering photograph editor. Stiller then evoked the angst of a stultified documentary filmmaker in Noah Baumbach’s dark comedy While…
- Secret Life of Walter Mitty, The (work by Thurber)
James Thurber: …in the short story “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” is Thurber’s quintessential urban man. That story became Thurber’s best-known. It was first published in The New Yorker in 1939 and was collected in My World—and Welcome to It (1942). A film version starring Danny Kaye was released in…
- Secret Life of Walter Mitty, The (film by McLeod [1947])
Norman Z. McLeod: Danny Kaye and Bob Hope: …becomes a professional boxer, and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947), an adaptation of James Thurber’s short story about a daydreaming wallflower. Both films were box-office hits.
- Secret Life of Words, The (film by Coixet [2005])
Tim Robbins: …Worlds (2005), the Spanish-Irish coproduction The Secret Life of Words (2005), the political drama Catch a Fire (2006), the war comedy The Lucky Ones (2008), the superhero movie Green Lantern (2011), the romance mystery Marjorie Prime (2017), and the legal thriller Dark Waters (2019). His television credits from this
- Secret Love, or the Maiden Queen (play by Dryden)
John Dryden: Writing for the stage: …remarkable hit with a tragicomedy, Secret Love, or the Maiden Queen, which appealed particularly to the king. The part of Florimel, a gay and witty maid of honour, was played to perfection by the king’s latest mistress, Nell Gwynn. In Florimel’s rattling exchanges with Celadon, the Restoration aptitude for witty…
- Secret Marriage, The (opera by Cimarosa)
Domenico Cimarosa: …masterpiece, Il matrimonio segreto (The Secret Marriage), one of the highest achievements in comic opera and the work upon which his reputation rests. In 1793 he returned to Italy, where Il matrimonio segreto and many others of his works were enthusiastically received. New works of this period included Le…
- Secret Memoirs…of Several Persons of Quality (work by Manley)
Mary de la Riviere Manley: Her Secret Memoirs . . . of Several Persons of Quality (1709) was a chronicle seeking to expose the private vices of Whig ministers. After its publication she was arrested for libel but escaped punishment.
- Secret of Father Brown, The (work by Chesteron)
G.K. Chesterton: Wisdom… (1914), The Incredulity… (1926), The Secret… (1927), and The Scandal of Father Brown (1935).
- Secret of Hegel, The (work by Stirling)
Hegelianism: Logic and metaphysics problems: Italy, England: …Hutchison Stirling, through his work The Secret of Hegel (1865). Stirling reaffirmed the lineage of thought that Fischer had traced “from Kant to Hegel,” endeavouring to penetrate the dialectic-speculative relationship of unity in multiplicity as the central point of the dialectic. Toward Hegelianism as a unifying experience the ethics scholar…
- Secret of Luca, The (work by Silone)
Ignazio Silone: …Il segreto di Luca (1956; The Secret of Luca, 1958) show Silone’s continued concern with the needs of southern Italy and the complexities of social reform. In Uscita di sicurezza (1965; Emergency Exit, 1968), Silone describes his shifts from Socialism to Communism to Christianity. A play, L’avventura d’un povero cristiano…
- Secret of Roan Inish, The (film by Sayles [1994])
John Sayles: …murder mystery Lone Star (1996); The Secret of Roan Inish (1994); Men with Guns (1997); Limbo (1999); Sunshine State (2002); Casa de Los Babys (2003); Silver City (2004); and Honeydripper (2007).
- Secret of Santa Vittoria, The (film by Kramer [1969])
Stanley Kramer: Directing: …closed out the decade with The Secret of Santa Vittoria (1969), a light comedy about Italian villagers who try to hide a million bottles of wine from occupying Germans during World War II.
- Secret of Susanne, The (opera by Wolf-Ferrari)
Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari: …Il segreto di Susanna (1909; The Secret of Susanne), presented 18th-century styles orchestrated in the manner of the 20th century. Comic points in these operas are delicately underlined. In Sly (1927; based on the opening scenes of The Taming of the Shrew) and in his only tragic opera, I gioielli…
- Secret Pilgrim, The (novel by le Carré)
John le Carré: …Russia House (1989; film 1990); The Secret Pilgrim (1991); The Night Manager (1993; television miniseries 2016); and Our Game (1995), set after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
- secret police (government organization)
secret police, Police established by national governments to maintain political and social control. Generally clandestine, secret police have operated independently of the civil police. Particularly notorious examples were the Nazi Gestapo, the Russian KGB, and the East German Stasi. Secret-police
- Secret River, The (novel by Grenville)
Kate Grenville: …Man Booker Prize nominees with The Secret River (2005). Set in the early 19th century, it traces the life of an impoverished Englishman—William Thornhill, a waterman on the Thames—who is convicted of theft and transported to Australia. Accompanied by his wife, he is eventually pardoned and seeks to settle a…
- Secret Service (United States government agency)
U.S. Secret Service, federal law-enforcement agency within the United States Department of Homeland Security tasked with the criminal investigation of counterfeiting and other financial crimes. After the assassination of Pres. William McKinley in 1901, the agency also assumed the role of chief
- secret society
secret society, any of a large range of membership organizations or associations that utilize secret initiations or other rituals and whose members often employ unique oaths, grips (handshakes), or other signs of recognition. Elements of secrecy may vary from a mere password to elaborate rituals,
- secret speech (Soviet history)
Khrushchev’s secret speech, (February 25, 1956), in Russian history, denunciation of the deceased Soviet leader Joseph Stalin made by Nikita S. Khrushchev to a closed session of the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The speech was the nucleus of a far-reaching
- Secret Superstar (film by Chandan [2017])
Aamir Khan: …Bollywood history; and the musical Secret Superstar (2017). In 2007 Khan made his directorial debut with Taare zameen par (Like Stars on Earth); he also starred in that critically acclaimed drama.
- Secret to Superhuman Strength, The (graphic memoir by Bechdel)
Alison Bechdel: …book in nearly 10 years, The Secret to Superhuman Strength. In the graphic memoir, Bechdel explored her interest in fitness crazes while addressing such issues as body image, interdependence, and mortality.
- Secret Villages (short stories by Dunn)
Douglas Dunn: …also published the short-story collections Secret Villages (1985) and Boyfriends and Girlfriends (1995). He edited a number of anthologies, notably The Oxford Book of Scottish Short Stories (1995) and The Faber Book of Twentieth Century Scottish Poetry (2006). Dunn was created an Officer of the Order of the British Empire…
- secret voting (politics)
Australian ballot, the system of voting in which voters mark their choices in privacy on uniform ballots printed and distributed by the government or designate their choices by some other secret means. Victoria and South Australia were the first states to introduce secrecy of the ballot (1856), and
- Secret Ways, The (film by Karlson [1961])
Phil Karlson: Later films: …leader, and the spy adventure The Secret Ways (1961) starred Richard Widmark as an American mercenary hired to smuggle a famous scholar out of Hungary following the country’s 1956 revolution. Karlson continued to explore new genres with The Young Doctors (1961), a medical soap opera based on a popular novel…
- secret-sharing (cryptology)
cryptology: Secret-sharing: To understand public-key cryptography fully, one must first understand the essentials of one of the basic tools in contemporary cryptology: secret-sharing. There is only one way to design systems whose overall reliability must be greater than that of some critical components—as is the case…
- Secreta fidelium crucis (work by Sanudo)
Crusades: The later Crusades: …1321 Marino Sanudo, in his Secreta fidelium crucis (“Secrets of the Faithful of the Cross”), produced an elaborate plan for an economic blockade of Egypt. But none of these or any other such schemes was put into effect.
- secretaire (furniture)
secretary, a writing desk fitted with drawers, one of which can be pulled out and the front lowered to provide a flat writing surface. There are many variations to this basic design. Early versions, which appeared in France in the first half of the 18th century, were made in one piece divided into
- secrétaire d’état (French government)
France: The growth of a professional bureaucracy: …secretaries the official title of secrétaire d’état, and in 1561 they became full members of the royal council. Closely associated with them and destined to overshadow them in importance in the first half of the 17th century were the superintendents of finance, formally established in 1564, though exercising an already…
- Secretariat (building complex, New Delhi, India)
Delhi: City layout: …the India Gate), to the Central Secretariat buildings and the Presidential House (Rashtrapati Bhavan). This is the main east-west axis; it divides New Delhi into two parts, with a large shopping and business district, Connaught Place, in the north and extensive residential areas in the south.
- Secretariat (racehorse)
Secretariat, (foaled 1970), American racehorse (Thoroughbred) who is widely considered the greatest horse of the second half of the 20th century. A record-breaking money winner, in 1973 he became the ninth winner of the U.S. Triple Crown (the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont
- Secretariat (European organization)
Council of Europe: The Secretariat, with a staff of about 1,000, serves the other three main organizations within the council.
- Secretariat (Chinese government)
China: Central government: …was dominated by a unitary Secretariat. The senior executive official of the Secretariat served the emperor as a chief counselor, or prime minister. Suspected treason on the part of the chief counselor Hu Weiyong in 1380 caused the Hongwu emperor to abolish all executive posts in the Secretariat, thus fragmenting…
- Secretariat (UN)
Secretariat, the organ that administers and coordinates the activities of the United Nations. It is headed by the UN secretary-general. The Secretariat influences the work of the United Nations to a degree much greater than indicated in the UN Charter. This influence largely results from the fact
- Secretariat (film by Wallace [2010])
Fred Thompson: …appearing in such movies as Secretariat (2010), an inspirational drama about the champion racehorse, and Sinister (2012), a horror film. In 2009–11 he hosted a radio program, and in 2010 he published the memoir Teaching the Pig to Dance.
- secretariat (government)
China: Constitutional framework: …Political Bureau itself, and the Secretariat—has varied a great deal, and from 1966 until the late 1970s the Secretariat did not function at all. There is in any case a partial overlap of membership among these organs and between these top CCP bodies and the Standing Committee of the State…
- secretary (furniture)
secretary, a writing desk fitted with drawers, one of which can be pulled out and the front lowered to provide a flat writing surface. There are many variations to this basic design. Early versions, which appeared in France in the first half of the 18th century, were made in one piece divided into
- secretary (government official)
public administration: Early systems: …within these bodies the monarchs’ secretaries, initially given low status within a council, emerged as perhaps the first professional civil servants in Europe in the modern sense. The proximity of the secretaries to the monarch gave them more knowledge of royal intentions, and their relative permanence gave them greater expertise…
- Secretary (film by Shainberg [2002])
James Spader: …starred with Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary, a film based on Mary Gaitskill’s short story from 1988 about a sadomasochistic relationship. The following year he was cast as lawyer Alan Shore in season eight of the legal drama The Practice; he reprised that role in the spin-off Boston Legal. Spader won…
- secretary bird (bird)
secretary bird, (Sagittarius serpentarius), bird of prey (family Sagittaridae) of the dry uplands of Africa, the only living bird of prey of terrestrial habits. It is a long-legged bird, with a slender but powerful body 1.2 m (3.9 feet) long and a 2.1-metre (6.9-foot) wingspread. Twenty black crest
- secretary-general (UN)
secretary-general, the principal administrative officer of the United Nations. See Secretariat. The table provides a historical list of UN
- secretin (hormone)
secretin, a digestive hormone secreted by the wall of the upper part of the small intestine (the duodenum) that regulates gastric acid secretion and pH levels in the duodenum. Secretin is a polypeptide made up of 27 amino acids. It was discovered in 1902 by British physiologists Sir William M.
- secretion (biology)
secretion, in biology, production and release of a useful substance by a gland or cell; also, the substance produced. In addition to the enzymes and hormones that facilitate and regulate complex biochemical processes, body tissues also secrete a variety of substances that provide lubrication and
- secretor system (biology)
secretor system, phenotype based on the presence of soluble antigens on the surfaces of red blood cells and in body fluids, including saliva, semen, sweat, and gastrointestinal juices. The ability to secrete antigens into body fluids is of importance in medicine and genetics because of its