- Wiggins, Sir Bradley Marc (British cyclist)
Bradley Wiggins is a Belgian-born British cyclist who was the first rider from the United Kingdom to win the Tour de France (2012). Wiggins was the son of an Australian track cyclist. He moved to London with his English mother at the age of two following his parents’ divorce. He started racing on
- wiggler indicator (measurement instrument)
gauge: …pointer on a graduated dial; wiggler indicators, which are used by machinists to centre or align work in machine tools; comparators, or visual gauges; and air gauges, which are used to gauge holes of various types. Very precise measurements may also be obtained by the use of light-wave interference, but…
- Wiggles, The (album by the Wiggles)
the Wiggles: …band released its debut album, The Wiggles, and it eventually became one of the best-selling Australian albums of all time. The following year Wilcher left the group.
- Wiggles, the (Australian band)
the Wiggles, Australian quartet that is one of the most popular music acts in the English-speaking world, known for writing and performing music specifically aimed at preschool children. To many of their young listeners, the individual Wiggles are identified by the colour of their long-sleeved
- Wigglesworth, Michael (American theologian and writer)
Michael Wigglesworth was a British-American clergyman, physician, and author of rhymed treatises expounding Puritan doctrines. Wigglesworth emigrated to America in 1638 with his family and settled in New Haven. In 1651 he graduated from Harvard College, where he was a tutor and a fellow from 1652
- Wigglesworth, Sir Vincent (British entomologist)
Sir Vincent Wigglesworth was an English entomologist, noted for his contribution to the study of insect physiology. His investigations of the living insect body and its tissues and organs revealed much about the dynamic complexity of individual insects and their interactions with the environment.
- Wiggo (British cyclist)
Bradley Wiggins is a Belgian-born British cyclist who was the first rider from the United Kingdom to win the Tour de France (2012). Wiggins was the son of an Australian track cyclist. He moved to London with his English mother at the age of two following his parents’ divorce. He started racing on
- Wight, Isle of (island and unitary authority, England, United Kingdom)
Isle of Wight, island, unitary authority, and geographic county, part of the historic county of Hampshire. It lies off the south coast of England, in the English Channel. The island is separated from the mainland by a deep strait known as The Solent. The Isle of Wight is diamond-shaped and extends
- Wight, James Alfred (British veterinarian and writer)
James Herriot was a British veterinarian and writer. Born James Alfred Wight, he joined the practice of two veterinarian brothers working in the Yorkshire Dales and at age 50 was persuaded by his wife to write down his collection of anecdotes. His humorous fictionalized reminiscences were published
- Wight, Peter B. (American architect)
Western architecture: United States: …of the Ruskinian aesthetic was Peter B. Wight, architect of the National Academy of Design, New York City (1863–65). There the Venetian Gothic mode came into its own. Wight and Potter—and, later, Potter’s brother William Appleton—were responsible for a number of collegiate and public buildings in this harsh, polychrome Gothic…
- Wightman Cup (tennis trophy)
Wightman Cup, trophy awarded the winner of women’s tennis matches held annually from 1923 to 1989 between British and American teams. A competition comprised five singles and two doubles matches. The cup itself was donated in 1923 by Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman (q.v.). The first contest, at Forest
- Wightman, Hazel Hotchkiss (American athlete)
Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman was an American tennis player who dominated women’s competition before World War I. Known as the “queen mother of American tennis,” she was instrumental in organizing the Wightman Cup match between British and American women’s teams. The winner of 45 U.S. titles, Hazel
- Wigman, Mary (German dancer)
Mary Wigman was a German dancer, a pioneer of the modern expressive dance as developed in central Europe. A pupil of Émile Jaques-Dalcroze and Rudolf Laban, she subsequently formulated her own theories of movement, often dancing without music or to percussion only. Although she made her debut as a
- Wigmore on Evidence (work by Wigmore)
John Henry Wigmore: …scholar and teacher whose 10-volume Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law (1904–05), usually called Wigmore on Evidence, is generally regarded as one of the world’s great books on law.
- Wigmore, John Henry (American legal scholar)
John Henry Wigmore was an American legal scholar and teacher whose 10-volume Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law (1904–05), usually called Wigmore on Evidence, is generally regarded as one of the world’s great books on law. A graduate of Harvard University,
- Wigner effect (physics)
radiation: Neutrons: The phenomenon, known as the Wigner effect and sometimes as a “knock on” process, was actually discovered in 1943 by the American chemists Milton Burton and T.J. Neubert and found to have profound influences on graphite and other materials.
- Wigner, Eugene (American physicist)
Eugene Wigner was a Hungarian-born American physicist, joint winner, with J. Hans D. Jensen of West Germany and Maria Goeppert Mayer of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1963. He received the prize for his many contributions to nuclear physics, which include his formulation of
- Wigner, Eugene Paul (American physicist)
Eugene Wigner was a Hungarian-born American physicist, joint winner, with J. Hans D. Jensen of West Germany and Maria Goeppert Mayer of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1963. He received the prize for his many contributions to nuclear physics, which include his formulation of
- Wigner, Jeno Pal (American physicist)
Eugene Wigner was a Hungarian-born American physicist, joint winner, with J. Hans D. Jensen of West Germany and Maria Goeppert Mayer of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1963. He received the prize for his many contributions to nuclear physics, which include his formulation of
- Wigry National Park (park, Poland)
Podlaskie: Geography: …an abundance of wildlife, and Wigry National Park features a popular canoeing route along the Czarna Hańcza River as well as a 17th-century Camaldolese monastery. The main tourist centres of the province are Augustów, Wigry, and Sejny, while other attractions reflect its ethnic diversity. The Holy Mountain outside Grabarka is…
- Wigry, Lake (lake, Poland)
Podlaskie: Geography: …lake in the province is Lake Wigry (8.5 square miles [22 square km]). Lake Hańcza is the deepest of all Polish lakes (354 feet [108 metres]). The main rivers are the Bug, Narew, and Biebrza. About one-third of the province is forested. Podlaskie is the coolest region of Poland, with…
- Wigstock: The Movie (film by Shils [1995])
RuPaul: …he appeared in the documentary Wigstock: The Movie, published an autobiography, Lettin It All Hang Out, and signed a contract with M.A.C. Cosmetics, becoming the first drag queen to become a spokesmodel for a major cosmetics company.
- Wigston (district, England, United Kingdom)
Oadby and Wigston, borough (district), administrative and historic county of Leicestershire, England. Both Oadby and Wigston, formerly villages lying outside the city of Leicester, have been engulfed by the outward spread of the city’s suburbs. They lie to the southeast and south, respectively, of
- Wigtown (former county, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Wigtownshire, historic county at the southwestern tip of Scotland, facing the Irish Sea to the south and the North Channel to the west. It is the western portion of the historic region of Galloway and lies entirely within the Dumfries and Galloway council area. Hill forts and lake dwellings
- Wigtownshire (former county, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Wigtownshire, historic county at the southwestern tip of Scotland, facing the Irish Sea to the south and the North Channel to the west. It is the western portion of the historic region of Galloway and lies entirely within the Dumfries and Galloway council area. Hill forts and lake dwellings
- wigwam (Native American dwelling)
wickiup, indigenous North American dwelling characteristic of many Northeast Indian peoples and in more limited use in the Plains, Great Basin, Plateau, and California culture areas. The wickiup was constructed of tall saplings driven into the ground, bent over, and tied together near the top. This
- wihangin (Korean literature)
Korean literature: Later Chosŏn: 1598–1894: …village residents—collectively known as the wihangin. The wihangin, among them Chŏng Nae-Gyo, Chang Hon, and Cho Su-Sam, formed fellowships of poets and composed poetry with great enthusiasm. They referred to their poems as p’ungyo (“poems of the people,” also called talk songs) and published a number of collections of these…
- Wihtred (king of Kent)
Wihtred was a king of Kent who came to the throne in 691 or 692 after a period of anarchy. Wihtred was not sole king until 692 at the earliest, for Bede, the 8th-century historian, states that Swaefred, king of the East Saxons, was joint ruler in this year. Wihtred, however, seems to have become
- Wii (electronic game console)
Nintendo Wii, electronic game console, released by the Nintendo Company of Japan in 2006. Instead of directly competing with rival video consoles, such as the Microsoft Corporation’s Xbox 360 and the Sony Corporation’s PlayStation 3 (PS3), in terms of processing power and graphics display, Nintendo
- Wii Fit (electronic fitness game)
Wii Fit, interactive electronic fitness game released in 2007 by the Nintendo Company Ltd. for their Wii gaming system. Wii Fit consists of software along with a balance board that enables users to do an extensive series of yoga exercises. For more aggressive fitness enthusiasts, Wii Fit offers
- Wii Sports (electronic game)
Wii Sports, electronic game created by Japanese designer Eguchi Katsuya and produced by Nintendo for the 2006 launch of the Nintendo Wii video game console. Wii Sports features five individual games that showcase the Wii’s unique motion-sensitive controller, which translates a player’s actual
- Wiig, Kristen (American actress and comedian)
Melissa McCarthy: …supernatural creatures, featured McCarthy alongside Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon, and Leslie Jones. The film was noted for casting the titular team of wisecracking enforcers as women. (The ghostbusters had been portrayed by men in the original.)
- wiindigoo (Algonkian mythology)
wendigo, a mythological cannibalistic monster in the spiritual tradition of North American Algonquian-speaking tribes. It is associated with winter and described as either a fearsome beast that stalks and eats humans or as a spirit that possesses humans, causing them to turn into cannibals. There
- wiitiko (Algonkian mythology)
wendigo, a mythological cannibalistic monster in the spiritual tradition of North American Algonquian-speaking tribes. It is associated with winter and described as either a fearsome beast that stalks and eats humans or as a spirit that possesses humans, causing them to turn into cannibals. There
- Wiitiko psychosis
American Subarctic peoples: Religious beliefs: “Wiitiko psychosis” refers to a condition in which an individual would be seized by the obsessive idea that he was turning into a cannibal with a compulsive craving for human flesh.
- Wijdenbosch, Jules (president of Suriname)
Suriname: Suriname since independence: …as the real power behind Jules Wijdenbosch, who was elected president of the country in 1996. In 1997 the government of the Netherlands issued an arrest warrant for Bouterse on charges of drug smuggling, but Suriname failed to extradite him; in 1999 he was convicted in absentia and sentenced to…
- Wika-K’iraw (Inca leader)
pre-Columbian civilizations: The beginnings of external expansion: His brothers Vicaquirao (Wika-k’iraw) and Apo Mayta (’Apu Mayta) were able military leaders and incorporated lands south and east of Cuzco into the Inca domain. Yahuar Huacac’s principal wife was apparently an Ayarmaca, indicating that at that time sister marriage was not the rule (see below Civil…
- wiki (Web site)
wiki, website that can be modified or contributed to by users. Wikis can be dated to 1995, when American computer programmer Ward Cunningham created a new collaborative technology for organizing information on websites. Using a Hawaiian term meaning “quick,” he called this new software WikiWikiWeb,
- Wikia, Inc. (American company)
Jimmy Wales: …with Angela Beesley the for-profit Wikia, Inc.
- WikiLeaks (media organization and Web site)
WikiLeaks, media organization and website that functioned as a clearinghouse for classified or otherwise privileged information. WikiLeaks was founded in 2006 by Australian computer programmer and activist Julian Assange. Assange, a noted computer hacker, pleaded guilty to a host of cybercrime
- WikiLeaks Party (political party, Australia)
WikiLeaks: Edward Snowden and the Sony Pictures hack: …July 2013 Assange launched the WikiLeaks Party and announced his candidacy for a seat in the Australian Senate. Promoting a platform of “transparency, accountability, and justice,” the party fielded a total of seven candidates in Senate races in the Australian states of Victoria, New South Wales, and Western Australia. An…
- Wikimedia Foundation (nonprofit organization)
Wikipedia: …is overseen by the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation. Wikipedia uses a collaborative software known as wiki that facilitates the creation and development of articles. Although some highly publicized problems have called attention to Wikipedia’s editorial process, they have done little to dampen public use of the resource, which is one of…
- Wikipedia (encyclopaedia)
Wikipedia, free Internet-based encyclopaedia, started in 2001, that operates under an open-source management style. It is overseen by the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation. Wikipedia uses a collaborative software known as wiki that facilitates the creation and development of articles. Although some
- Wikipedia Scanner (computer science)
Wikipedia: Issues and controversies: …Institute of Technology, to create Wikipedia Scanner, or WikiScanner, in 2007. By correlating the IP addresses attached to every Wikipedia edit with their owners, Griffith constructed a database that he made available on the Web for anyone to search through. He and other researchers quickly discovered that editing Wikipedia content…
- WikiScanner (computer science)
Wikipedia: Issues and controversies: …Institute of Technology, to create Wikipedia Scanner, or WikiScanner, in 2007. By correlating the IP addresses attached to every Wikipedia edit with their owners, Griffith constructed a database that he made available on the Web for anyone to search through. He and other researchers quickly discovered that editing Wikipedia content…
- WikiWikiWeb (Web site)
wiki, website that can be modified or contributed to by users. Wikis can be dated to 1995, when American computer programmer Ward Cunningham created a new collaborative technology for organizing information on websites. Using a Hawaiian term meaning “quick,” he called this new software WikiWikiWeb,
- Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, Emmo Friedrich Richard Ulrich von (German scholar)
Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff was a German classical scholar and teacher whose studies advanced knowledge in the historical sciences of metrics, epigraphy, papyrology, topography, and textual criticism. Educated at the universities of Bonn and Berlin, Wilamowitz-Moellendorff served in the
- Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, Ulrich von (German scholar)
Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff was a German classical scholar and teacher whose studies advanced knowledge in the historical sciences of metrics, epigraphy, papyrology, topography, and textual criticism. Educated at the universities of Bonn and Berlin, Wilamowitz-Moellendorff served in the
- Wilander, Mats (Swedish athlete)
tennis: The open era: …and 1988 French Open champion Mats Wilander. Another European country with a long tennis tradition that reached new heights in the 1980s was Czechoslovakia. One of the foremost players and coaches in Europe in the 1920s and ’30s was the Czech Karel Kozeluh. Czechoslovakia produced men’s Wimbledon champions Jaroslav Drobny…
- wilāyah (North African government)
Tunisia: Local government: …areas called wilāyāt (provinces; singular wilāyah), each of which is headed by a wālī (governor). Each province is designated by the name of its chief town and is in turn subdivided into numerous units called muʿtamadiyyāt (delegations), whose number varies according to province size. Delegations are administered by a muʿtamad…
- Wilberforce University (university, Wilberforce, Ohio, United States)
Wilberforce University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Wilberforce, Ohio, U.S. It is affiliated with the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Wilberforce, the oldest historically black private college in the United States, is a liberal arts university offering undergraduate
- Wilberforce, Samuel (English bishop)
Samuel Wilberforce was a British cleric, an Anglican prelate and educator and a defender of orthodoxy, who typified the ideal bishop of the Victorian era. He was a major figure in the preservation of the Oxford Movement, which sought to reintroduce 17th-century High Church ideals into the Church of
- Wilberforce, William (British politician)
William Wilberforce was a British politician and philanthropist who from 1787 was prominent in the struggle to abolish the slave trade and then to abolish slavery itself in British overseas possessions. He studied at St. John’s College at the University of Cambridge, where he became a close friend
- Wilbrord of Utrecht (Anglo-Saxon missionary)
Saint Willibrord ; feast day November 7) was an Anglo-Saxon bishop and missionary, apostle of Friesland, and a patron saint of the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The son of the hermit St. Wilgis, Willibrord was sent by him to the Benedictine monastery of Ripon, England, under Abbot St. Wilfrid of
- Wilbrord, Saint (Anglo-Saxon missionary)
Saint Willibrord ; feast day November 7) was an Anglo-Saxon bishop and missionary, apostle of Friesland, and a patron saint of the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The son of the hermit St. Wilgis, Willibrord was sent by him to the Benedictine monastery of Ripon, England, under Abbot St. Wilfrid of
- Wilbrord, Saint (Anglo-Saxon missionary)
Saint Willibrord ; feast day November 7) was an Anglo-Saxon bishop and missionary, apostle of Friesland, and a patron saint of the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The son of the hermit St. Wilgis, Willibrord was sent by him to the Benedictine monastery of Ripon, England, under Abbot St. Wilfrid of
- Wilbur Cross Parkway (highway, Connecticut, United States)
Merritt Parkway: … and in Connecticut is the Wilbur Cross Parkway.
- Wilbur, Earl Morse (American theologian)
Unitarianism and Universalism: Teachings: The Unitarian theologian Earl Morse Wilbur (1866–1956) advanced the thesis, now widely accepted, that the history of Unitarianism in Poland, Transylvania, England, and America gains unity from certain common themes. These themes are freedom of religious thought rather than required agreement with creeds or confessions, reliance not on…
- Wilbur, John (American religious leader)
Friends United Meeting: …this movement was led by John Wilbur, a Friends minister who stressed traditional Friends teachings and mode of worship. This reaction led to further schism and the forming of Wilburite yearly meetings.
- Wilbur, Richard (American poet)
Richard Wilbur was an American poet associated with the New Formalist movement. Wilbur was educated at Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, and Harvard University, where he studied literature. He fought in Europe during World War II and earned a master’s degree from Harvard in 1947. With The
- Wilbur, Richard Purdy (American poet)
Richard Wilbur was an American poet associated with the New Formalist movement. Wilbur was educated at Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, and Harvard University, where he studied literature. He fought in Europe during World War II and earned a master’s degree from Harvard in 1947. With The
- Wilburite (religious group)
Friends United Meeting: …schism and the forming of Wilburite yearly meetings.
- Wilby Conspiracy, The (film by Nelson [1975])
Ralph Nelson: Nelson reteamed with Poitier on The Wilby Conspiracy (1975), which was set in South Africa during the apartheid era. Poitier portrayed an activist who joins up with a wanted Englishman as both try to evade law officers; while the film briefly touched on social issues, it was basically a chase…
- Wilbye, John (English composer)
John Wilbye was an English composer, one of the finest madrigalists of his time. Wilbye was the son of a successful farmer and landowner. His musical abilities early attracted the notice of the local gentry. Sir Thomas Kytson of nearby Hengrave Hall, Bury St. Edmunds, was especially interested, and
- Wilcher, Phillip (Australian composer)
the Wiggles: …Cook, and classical music composer Phillip Wilcher for the project.
- Wilcher, Tom (fictional character)
Tom Wilcher, fictional character, protagonist and narrator of the novel To Be a Pilgrim (1942), the second novel in a trilogy by Joyce
- Wilco (American band)
Wilco, American band led by singer-songwriter Jeff Tweedy that spun off from the group Uncle Tupelo in the mid-1990s and evolved from its alternative country roots into one of the most successful and multifaceted rock groups of its time. The original members were Jeff Tweedy (in full Jeffrey Scott
- Wilco (The Album) (album by Wilco)
Wilco: … (2007) and the career-spanning compendium Wilco (The Album), released in 2009. On a track from the latter, “Wilco (The Song),” Tweedy even demonstrated a sense of humour, singing, “Wilco will love you, baby.”
- Wilcox, Ella Wheeler (American poet and journalist)
Ella Wheeler Wilcox was an American poet and journalist who is perhaps best remembered for verse tinged with an eroticism that, while rather oblique, was still unconventional for her time. Ella Wheeler from an early age was an avid reader of popular literature, especially the novels of E.D.E.N.
- Wilcox, Fred M. (American director)
Forbidden Planet: Production notes and credits:
- Wilcox, Harvey (American Prohibitionist)
Hollywood: …real-estate subdivision in 1887 by Harvey Wilcox, a prohibitionist from Kansas who envisioned a community based on his sober religious principles. Real-estate magnate H.J. Whitley, known as the “Father of Hollywood,” subsequently transformed Hollywood into a wealthy and popular residential area. At the turn of the 20th century, Whitley was…
- Wilcox, Marjorie (British actress)
Dame Anna Neagle was a British actress and dancer, known for her work in stage plays, musicals, and films. Her motion-picture career was guided by her husband, producer-director Herbert Wilcox. Neagle debuted as a dancer in The Wonder Tales (London, 1917). Her first real lead was as a juvenile with
- Wilcox, Thomas (British clergyman)
Admonition to Parliament: …London clergymen John Field and Thomas Wilcox, that demanded that Queen Elizabeth I restore the “purity” of New Testament worship in the Church of England and eliminate the remaining Roman Catholic elements and practices from the Church of England. Reflecting wide Presbyterian influence among Puritans, the admonition advocated greater direct…
- Wilcoxon signed-rank test (statistics)
statistics: Nonparametric methods: The Wilcoxon signed-rank test can be used to test hypotheses about two populations. In collecting data for this test, each element or experimental unit in the sample must generate two paired or matched data values, one from population 1 and one from population 2. Differences between…
- Wilcy (people)
Polab: …principalities, the Obodrites and the Lutycy, or Wilcy. The many Lutycy tribes, of which the Ratarowie and Stodoranie (Hawolanie) were the most important, were subdued by Lothar of Saxony and Albert the Bear of Brandenburg in the 12th century. The other Polab groups were also subjugated by the Germans in…
- Wilczek, Frank (American physicist)
Frank Wilczek is an American physicist who, with David J. Gross and H. David Politzer, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2004 for discoveries regarding the strong force—the nuclear force that binds together quarks (the smallest building blocks of matter) and holds together the nucleus of
- Wild (poetry by Okri)
Ben Okri: Other volumes of poetry included Wild (2012), Rise Like Lions: Poetry for the Many (2018), and A Fire in My Head: Poems for the Dawn (2021). His short-story collections from this time included Prayer for the Living (2019). A Way of Being Free (1997) and A Time for New Dreams…
- Wild (film by Vallée [2014])
Laura Dern: …lead character (Reese Witherspoon) in Wild (2014).
- Wild 2 (comet)
comet: Spacecraft exploration of comets: …dust from the coma of Comet 81P/Wild 2. At a flyby speed of 6.1 km per second (13,600 miles per hour), the dust samples would be completely destroyed by impact with a hard collector. Therefore, Stardust used a material made of silica (sand) called aerogel that had a very low…
- wild allspice (plant)
spicebush, (Lindera benzoin), deciduous, dense shrub of the laurel family (Lauraceae), native to eastern North America. It occurs most often in damp woods and grows about 1.5–6 m (about 5–20 feet) tall. The alternate leaves are rather oblong, but wedge-shaped near the base, and 8–13 cm (3–5 inches)
- Wild Angels, The (film by Corman [1966])
Roger Corman: Other cult classic films: The Wild Angels (1966) was a sordid biker film that was based on the exploits of the Hells Angels and starred Peter Fonda, Bruce Dern, and Nancy Sinatra. The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (1967) was a relatively faithful account of the notorious 1929 slaughter, starring…
- wild animal act (circus)
circus: Wild animal acts: Until the late 20th century there was a marked difference between European and American styles of presenting wild animal acts. In the 19th century Van Amburgh, believing that the trainer must demonstrate physical superiority over his “pupils,” had customarily beat his animals…
- Wild Animals I Have Known (work by Seton)
Ernest Thompson Seton: …into his most popular book, Wild Animals I Have Known (1898). He continued to write such books into the 1940s.
- wild ass (mammal)
ass, either of two species belonging to the horse family, Equidae, especially the African wild ass (Equus africanus) sometimes referred to as the true ass. The related Asiatic wild ass, sometimes called the Asian wild ass or the half-ass (E. hemionus), is usually known by the local names of its
- Wild Ass’s Skin, The (novel by Balzac)
The Wild Ass’s Skin, novel by Honoré de Balzac, published in two volumes in 1831 as La Peau de chagrin and later included as part of the Études philosophiques section of La Comédie humaine (The Human Comedy). A poor young writer, Raphael de Valentin, is given a magical ass’s skin that will grant
- Wild at Heart (film by Lynch [1990])
David Lynch: Wild at Heart (1990), Lynch’s adaptation of Barry Gifford’s novel about a young couple who take to the road, pursued by various hit men, won the Palm d’Or at the Cannes film festival. However, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992), a prequel to the…
- wild Bactrian camel (mammal)
Bactrian camel: …the steppes of Mongolia; the wild Bactrian camel (also known as the wild camel, C. ferus) is limited to a few small pockets in China and Mongolia. Both Bactrian camels are distinguished from Arabian camels, or dromedaries (C. dromedarius), of North Africa and the Middle East by their short stature,…
- wild bean (plant)
groundnut: …nut; Apois americana, also called wild bean and potato bean, the tubers of which are edible; and Lathyrus tuberosa, also called earth-nut pea. Cyperus esculentus, nut sedge or yellow nut grass, is a papyrus relative (family Cyperaceae) that also bears edible tubers, especially in the variety called chufa or earth…
- wild bergamot (herb)
Monarda: M. fistulosa, growing to 1.5 m (5 feet) tall, has a minty aroma. The more sharply scented Oswego tea (M. didyma), shorter and with scarlet flowers, is native in eastern North America but is widely cultivated elsewhere.
- Wild Berries (novel by Yevtushenko)
Yevgeny Yevtushenko: …and published in English as Wild Berries in 1984; that same year, a novella, Ardabiola, appeared in English translation. In 1978 he embarked on an acting career, and in 1981 a book of his photographs, Invisible Threads, was published. He published more poetry in The Collected Poems, 1952–1990 (1991), The…
- wild bleeding heart (plant)
bleeding heart: …as the shorter eastern, or wild, bleeding heart (D. eximia), which produces sprays of small pink flowers from April to September in the Allegheny mountain region of eastern North America. The Pacific, or western, bleeding heart (D. formosa) of mountain woods, which ranges from California to British Columbia, has several…
- wild boar
wild boar, any of the wild members of the pig species Sus scrofa (family Suidae, order Artiodactyla), the ancestors of domestic pigs. See
- wild boar (mammal)
boar, any of the wild members of the pig species Sus scrofa, family Suidae. The term boar is also used to designate the male of the domestic pig, guinea pig, and various other mammals. The term wild boar, or wild pig, is sometimes used to refer to any wild member of the Sus genus. The wild
- Wild Boy of Aveyron, The (work by Itard)
Jean-Marc-Gaspard Itard: …le sauvage de l’Aveyron (1807; Reports on the Savage of Aveyron), he explained the methods that he used (1801–05) in trying to train and educate an unsocialized 11-year-old boy who had been found in a forest in Aveyron, south of Paris.
- Wild Boys of the Road (film by Wellman [1933])
William Wellman: Films of the early to mid-1930s: …turning to the pre-Code gem Wild Boys of the Road (1933), a message film in the best Warner Brothers tradition about three Great Depression-ravaged kids who take to the road in search of a better life.
- Wild Boys, The (novel by Burroughs)
William S. Burroughs: …them The Soft Machine (1961), The Wild Boys (1971), Exterminator! (1973), Cities of the Red Night (1981), Place of Dead Roads (1983), Queer (1985), The Western Lands (1987), and My Education: A Book of Dreams (1995)—Burroughs further experimented with the structure
- Wild Bull of the Pampas (Argentine boxer)
Luis Firpo was an Argentine professional boxer. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Firpo moved to the United States in 1922 after having compiled an outstanding record during the first three years of his career in South America. He won his first 10 American matches by knockout
- Wild Bunch (American outlaws)
Wild Bunch, a collection of cowboy-outlaws who flourished in the 1880s and ’90s in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and surrounding states and territories. Their chief hideouts were Hole in the Wall, a nearly inaccessible grassy canyon and rocky retreat in north-central Wyoming; Brown’s Hole (now Brown’s
- Wild Bunch, The (film by Peckinpah [1969])
The Wild Bunch, American western film, released in 1969, that is a classic of the genre and widely considered Sam Peckinpah’s finest movie. Although the film’s graphic violence caused much controversy at the time of its release, the climactic shoot-out is arguably the best-directed and
- wild calla (plant)
calla: …known as the arum lily, water arum, or wild calla. It occurs widely in wet places in cool north temperate and subarctic regions and grows readily in mud or shallow water along pond edges or watercourses. A handsome plant, it has heart-shaped leaves, showy white floral leaves (spathes), and clusters…