- Winter Count (short stories by Lopez)
Barry Lopez: Among his short-story volumes were Winter Count (1981), Light Action in the Caribbean (2000), and Outside (2014). Other notable works included the essay collections Crossing Open Ground (1988), About This Life (1998), and Embrace Fearlessly the Burning World (2022), the latter of which was published
- Winter Count (American Indian culture)
Native American art: Midwest and Great Plains: …in content, as with the Winter Counts, those painted records that recounted tribal history by means of annual symbols, and the personal history paintings on hide that recount the exploits of the owner.
- winter creeper euonymus (plant)
Euonymus: Winter creeper euonymus (Euonymus fortunei), from East Asia, climbs by aerial rootlets. It has glossy evergreen leaves and clusters of greenish flowers followed by orange fruits. Its many cultivated varieties include bigleaf, glossy, sarcoxie, baby, longwood, and purpleleaf, widely used in landscaping.
- winter cress (plant)
winter cress, (genus Barbarea), genus of about 20 species of weedy herbs of the mustard family (Brassicaceae), native to the north temperate region. Most species are biennials or perennials and have yellow or white four-petaled flowers and deeply lobed leaves. Some winter cresses are cultivated as
- winter daffodil (plant)
Amaryllidaceae: …ornamental Eurasian plant known as winter daffodil (Sternbergia lutea) is often cultivated in borders or rock gardens. Natal lily, or Kaffir lily (Clivia miniata), a South African perennial, is cultivated as a houseplant for its orange flowers lined with yellow.
- winter dance (North American Indian culture)
Northwest Coast Indian: Religion and the performing arts: …Coast peoples; known as the spirit dances, they were performed during the winter months.
- Winter Dance Party (music tour [1959])
Buddy Holly: …participate in the doomed “Winter Dance Party of 1959” tour through the frozen Midwest, during which he and coheadliners Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson) were killed in a plane crash. (See Winter Dance Party itinerary.)
- winter daphne (plant)
Daphne: …include the several varieties of winter daphne (D. odora), which have very fragrant white to purplish flowers in crowded clusters. D. indica, with red blossoms, and D. japonica, with white or pinkish-purple flowers, are also grown as greenhouse evergreens.
- winter dormancy (zoology)
dormancy: Effects of temperature: …reptiles, which is also called brumation, is akin to hibernation in mammals. Instead of experiencing long, sustained periods of inactivity, brumating reptiles stir occasionally to drink water; however, they may go without food for several months. Dormancy in reptiles may display a circadian rhythm, a seasonal one, or both; it…
- Winter Egg (decorative egg [1913])
Fabergé egg: …the Imperial eggs was the Winter Egg (1913), which was the most expensive, boasting some 3,000 diamonds. Ice crystals were engraved on the shell, while inside was a floral bouquet, representing spring. The Blue Serpent Clock (1895) featured a rotating dial that wrapped around the top of the egg; the…
- winter fishing
fishing: Methods: Ice fishing, through holes cut in frozen lakes, is particularly popular in the northeastern United States and the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence valley region of the United States and Canada. Equipment is commonly a three-foot rod with a simple reel or a cleatlike device to hold…
- winter flounder (fish)
flounder: …pounds) in weight; and the winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus), an American Atlantic food fish, growing to about 60 cm (23 inches) in length. Flounders in that family typically have the eyes and colouring on the right side.
- Winter Games
Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games: …22nd occurrence of the Olympic Winter Games.
- Winter Garden (novel by Bainbridge)
Beryl Bainbridge: Winter Garden (1980) is a mystery about an English artist who disappears on a visit to the Soviet Union. Subsequent novels included An Awfully Big Adventure (1989; film 1995), The Birthday Boys (1991), Every Man for Himself (1996), Master Georgie (1998), and
- Winter Guest, The (film by Rickman [1997])
Alan Rickman: …and film (1997) versions of The Winter Guest. The film starred Emma Thompson and her mother, Phyllida Law. The Winter Guest premiered at several international film festivals in 1997 and received glowing reviews. In 2014 he directed the period romance A Little Chaos, in which he reunited with his Sense…
- Winter Haven (Florida, United States)
Winter Haven, city, Polk county, central Florida, U.S., situated amid a large cluster of small lakes, about 15 miles (25 km) east of Lakeland. The area was settled in the 1860s. The city was laid out in 1884 and originally called Harris Corners (for the family who owned a local store) but was later
- winter hazel (plant)
winter hazel, any of about 10 species of the genus Corylopsis, deciduous shrubs or small trees of the witch hazel family (Hamamelidaceae). They are native to eastern Asia and the Himalayas but are planted elsewhere as ornamentals. Their bell-shaped creamy to yellow fragrant flowers appear in
- Winter Hill Gang (American crime syndicate)
Whitey Bulger: …as head of the Boston-area Winter Hill Gang, was a leading figure in organized crime from the late 1960s to the mid-1990s. For more than a decade, until his capture in June 2011, he was listed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as one of its 10 most-wanted fugitives.
- winter jasmine (plant)
jasmine: Major species: Winter jasmine (J. nudiflorum), a Chinese species with solitary yellow flowers, is used as a cover plant on hillsides. Japanese, or primrose, jasmine (J. mesnyi) is a similar plant with larger flowers that bloom during the winter. Italian jasmine (J. humile), a vinelike shrub with…
- Winter Journal (work by Auster)
Paul Auster: …the pointedly unstudied and fragmentary Winter Journal (2012) was written in the second person and comprised self-reflective meditations interspersed with enumerations of Auster’s experiences, preferences, and travels. A companion volume, Report from the Interior (2013), arrayed a similarly eclectic selection of anecdotes alongside deeper analyses of some of his cinematic…
- Winter Journey (novel by Colegate)
Isabel Colegate: Winter Journey (1995) delves into the relationship between an aging brother and sister through their reminisces during a holiday together.
- Winter Journey (work by Schubert)
Winterreise, cycle of 24 songs for male voice and piano composed in 1827 by Austrian composer Franz Schubert, with words by German poet Wilhelm Müller. Schubert was reviewing the publisher’s proofs of the cycle in the weeks before his death, shortly before his 32nd birthday. He had already
- Winter Kills (film by Richert [1979])
Jeff Bridges: …discovering his brother’s assassin in Winter Kills (1979).
- Winter Landscape (painting by Sesshū)
Winter Landscape, ink painting on paper scroll (part of a work called Autumn and Winter Landscapes) created about 1470 by Japanese artist and Zen Buddhist priest Sesshū. Sesshū is regarded as the greatest master of Japanese monochrome ink painting. Sesshū devoted his life to art. As a young man, he
- Winter Light (film by Bergman [1963])
Ingmar Bergman: Life: …films, Through a Glass Darkly, Winter Light, and The Silence, dealing with the borderline between sanity and madness and that between human contact and total withdrawal, was regarded by many as his crowning achievement. Through a Glass Darkly won an Academy Award for best foreign film.
- winter melon (plant)
wax gourd, (Benincasa hispida), fleshy vine of the gourd family (Cucurbitaceae), grown for its edible fruits. The wax gourd is native to tropical Asia, where it is commonly used in soups, curries, and stir-fries and is sometimes made into a beverage. Like other gourds, the fruit has a long shelf
- winter monsoon (meteorology)
climate: Monsoons: Winter monsoons have a dominant easterly component and a strong tendency to diverge, subside, and cause drought. Both are the result of differences in annual temperature trends over land and sea.
- Winter Nelis (fruit)
pear: History and types: …as Beurré Bosc, Anjou, and Winter Nelis are grown. A highly popular variety in England and the Netherlands is Conference. Common Italian varieties include Curato, Coscia, and Passe Crassane, the latter also being popular in France. In Asian countries the pear crop comprises primarily local varieties of native species, such…
- Winter Olympic Games
Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games: …22nd occurrence of the Olympic Winter Games.
- Winter Olympics
Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games: …22nd occurrence of the Olympic Winter Games.
- Winter Palace (palace, Saint Petersburg, Russia)
Winter Palace, former royal residence of the Russian tsars in St. Petersburg, on the Neva River. Several different palaces were constructed in the 18th century, with the fourth and final version built in 1754–62 by Baroque architect Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli; it was restored following a fire
- Winter Park (Florida, United States)
Winter Park, city, Orange county, central Florida, U.S., just north of Orlando. The city was founded as Lakeview in 1858, and the name was changed to Osceola in 1870. In 1881 Loring A. Chase and Oliver E. Chapman purchased 600 acres (240 hectares) of land on the site and laid out a town that they
- winter pink (plant)
trailing arbutus, (Epigaea repens), trailing plant of the heath family (Ericaceae), native to sandy or boggy, acid woodlands of eastern North America. It has oblong, hairy evergreen leaves 2–6 cm (0.75–2.5 inches) long. The highly fragrant white, pink, or rosy flowers have a five-lobed corolla (the
- Winter Quarters (Nebraska, United States)
Omaha: History: …named Winter Quarters, later called Florence, which was subsequently annexed by Omaha. From 1847 to 1848 Winter Quarters witnessed the beginning of the Mormon migration to what became the state of Utah, but because the west side of the Missouri River was closed to permanent “white” settlement, the Mormons moved…
- winter rose (plant)
Christmas rose, (Helleborus niger), small poisonous perennial herb of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae), known for its tendency to bloom from late autumn to early spring, often in the snow. It has evergreen compound leaves, of seven or more leaflets arranged like the fingers on a hand, that
- winter savory (herb)
savory: Winter savory, or dwarf savory (S. montana), is a smaller perennial subshrub that flowers in winter. It is used for culinary purposes almost interchangeably with the summer species.
- winter solstice (astronomy)
winter solstice, the two moments during the year when the path of the Sun in the sky is farthest south in the Northern Hemisphere (December 21 or 22) and farthest north in the Southern Hemisphere (June 20 or 21). At the winter solstice the Sun travels the shortest path through the sky, and that day
- winter sports
goggles: Modern goggles are worn in winter sports to protect against snow blindness and glare, against cold and wind, and against flying objects and objects that one might run into, such as tree branches.
- winter squash (plant)
pumpkin: Major species and uses: …and used interchangeably with other winter squashes. In the United States and Canada, pumpkin pie is a traditional Thanksgiving and Christmas dessert. Canned pumpkin is commonly made from C. moschata and may be mixed with other winter squashes, such as butternut squash (also C. moschata).
- Winter Sun (poetry by Avison)
Margaret Avison: …began writing the poems of Winter Sun (1960), her first collection, in 1956, while living in Chicago as a Guggenheim fellow. The introspective poems of this collection are concerned with belief and moral knowledge, and for the most part they are written in free verse. About the same time she…
- Winter Trees (poetry by Plath)
Sylvia Plath: …Crossing the Water (1971) and Winter Trees (1971), was welcomed by critics and the public alike. The Bell Jar was reissued in Great Britain under her own name in 1966, and it was published in the United States for the first time in 1971. Johnny Panic and the Bible of…
- Winter Vault, The (novel by Michaels)
Anne Michaels: Novels: Michaels’s second novel, The Winter Vault (2009), begins with a couple, Jean and Avery, living on a houseboat beneath the temple of Abu Simbel in Egypt during the construction of the Aswan Dam in the 1960s. Avery is one of the engineers tasked with dismantling and reassembling the…
- Winter War (Russo-Finnish history [1939–1940])
Russo-Finnish War, (November 30, 1939–March 12, 1940), war waged by the Soviet Union against Finland at the beginning of World War II, following the conclusion of the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact (August 23, 1939). During the 1920s the Finnish government, wary of the threat posed by the Soviet
- winter wheat
Abilene: Winter-wheat cultivation was introduced in Abilene in the mid-1870s and remains economically important. Abilene is still a shipping point for livestock, as well as for grain and other agricultural products, and it has some light industry.
- Winter Wheat Belt (geographical area, North America)
North America: Cool temperate, humid regions: The Winter Wheat Belt, mainly in Kansas and Oklahoma, lies south of killing frosts. As the polar front retreats in early spring, the sweep of rainstorms brings on the grain sown in the previous fall. The Spring Wheat Belt—in the Dakotas, Montana, Minnesota, the Canadian Prairie…
- Winter’s bark (tree, Drimys winteri)
Winteraceae: …known is the South American Winter’s bark (Drimys winteri), a 15-metre (50-foot) tree with hot-tasting leaves and bark. The bark was formerly used as a preventive against scurvy. Winter’s bark has leathery elliptic-shaped leaves; red-tinged shoots; and jasmine-scented, cream-coloured, 8- to 12-petaled, 2.5-cm (1-inch) flowers in clusters. A closely related…
- Winter’s Bone (film by Granik [2010])
Jennifer Lawrence: …the lead in the movie Winter’s Bone (2010). For her portrayal of Ree, a poor rural teenager tracking down her missing criminal father in the Ozark Mountains, Lawrence, at the age of 20, received her first best actress Academy Award nomination.
- Winter’s Journey (poetry by Dobyns)
Stephen Dobyns: (1996), The Porcupine’s Kisses (2002), Winter’s Journey (2010), and The Day’s Last Light Reddens the Leaves of the Copper Beech (2016).
- Winter’s Tale (film by Goldsman [2014])
Russell Crowe: …crime boss in the fantasy Winter’s Tale (2014); and as the titular biblical figure in Noah (2014).
- Winter’s Tale, The (ballet by Wheeldon)
Christopher Wheeldon: …Adventures in Wonderland (2011) and The Winter’s Tale (2014). He also staged productions for a number of major ballet companies, including Cinderella (2012) for both the San Francisco Ballet and the Dutch National Ballet, Amsterdam, and The Nutcracker (2016) for the Joffrey Ballet, Chicago. Wheeldon also choreographed several Broadway productions,…
- Winter’s Tale, The (work by Shakespeare)
The Winter’s Tale, play in five acts by William Shakespeare, written about 1609–11 and produced at the Globe Theatre in London. It was published in the First Folio of 1623 from a transcript, by Ralph Crane (scrivener of the King’s Men), of an authorial manuscript or possibly the playbook. One of
- Winter’s Tales (short stories by Dinesen)
Winter’s Tales, collection of short stories by Isak Dinesen, originally published in Danish as Vinter-eventyr in 1942 and then translated by the author into English in the same year. Mostly set against the backdrop of historic Denmark, the 11 stories trace the symbolic destinies of simple
- Winter, Fifth Avenue (photograph by Stieglitz)
Alfred Stieglitz: The Photo-Secession: …life and place, such as Winter, Fifth Avenue or The Terminal (both 1892)—are almost always answers to difficult technical problems, which Stieglitz loved, and which often trumped his impulses to make photographs that were artistically correct.
- Winter, Friedrich (glass engraver)
Bohemian glass: …glassware through the work of Friedrich Winter and other glass engravers. In the late 18th century English lead glass with cut decoration surpassed Bohemian glass in popularity after the introduction of the new Rococo style. Bohemian glass responded to competition with the invention of Hyalith glass, black with gold chinoiserie…
- Winter, Gregory P. (British biochemst)
Gregory P. Winter is a British biochemist known for his development of the first humanized antibodies, his research on the directed evolution of antibodies, and his application of phage display technology for the development of fully human therapeutic antibodies. Winter was awarded the 2018 Nobel
- Winter, Kurt (Canadian musician)
the Guess Who: December 31, 1947, Winnipeg), Kurt Winter (b. April 2, 1946; d. December 14, 1997, Winnipeg), and Greg Leskiw (b. August 5, 1947).
- Winter, Sir Gregory Paul (British biochemst)
Gregory P. Winter is a British biochemist known for his development of the first humanized antibodies, his research on the directed evolution of antibodies, and his application of phage display technology for the development of fully human therapeutic antibodies. Winter was awarded the 2018 Nobel
- Winter, Thomas (English conspirator)
Gunpowder Plot: …together with his four coconspirators—Thomas Winter, Thomas Percy, John Wright, and Guy Fawkes—were zealous Roman Catholics angered by James’s refusal to grant more religious toleration to Catholics. They apparently hoped that the confusion that would follow the murder of the king, his ministers, and the members of Parliament would…
- Winter, Zikmund (Czech author)
Czech literature: The 18th and 19th centuries: …historical novelists Alois Jirásek and Zikmund Winter. Both men presented romanticized versions of Czech history, but their historical details were based on scholarly research. Jirásek’s novels presented an entire history of the Czechs up to his own time, concentrating in particular on the Hussite period and the national revival of…
- Winter-Wood, Edith (British chess composer)
chess: Women in chess: Edith Winter-Wood composed more than 2,000 problems, 700 of which appeared in a book published in 1902.
- Winteraceae (plant family)
Winteraceae, family of aromatic trees and shrubs in the order Canellales, containing 9 genera and 120 species. Most species are native to Southeast Asia and Australasia. Members of the family have wood without water-conducting cells and produce acrid sap. The leathery leaves are gland-dotted and
- Winterales (plant order)
Canellales, order of flowering plants consisting of 2 families (Winteraceae and Canellaceae), 15 genera, and 136 species. Together with three other orders (Laurales, Magnoliales, and Piperales), Canellales constitutes the magnoliids clade, which is an early branch in the angiosperm tree.
- winterberry (plant)
holly: Major species: …America, as is the deciduous winterberry (I. verticillata). Possum haw (I. decidua), also deciduous, bears red fruits on a shrub growing to 10 metres (33 feet).
- Winterbotham, Ann Sophia (American editor and author)
Ann Sophia Stephens was an American editor and writer whose melodramatic novels, popular in serialized form, gained an even wider readership as some of the first "dime novels." Ann Winterbotham knew from childhood that she wanted to be a writer. In 1831 she married Edward Stephens and settled in
- Winterbotham, Frederick William (British secret service official)
Frederick William Winterbotham was a British secret-service official who played a key role in the Ultra code-breaking project during World War II. Winterbotham joined the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars in 1915 but later transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, where he became a fighter pilot. He was
- Winterbranch (dance by Cunningham)
dance: Merce Cunningham: One of his pieces, Winterbranch (1964), started out as a study based on moving into a space and falling, but it produced a powerful effect on audiences, who variously interpreted it as a piece about war, concentration camps, or even sea storms. Cunningham believed that the expressive qualities in…
- wintergreen (plant)
wintergreen, any of several evergreen, aromatic plants of the heath family (Ericaceae). Oil of wintergreen, derived from the leaves of Gaultheria procumbens, is a volatile oil used as a flavouring for candies and chewing gum and in the treatment of muscular aches and pains. The active ingredient,
- wintergreen (plant, Gaultheria procumbens)
Gaultheria: Major species: Wintergreen (G. procumbens), also called checkerberry or teaberry, is a creeping shrub with white bell-shaped flowers, spicy red fruits, and aromatic shiny leaves.
- wintergreen barberry (plant)
barberry: Another widely planted species is wintergreen barberry (B. julianae), an evergreen shrub with bluish black berries. The cultivation of certain barberry species is prohibited in some regions because they harbour one of the spore stages of the fungus that causes black stem rust of wheat.
- wintergreen oil (essential oil)
essential oil: Chemical composition: …a few components predominate: thus oil of wintergreen contains about 98 percent of methyl salicylate; orange oil, about 90 percent of d-limonene; bois de rose, 90 percent of linalool; and cassia, up to 95 percent of cinnamaldehyde. In most oils there is a mixture of anywhere from a few dozen…
- Winterhalter, Franz Xaver (German painter)
Franz Xaver Winterhalter was a German painter and lithographer, known for his portraits of royalty. Trained in Freiburg im Breisgau and Munich, Germany, Winterhalter entered court circles when in 1828 he became drawing master to Sophie, later grand duchess of Baden, at Karlsruhe. After 1834 he went
- wintering (chemical process)
fat and oil processing: Destearinating or winterizing: It is often desirable to remove the traces of waxes (e.g., cuticle wax from seed coats) and the higher-melting glycerides from fats. Waxes can generally be removed by rapid chilling and filtering. Separation of high-melting glycerides, or stearine, usually requires very slow cooling in…
- Wintering Out (poetry by Heaney)
Seamus Heaney: In Wintering Out (1972) and North (1975), he began to encompass such subjects as the violence in Northern Ireland and contemporary Irish experience, though he continued to view his subjects through a mythic and mystical filter. Among the later volumes that reflect Heaney’s honed and deceptively…
- winterizing (chemical process)
fat and oil processing: Destearinating or winterizing: It is often desirable to remove the traces of waxes (e.g., cuticle wax from seed coats) and the higher-melting glycerides from fats. Waxes can generally be removed by rapid chilling and filtering. Separation of high-melting glycerides, or stearine, usually requires very slow cooling in…
- Winterland (building, San Francisco, California, United States)
San Francisco ballrooms: Winterland: these four venues ushered in the modern era of rock show presentation and grew out of the hippie counterculture of San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district. The first multiband rock show was held at the Ark in Sausalito in 1965 and proved so successful that the…
- Winterreise (work by Schubert)
Winterreise, cycle of 24 songs for male voice and piano composed in 1827 by Austrian composer Franz Schubert, with words by German poet Wilhelm Müller. Schubert was reviewing the publisher’s proofs of the cycle in the weeks before his death, shortly before his 32nd birthday. He had already
- Winterreise, Die (work by Müller)
Wilhelm Müller: …“Die schöne Müllerin” and “Die Winterreise,” which Franz Schubert set to music.
- Winters, Arthur Yvor (American poet)
Yvor Winters was an American poet, critic, and teacher who held that literature should be evaluated for its moral and intellectual content as well as on aesthetic grounds. Educated at the University of Chicago, University of Colorado (Boulder), and Stanford University (California), Winters taught
- Winters, Jonathan (American comedian)
Jonathan Winters was an American comedian who used sound effects, facial contortions, a gift for mimicry, and breakneck improvisational skills to entertain nightclub, radio, television, and film audiences. He was once described by talk-show host Jack Paar as “pound for pound, the funniest man
- Winters, Jonathan Harshman III (American comedian)
Jonathan Winters was an American comedian who used sound effects, facial contortions, a gift for mimicry, and breakneck improvisational skills to entertain nightclub, radio, television, and film audiences. He was once described by talk-show host Jack Paar as “pound for pound, the funniest man
- Winters, Shelley (American actress)
Shelley Winters was an American actor who had a career that spanned more than half a century, well over 100 films, and a variety of colourful characters. She won two best supporting actress Academy Awards, for The Diary of Anne Frank (1959) and A Patch of Blue (1965), and received nominations as
- Winters, Yvor (American poet)
Yvor Winters was an American poet, critic, and teacher who held that literature should be evaluated for its moral and intellectual content as well as on aesthetic grounds. Educated at the University of Chicago, University of Colorado (Boulder), and Stanford University (California), Winters taught
- Winterset (work by Anderson)
Maxwell Anderson: …peak of his career with Winterset (1935), a poetic drama set in his own times. A tragedy inspired by the Sacco and Vanzetti case of the 1920s and set in the urban slums, it deals with the son of a man who has been unjustly condemned to death, who seeks…
- Winterson, Jeanette (British author)
Jeanette Winterson is a British writer noted for her quirky, unconventional, and often comic novels. Winterson was educated at St. Catherine’s College, Oxford, and held various jobs while working on her writing. Her first novel, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1985), won a Whitbread Award as that
- Winterspelt: A Novel About the Last Days of World War II (novel by Andersch)
Alfred Andersch: …his last novel, Winterspelt (1974; Winterspelt: A Novel About the Last Days of World War II), and for his work as a radio producer, which allowed him to promote young writers and play an active part in German cultural life. He moved to Switzerland in the late 1950s and later…
- Winterstick (sports equipment)
snowboarding: History of snowboarding: …Milovich’s new snowboard, the “Winterstick,” attracted the attention of Newsweek magazine.
- wintersweet (plant)
allspice: Other plants known as allspice: Other allspices include the Japanese allspice (Chimonanthus praecox), native to eastern Asia and planted as an ornamental in England and the United States, and the wild allspice, or spicebush (Lindera benzoin), a shrub of eastern North America with aromatic berries reputed to have been used as a substitute for…
- Winterthur (Switzerland)
Winterthur, city, Zürich canton, northern Switzerland. It lies in a wooded basin east of the Töss River, northeast of Zürich city. The Roman settlement of Vitodurum was on the site of the city’s northeastern suburb of Ober-Winterthur. Winterthur was founded about 1175 by the counts of Kyburg, who
- Winterthur Museum (museum, Winterthur, Delaware, United States)
Winterthur Museum, museum in Winterthur, Del., U.S., near Wilmington, that specializes in American decorative arts and furnishings. Occupying a mansion built in 1839 by James Antoine Bidermann and his wife, the great-aunt of Henry Francis du Pont, the museum limits its collections to American
- Winterthur Museum & Country Estate (museum, Winterthur, Delaware, United States)
Winterthur Museum, museum in Winterthur, Del., U.S., near Wilmington, that specializes in American decorative arts and furnishings. Occupying a mansion built in 1839 by James Antoine Bidermann and his wife, the great-aunt of Henry Francis du Pont, the museum limits its collections to American
- Wintertime (film by Brahm [1943])
Cesar Romero: … in Happy Landing (1938) and Wintertime (1943). Romero was also featured in such musicals as The Great American Broadcast (1941), Weekend in Havana (1941), and Springtime in the Rockies (1942).
- Winthemia (insect)
tachinid fly: …infested by larvae of the red-tailed tachinids (Winthemia).
- Winther, Christian (Danish author)
children’s literature: Denmark: …a picture book until 1900, Christian Winther in 1830 wrote a pleasing trifle, with an unusual fantastic touch, called “Flugten til Amerika” (“Flight to America”). It is still ranked as a classic. Such are some of the 19th-century oases.
- Winthrop University (university, Rock Hill, South Carolina, United States)
South Carolina: Education: Winthrop University (1886), located at Rock Hill and long known as South Carolina College for Women, is now coeducational. The Citadel (1842), one of the few state-supported military colleges, is located in Charleston, as is the Medical University of South Carolina. South Carolina State University…
- Winthrop, John (American colonial governor)
John Winthrop was the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and the chief figure among the Puritan founders of New England. Winthrop’s father was a newly risen country gentleman whose 500-acre (200-hectare) estate, Groton Manor, had been bought from Henry VIII at the time of the
- Winthrop, John (American mathematician)
mechanics of solids: Waves: …the American mathematician and astronomer John Winthrop, following his experience of the “Boston” earthquake of 1755, that the ground shaking was due to a disturbance propagated like sound through the air.)
- wintiko (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
- Winton (Queensland, Australia)
Winton, town, central Queensland, Australia, on Western Mills Creek, an intermittent tributary of the Diamantina River. Settled in 1873 and originally called Pelican Waterholes, it became a village in 1875 and a town in 1879. It was later renamed after Winton, England, the birthplace of its
- Winton, Alexander (American automobile manufacturer)
Alexander Winton was a Scottish-born American pioneer automobile manufacturer who put thousands of “Winton Sixes” on the road. After serving an apprenticeship in Clyde shipyards Winton moved to the United States in 1880, worked in iron mills and as a steamship engineer, and became a bicycle
- Winton, Tim (Australian author)
Tim Winton is an Australian author of both adult and children’s novels that evoke both the experience of life in and the landscape of his native country. Winton had decided by age 10 to be a writer. He studied creative writing at the Western Australian Institute of Technology, but his down-to-earth