- Tradescantia (plant genus)
spiderwort, (genus Tradescantia), genus of about 75 species of erect to trailing weak-stemmed herbs in the family Commelinaceae. The plants are native to the Americas. Spiderworts are of extremely easy culture, taking root readily from cuttings, and thus are very popular indoor plants. Some are
- Tradescantia × andersoniana (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: T.×andersoniana comprises a complex series of garden hybrids. Also grown in the garden is the common spiderwort, or widow’s tears (T. virginiana), an upright juicy-stemmed plant with white to pink or purple flowers.
- Tradescantia blossfeldiana (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: Flowering inch plant (T. cerinthoides), with leaves green and smooth above and purplish and fuzzy beneath, has purplish hairy blossoms. T.×andersoniana comprises a complex series of garden hybrids. Also grown in the garden is the common spiderwort, or widow’s tears (T. virginiana), an upright juicy-stemmed…
- Tradescantia fluminensis (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: …baskets, especially small-leaf spiderwort (Tradescantia fluminensis) and inch plant (T. zebrina). The latter has an array of colourful-leaved varieties including ‘Purpusii,’ with dark red or bronzy leaves, and ‘Quadricolor,’ with metallic-green leaves striped with green, red, and white. White velvet, or white-gossamer (T. sillamontana), has leaves and stems covered…
- Tradescantia sillamontana (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: White velvet, or white-gossamer (T. sillamontana), has leaves and stems covered with a whitish fuzz. Flowering inch plant (T. cerinthoides), with leaves green and smooth above and purplish and fuzzy beneath, has purplish hairy blossoms. T.×andersoniana comprises a complex series of garden hybrids. Also grown…
- Tradescantia spathecea (plant)
Commelinales: …plant; and Tradescantia spathacea, or Moses-in-the-cradle, grown as a potted plant for its purple-coloured leaves and unusual flowers.
- Tradescantia virginiana (plant)
spiderwort: Major species: …in the garden is the common spiderwort, or widow’s tears (T. virginiana), an upright juicy-stemmed plant with white to pink or purple flowers.
- Tradescantia zebrina (botany)
spiderwort: Major species: small-leaf spiderwort (Tradescantia fluminensis) and inch plant (T. zebrina). The latter has an array of colourful-leaved varieties including ‘Purpusii,’ with dark red or bronzy leaves, and ‘Quadricolor,’ with metallic-green leaves striped with green, red, and white. White velvet, or white-gossamer (T. sillamontana), has leaves and stems covered with a whitish…
- tradewind (air current)
trade wind, persistent wind that blows westward and toward the Equator from the subtropical high-pressure belts toward the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ). It is stronger and more consistent over the oceans than over land and often produces partly cloudy sky conditions, characterized by
- Tradewind Current (ocean current)
Atlantic Ocean: The South Atlantic: …southeast trade winds maintain the South Equatorial Current, which flows toward the west where it divides into two branches: one that continues to the Northern Hemisphere and enters the Caribbean—together with a small amount of water from the North Equatorial Current—as the Guiana (Guyana) Current and one that turns south…
- tradición (Spanish-American literature)
tradición, in Spanish-American literature, short prose sketch in which a historical incident is related in an imaginative and literary style. An evocation of the South American past, the tradición may be set in the precolonial era, the age of discovery and conquest, the prerevolutionary era of
- Tradiciones peruanas (work by Palma)
Ricardo Palma: …chiefly from his charmingly impudent Tradiciones peruanas (1872; “Peruvian Traditions”)—short prose sketches that mingle fact and fancy about the pageantry and intrigue of colonial Peru. His sources were the folktales, legends, and pungent gossip of his elders, in addition to historical bits gleaned from the National Library. The first six…
- trading (economics)
market, a means by which the exchange of goods and services takes place as a result of buyers and sellers being in contact with one another, either directly or through mediating agents or institutions. Markets in the most literal and immediate sense are places in which things are bought and sold.
- Trading crypto? Using it in transactions? Are you mining or staking? Your crypto is taxable
Uncle Sam gets a slice of your digital profits.Do you own—or have you transacted in—crypto assets? Engaging in any cryptocurrency or digital asset transaction can trigger tax consequences—and nobody likes nasty surprises from the IRS. The type of transaction and whether you incur a gain or loss are
- Trading Places (film by Landis [1983])
Jamie Lee Curtis: Acting career: …range, appearing in the comedy Trading Places, which starred Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy. The film was a major box-office hit, and she received a BAFTA Award for her portrayal of a kindhearted prostitute. She later was cast as an aerobics instructor in Perfect (1985), a widely panned romcom that…
- Trading psychology: Mastering your emotions and instincts for successful trading
A trader can be their own worst enemy.Trading is a complex endeavor that involves understanding financial instruments, charts, patterns, market conditions, risk management, and plenty of other factors. But becoming a successful trader requires more than technical knowledge. You also need to develop
- trading ship (water vessel)
ship: 15th-century ships and shipping: The distinction between warship and trading ship might have remained quite abstract had not the theory and tactics of warfare changed. Most medieval wars were either dynastic or religious, and armies and navies were small by modern standards. But beginning with the warfare between the Dutch and the English in…
- trading stamp (retail promotion)
trading stamp, printed stamps given as a premium by retailers to customers and redeemable for cash or merchandise from the trading stamp company when accumulated in specified amounts. Retailers sponsor trading stamp programs as a means of building customer loyalty. The retailer purchases the stamps
- Trading with price action analysis
Explore price territory without a map.They say the map is not the territory. That might sound like a no-brainer. Yet, we’re all prone to occasionally fixating on a map such that we miss the landscape right in front of us. In the financial markets, technical indicators are like maps. They can give
- trading-post band (Native American social group)
American Subarctic peoples: Territorial organization: …these peoples, known as the home guard or trading-post band, usually named for the settlement in which its members traded. These new groups amalgamated the smaller bands and notably expanded the population in which marriage occurred.
- traditio (Roman law)
Roman law: The law of property and possession: Traditio was the simple delivery of possession with the intention of passing ownership and was the method of conveyance of the jus gentium. If A sold and merely delivered a slave to B, under the jus civile, A remained the owner of the slave until…
- traditio (Roman Catholicism)
history of Europe: The bishops of Rome: …benefited from the idea of traditio (Latin: “tradition”), which stated that the authority of the Apostles had been passed down to the Christian higher clergy. They also gradually assumed more and more responsibility for the administration of the city itself. Because Rome was Rome and because the properties of the…
- Traditio apostolica (work attributed to Hippolytus)
church year: Lent: …these ceremonies is in the Apostolic Tradition (c. 200) of St. Hippolytus. At the conclusion all the faithful joined the catechumens (inquirers for instruction) in a strict fast on the Friday and Saturday before Easter. These were the days “when the Bridegroom was taken away” (compare Mark 2:20).
- tradition (society)
monasticism: Improvement of society: …transmission of secular and religious traditions, monasticism played an important role in society, especially in those cultures that favoured cenobite institutions. Monasticism’s function as a propagating or proselytizing agent of the religious tradition, however, is by no means universal nor even regionally uniform. The role of monks and mendicant friars…
- Tradition (Islam)
Hadith, corpus of the sayings or traditions of the Prophet Muhammad, revered by Muslims as a major source of religious law and moral guidance. It comprises many reports of varying length and authenticity. The individual reports are also called hadith (plural: hadiths). The word hadith is derived
- Tradition and the Individual Talent (essay by Eliot)
T.S. Eliot: The Waste Land and criticism: In the essay “Tradition and the Individual Talent,” appearing in his first critical volume, The Sacred Wood (1920), Eliot asserts that tradition, as used by the poet, is not a mere repetition of the work of the immediate past (“novelty is better than repetition,” he said); rather, it…
- tradition criticism (biblical criticism)
tradition criticism, in the study of biblical literature, method of criticism of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and the New Testament that attempts to trace the developmental stages of the oral tradition, from its historical emergence to its literary presentation in scripture. Scholars of the
- tradition-directed personality (sociology)
David Riesman: …the typical individual is “tradition-directed,” his personal values being determined by the traditions of a highly structured society or by power relations within its major divisions, such as classes, professions, castes, or clans. These values are characteristically passed intact from one generation to another. When the population is growing…
- Traditional and Critical Theory (work by Horkheimer)
Max Horkheimer: …of these works was “Traditional and Critical Theory” (1937), in which he contrasted what he considered the socially conformist orientation of traditional political philosophy and social science with the brand of critical Marxism favoured by the institute. According to Horkheimer, the traditional approaches are content to describe existing social…
- traditional ceramics
traditional ceramics, ceramic materials that are derived from common, naturally occurring raw materials such as clay minerals and quartz sand. Through industrial processes that have been practiced in some form for centuries, these materials are made into such familiar products as china tableware,
- traditional Chinese medicine
traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), system of medicine at least 23 centuries old that aims to prevent or heal disease by maintaining or restoring yinyang balance. China has one of the world’s oldest medical systems. Acupuncture and Chinese herbal remedies date back at least 2,200 years, although
- traditional medicine
Central Asian arts: Shamanic ritual: Rituals for curing the sick, guiding the soul of the dead to the netherworld, invoking a deity, or visiting the heavens are performed by the shaman in a state of trance induced by frenetic dancing to the music of a drum or a string instrument. Elaborate, symbolic…
- Traditional Techniques (album by Malkmus)
Pavement: …albums Groove Denied (2019) and Traditional Techniques (2020). Kannberg’s post-Pavement band, Preston School of Industry, proved less interesting than either of Malkmus’s groups.
- Traditionalist Spanish Phalanx of the Juntas of the National Syndicalist Offensive (political organization, Spain)
Falange, extreme nationalist political group founded in Spain in 1933 by José Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of the former dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera. Influenced by Italian fascism, the Falange joined forces (February 1934) with a like-minded group, Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Sindicalista, and
- Traditionalists (demographic group)
Silent Generation, generation of people sandwiched between the “Greatest Generation,” which fought World War II, and the “baby boomers,” the generation born during the surge in births in the United States and other countries in the years immediately following the war. The range of birth years
- Traditions Islamiques, Les (work by al-Bukhārī)
Arabic literature: Belles lettres and narrative prose: …became part of two collections, both called the Ṣaḥīḥ, compiled by al-Bukhārī and Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj, which together are the second most important source of Islamic law and practice after the Qurʾān itself. These reports also became part of the collections of maghāzī (accounts of the Prophet’s raids during his
- Traekfuglene (work by Blicher)
Steen Steensen Blicher: In the “Prelude” to Trækfuglene (1838; “Birds of Passage”), his finest collection of poems, he presents a self-portrait of a caged bird longing for freedom. As his private life worsened, Blicher took to drink.
- Traetta, Tommaso (Italian composer)
Tommaso Traetta was a composer who, with Niccolò Jommelli, was a precursor of Gluck in the 18th-century movement for operatic reform. He studied in Naples and from 1758 to 1765 was music master to Don Felipe, duke of Parma and infante of Spain. He was director of the Conservatorio dell’Ospedaletto,
- Traetta, Tommaso Michele Francesco Saverio (Italian composer)
Tommaso Traetta was a composer who, with Niccolò Jommelli, was a precursor of Gluck in the 18th-century movement for operatic reform. He studied in Naples and from 1758 to 1765 was music master to Don Felipe, duke of Parma and infante of Spain. He was director of the Conservatorio dell’Ospedaletto,
- Trafalgar (British submarine class)
submarine: Attack submarines: …(six vessels, commissioned 1974–81) and Trafalgar class (six vessels, commissioned 1983–91) displaced between 4,000 and 4,500 tons at the surface and were about 87 metres (285 feet) long. They were originally armed only with torpedoes and dive-launched Harpoon missiles, consistent with their Cold War role of hunting and killing enemy…
- Trafalgar Square (plaza, London, United Kingdom)
Trafalgar Square, plaza in the City of Westminster, London, named for Lord Nelson’s naval victory (1805) in the Battle of Trafalgar. Possibly the most famous of all London squares, Trafalgar Square has always been public and has had no garden. Seven major arteries pump automobiles around the great
- Trafalgar, Battle of (European history)
Battle of Trafalgar, (October 21, 1805), naval engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, which established British naval supremacy for more than 100 years; it was fought west of Cape Trafalgar, Spain, between Cádiz and the Strait of Gibraltar. A fleet of 33 ships (18 French and 15 Spanish) under Admiral
- Traffic (British rock group)
Traffic, British rock group of the 1960s and ’70s, known for incorporating lengthy jazzlike improvisation into rock-music structures. Principal members included singer-keyboardist Steve Winwood (b. May 12, 1948, Birmingham, Warwickshire, England), flautist-saxophonist Chris Wood (b. June 24, 1944,
- Traffic (album by Traffic)
Traffic: …half of the songs on Traffic (1968)—a hit in both the United Kingdom and the United States—before leaving again. Shortly thereafter, Winwood (who had already experienced fame as a teenager with the Spencer Davis Group) broke up the band and formed Blind Faith with former Cream members Eric Clapton and…
- Traffic (film by Soderbergh [2000])
Steven Soderbergh: Breakthrough: sex, lies, and videotape; Erin Brockovich; and Traffic: …release of Erin Brockovich and Traffic. The former was based on the true story of a woman (played by Julia Roberts) who discovers that a power company is polluting the groundwater of a small town and aids the residents in a successful lawsuit. Traffic, a pseudo-documentary, depicts the lives of…
- traffic (transportation)
automotive industry: Highway development: …roads for other than local traffic. The general use of automobiles created a strong demand for better highways. The first response was to provide for the improvement of existing road networks. Experience subsequently demonstrated that roads for automobile traffic needed to be differentiated functionally, depending on whether they were intended…
- traffic accident
safety: …in the home as in motor-vehicle accidents, and about twice as many at home as in industrial accidents. On a worldwide basis, motor-vehicle accidents tend to be the primary cause of accidental deaths, followed by those in industry and in the home.
- traffic control
traffic control, supervision of the movement of people, goods, or vehicles to ensure efficiency and safety. Traffic is the movement of people and goods from one location to another. The movement typically occurs along a specific facility or pathway that can be called a guideway. It may be a
- traffic court (law)
court: Courts of limited jurisdiction: Traffic courts also deserve mention because they are so common and affect so many people. They process motor vehicle offenses such as speeding and improper parking. Their procedure is summary and their volume of cases heavy. Contested trials are quite infrequent.
- traffic lane
road: Alignment and profile: A traffic lane is the portion of pavement allocated to a single line of vehicles; it is indicated on the pavement by painted longitudinal lines or embedded markers. The shoulder is a strip of pavement outside an outer lane; it is provided for emergency use by…
- traffic law
road: Legal control: Legal rules governing the movement of traffic are an essential part of order on the road. The rules may be divided into three categories. First are those applying to the vehicle and the driver, such as vehicle and driver registration, vehicle safety equipment and roadworthiness,…
- traffic light
lighthouse: Identification: A traffic signal consists of a vertical column of high-powered red, green, and yellow projector lights that are visible in daylight.
- traffic management (business)
logistics: Traffic management: Planning, arranging, and buying the transportation services needed to move a firm’s freight is known as traffic management. It is probably the most important element of logistics. The traffic manager is concerned with freight consolidation, carrier rates and charges, carrier selection, documentation, tracing…
- traffic safety (condition)
safety, those activities that seek either to minimize or to eliminate hazardous conditions that can cause bodily injury. Safety precautions fall under two principal headings, occupational safety and public safety. Occupational safety is concerned with risks encountered in areas where people work:
- traffic sign
road: Traffic control: Signs advise the driver of special regulations and provide information about hazards and navigation. They are classified as regulatory signs, which provide notice of traffic laws and regulations (e.g., signs for speed limits and for stop, yield or give-way, and no entry); warning signs, which…
- traffic signal
lighthouse: Identification: A traffic signal consists of a vertical column of high-powered red, green, and yellow projector lights that are visible in daylight.
- trafficking in persons (crime)
human trafficking, form of modern-day slavery involving the illegal transport of individuals by force or deception for the purpose of labour, sexual exploitation, or activities in which others benefit financially. Human trafficking is a global problem affecting people of all ages. It is estimated
- Trafficking Victims Protection Act (United States [2000])
human trafficking: Legal response: …specifically addressing human trafficking, the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA). The primary goal of the TVPA is to provide protection and assistance to trafficking victims, to encourage international response, and to provide assistance to foreign countries in drafting antitrafficking programs and legislation. The TVPA seeks to successfully combat…
- Traffics and Discoveries (work by Kipling)
Rudyard Kipling: Legacy of Rudyard Kipling: … (1893), The Day’s Work (1898), Traffics and Discoveries (1904), Actions and Reactions (1909), Debits and Credits (1926), and Limits and Renewals (1932). While his later stories cannot exactly be called better than the earlier ones, they are as good—and they bring a subtler if less dazzling technical proficiency to the…
- Trafford (district, England, United Kingdom)
Trafford, metropolitan borough in the southwestern part of the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester, northwestern England. Most of the borough’s area, including towns such as Sale and Altrincham, lies south of the River Mersey in the historic county of Cheshire. However, the historic county of
- Tragedie of Gorboduc, The (work by Norton and Sackville)
Gorboduc, play by Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville that takes as its subject Gorboduc, a mythical king of ancient Britain. First performed in 1561, it is the earliest English tragic play in blank verse. Norton and Sackville’s play is derived from Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia regum Britanniae
- Tragedies of the Last Age, The (work by Rymer)
Thomas Rymer: In 1678 he wrote The Tragedies of the Last Age, in which he criticized plays by the Jacobean dramatists Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher for not adhering to the principles of classical tragedy. He himself published in the same year a play in rhyming verse, Edgar; or, The English…
- tragedy (literature)
tragedy, branch of drama that treats in a serious and dignified style the sorrowful or terrible events encountered or caused by a heroic individual. By extension the term may be applied to other literary works, such as the novel. Although the word tragedy is often used loosely to describe any sort
- tragedy of blood (drama)
revenge tragedy, drama in which the dominant motive is revenge for a real or imagined injury; it was a favourite form of English tragedy in the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras and found its highest expression in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The revenge drama derived originally from the Roman
- Tragedy of Brady Sims, The (novella by Gaines)
Ernest J. Gaines: The novella The Tragedy of Brady Sims (2017) follows a newspaper journalist as he researches “a human interest story” on a man who killed his son. Several of Gaines’s books were adapted into television movies, most notably The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1974) and A Lesson…
- Tragedy of Dido, Queen of Carthage, The (play by Marlowe and Nashe)
Dido, Queen of Carthage, play in five acts by Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Nashe, published in 1594. The play is based on the story of Dido and Aeneas as told in the fourth book of Virgil’s Aeneid. In the play, Dido, the queen of Carthage, is in love with Aeneas, who has taken refuge in Carthage
- Tragedy of Hoffman, The (work by Chettle)
Henry Chettle: …Day; and the revenge play The Tragedy of Hoffman (printed 1631), which is the only extant play attributed to Chettle alone.
- Tragedy of Ines de Castro, The (work by Ferreira)
António Ferreira: His tragedy Castro (written c. 1558) was one of the first in modern European literature. It takes as its subject the death of the Portuguese national heroine Inês de Castro, who was murdered by Afonso IV—the father of Dom Pedro, her lover—for reasons of state, a theme…
- Tragedy of King Christophe, The (work by Césaire)
Aimé Césaire: …Tragédie du Roi Christophe (1963; The Tragedy of King Christophe), a drama of decolonization in 19th-century Haiti, and Une Saison au Congo (1966; A Season in the Congo), the epic of the 1960 Congo rebellion and of the assassination of the Congolese political leader Patrice Lumumba. Both depict the fate…
- Tragedy of King Lear, The (play by Shakespeare)
King Lear, tragedy in five acts by William Shakespeare, written in 1605–06 and published in a quarto edition in 1608, evidently based on Shakespeare’s unrevised working papers. The text of the First Folio of 1623 often differs markedly from the quarto text and seemingly represents a theatrical
- Tragedy of Macbeth, The (film by Coen [2021])
Coen brothers: …his first solo directorial effort, The Tragedy of Macbeth, an adaptation of William Shakespeare’s play; he was also credited with writing it for the screen. The acclaimed drama starred Denzel Washington and McDormand.
- Tragedy of Man, The (work by Madách)
Imre Madách: …drama Az ember tragediája (1861; The Tragedy of Man). He is often considered Hungary’s greatest philosophical poet.
- Tragedy of Pudd’nhead Wilson, and the Comedy of Those Extraordinary Twins, The (novel by Twain)
Pudd’nhead Wilson, novel by Mark Twain, originally published as Pudd’nhead Wilson, a Tale (1894). A story about miscegenation in the antebellum South, the book is noted for its grim humour and its reflections on racism and responsibility. Also notable are the ironic epigraphs from a fictional
- tragedy of the commons
tragedy of the commons, concept highlighting the conflict between individual and collective rationality. The idea of the tragedy of the commons was made popular by the American ecologist Garrett Hardin, who used the analogy of ranchers grazing their animals on a common field. When the field is not
- Tragedy of Zara, The (play by Voltaire)
Voltaire: Return to France: Zaïre, however, was a resounding success. The play, in which the sultan Orosmane, deceived by an ambiguous letter, stabs his prisoner, the devoted Christian-born Zaïre, in a fit of jealousy, captivated the public with its exotic subject.
- tragelaphine antelope (mammal tribe)
antelope: Classification: Tribe Tragelaphini (spiral-horned antelopes, including kudus, elands, nyalas, and bushbucks) Tribe Boselaphini (includes the nilgai and the four-horned antelope)
- Tragelaphini (mammal tribe)
antelope: Classification: Tribe Tragelaphini (spiral-horned antelopes, including kudus, elands, nyalas, and bushbucks) Tribe Boselaphini (includes the nilgai and the four-horned antelope)
- Tragelaphus angasii (mammal)
nyala, (Tragelaphus angasii), slender antelope of southeastern Africa, a member of the spiral-horned antelope tribe Tragelaphini (family Bovidae), which also includes the kudu and eland. The nyala is notable for its extreme gender differences (sexual dimorphism) and specialized habitat preferences
- Tragelaphus buxtoni (mammal)
nyala: The related mountain nyala (Tragelaphus buxtoni), endemic to the Ethiopian highlands east of the Rift Valley and discovered only in 1908, is much more like a greater kudu than another nyala in size, proportions, and social organization. Both sexes are gray-brown with faded stripes but have two…
- Tragelaphus eurycerus (antelope)
bongo, (Tragelaphus eurycerus), the largest, most colourful, and most sociable of the African forest antelopes, belonging to the spiral-horned antelope tribe Tragelaphini (family Bovidae). It is also the third heaviest antelope, after the related giant eland and common eland. The bongo has short,
- Tragelaphus eurycerus eurycerus (mammal)
bongo: The lowland bongo (T. eurycerus eurycerus) inhabits lowland rainforests from western Africa and the Congo basin to southwestern Sudan. The lowland bongo’s habitat could be more accurately described as a forest-savanna mosaic, as it depends on openings where sunlight penetrates to the forest floor. Two herds…
- Tragelaphus eurycerus isaaci (mammal)
bongo: The larger mountain bongo (Tragelaphus eurycerus isaaci) is a relict of interglacial epochs when rainforest extended to the Indian Ocean; it occurs in pockets of protected mountain forest between 2,000 and 3,000 metres (7,000 and 10,000 feet) above sea level in the Kenya highlands. Mountain bongos frequent…
- Tragelaphus imberbis (mammal)
kudu: The lesser kudu stands only about 100 cm (39 inches) high and weighs 92–108 kg (202–238 pounds). Females and young have a bright rufous coat, which darkens to slate-gray in males. The lesser kudu is vividly marked with 11–15 vertical white stripes, broad chest and throat…
- Tragelaphus scriptus (mammal)
bushbuck, (Tragelaphus scriptus), African antelope of the family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla), found in sub-Saharan forests and brush. It is nocturnal, shy, and usually solitary. The bushbuck stands about 1 m (39 inches) at the shoulder and ranges in colour from reddish brown to almost black,
- Tragelaphus spekei (mammal)
sitatunga, (Tragelaphus spekei), the most aquatic antelope, with elongated, splayed hooves and flexible foot joints that enable it to traverse boggy ground. Though common, even abundant, in African swamps and permanent marshes, the sitatunga is also one of the most secretive and least known of
- Tragelaphus strepsiceros (mammal)
kudu: The very large greater kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros) is common in southern African wildlife reserves. The svelte lesser kudu (T. imberbis) is an elusive dweller in the arid lowland thornbush of northeast and East Africa. Both species have corkscrew horns (in males only), depend on cover for food and…
- Tragic (work by Schubert)
Franz Schubert: Early life and career: There were two more symphonies: No. 4 in C Minor, which Schubert himself named the Tragic (1816), and the popular No. 5 in B-flat Major (1816). A fourth mass, in C major, was composed in 1816. The year 1817 is notable for the beginning of his masterly series of piano…
- Tragic Death of the Sons of Usnech, The (Irish Gaelic literature)
The Tragic Death of the Sons of Usnech, in the Ulster cycle of Irish heroic myths, the love story of the ill-fated Deirdre and Noísi. First composed in the 8th or 9th century, the story was revised and combined in the 15th century with The Tragic Death of the Children of Tuireann (Oidheadh Chloinne
- tragic flaw (drama)
hamartia, (hamartia from Greek hamartanein, “to err”), inherent defect or shortcoming in the hero of a tragedy, who is in other respects a superior being favoured by fortune. Aristotle introduced the term casually in the Poetics in describing the tragic hero as a man of noble rank and nature whose
- Tragic History of the Sea, The (work by Mendes Pinto)
Portuguese literature: The literature of discovery and conquest: in part as The Tragic History of the Sea) vividly relates the experience of travel during the preceding centuries; it is a compilation of published narratives—stories told by survivors or based on their accounts—that describe some of the notable disasters that befell Portuguese ships in the 16th and…
- Tragic Kingdom (album by No Doubt)
Gwen Stefani: …its third album, the chart-topping Tragic Kingdom (1995), which included the hit singles “Just a Girl,” “Spiderwebs,” and “Don’t Speak.” As the band’s popularity grew, the spotlight was very much on the stylish Stefani, who became almost instantly identifiable by her fire-engine red lips and platinum blonde hair and who…
- Tragic Muse, The (novel by James)
The Tragic Muse, novel by Henry James, published serially in The Atlantic Monthly from 1889 to 1890 and in book form in 1890. This study of the conflict between the demands of art and those of the “real world” is set in London and Paris in the 1880s. Nicholas Dormer, an Englishman, gives up a
- Tragic Sense of Life in Men and Peoples, The (work by Unamuno)
Miguel de Unamuno: …y en los pueblos (1913; The Tragic Sense of Life in Men and Peoples), in which he stressed the vital role spiritual anxiety plays in driving man to live the fullest possible life. This and other themes were explored in La agonía del cristianismo (1925; The Agony of Christianity).
- Tragic Symphony (symphony by Mahler)
Gustav Mahler: Musical works: middle period: …work Mahler regarded as his Tragic Symphony—the four-movement No. 6 in A Minor (1904), which moves out of darkness only with difficulty, and then back into total night. From these three symphonies onward, he ceased to adapt his songs as whole sections or movements, but in each he introduced subtle…
- Tragic Week of 1909 (Spanish history)
Spain: Opposition movements, 1898–1923: …coastal possessions, set off the Tragic Week of 1909 in Barcelona. Public order collapsed, and anarchists and Radical Republicans burned churches and convents. Maura was driven from office because Alfonso XIII (who ruled in his own right from 1902) accepted the Liberals’ estimate of the harm Maura’s firm repression would…
- Tragic Zeus (work by Lucian)
Lucian: … and in Zeus Confuted and Tragic Zeus the leader of the gods is powerless to intervene on earth and prove his omnipotence to coldly skeptical Cynic and Epicurean philosophers. Lucian’s interest in philosophy was basically superficial, however, and his attitude to philosophical studies is best seen in Banquet, where, after…
- Tragical Death of A, Apple Pye Who was Cut in Pieces and Eat by Twenty-Five Gentlemen with whom All Little People Ought to be Very well acquainted, The (English chapbook)
alphabet rhyme: …chapbooks under the imposing name The Tragical Death of A, Apple Pye Who was Cut in Pieces and Eat by Twenty-Five Gentlemen with whom All Little People Ought to be Very well acquainted. It begins:
- Tragicall History of D. Faustus, The (play by Marlowe)
Doctor Faustus, tragedy in five acts by Christopher Marlowe, published in 1604 but first performed a decade or so earlier. Marlowe’s play followed by only a few years the first translation into English of the medieval legend on which the play is based. In Doctor Faustus Marlowe retells the story of
- Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet, The (poetry by Broke)
Arthur Brooke: …English poet and author of The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet (1562), the poem on which Shakespeare based Romeo and Juliet. It is written in rhymed verse and was taken from the French translation of one of the stories in Matteo Bandello’s Novelle (1554–73; French trans., 1564–82). Brooke altered…
- Tragically Hip, the (Canadian band)
the Tragically Hip, rock band from Kingston, Ontario, that was the most consistently successful Canadian recording and touring group of the 1990s, filling arenas and headlining festivals while selling more than six million records in a country of approximately 38 million people. Three of their