- Wonder Boys (novel by Chabon)
Michael Chabon: His next novel, Wonder Boys (1995; film 2000), centres on a weekend in the life of a stymied creative writing professor as he wrangles with his various personal and professional failures. Chabon conceived the novel on the heels of his own inability to refine the massive manuscript that…
- Wonder Maid (novel by Kosztolanyi)
Dezső Kosztolányi: Édes Anna (1926; Wonder Maid, 1947), the tale of a servant girl, is perhaps his best novel. He translated poetry from several European languages and also from Chinese and Japanese. In his later years he devoted much effort to the preservation of the purity of the Hungarian language.…
- Wonder Man (fictional character)
Will Eisner: Partnership with Iger and the Wonder Man lawsuit: In 1939 Eisner created Wonder Man for the Fox Feature Syndicate. Wonder Man was, uniquely, powered by a magic ring but had many similarities to the then-popular DC Comics character Superman. DC Comics (known as Detective Comics, Inc.) sued and won what is considered the first lawsuit in the…
- wonder tale
fairy tale, wonder tale involving marvellous elements and occurrences, though not necessarily about fairies. The term embraces such popular folktales (Märchen, q.v.) as “Cinderella” and “Puss-in-Boots” and art fairy tales (Kunstmärchen) of later invention, such as The Happy Prince (1888), by the
- Wonder Wheel (film by Allen [2017])
Woody Allen: 2000 and beyond: …to the big screen with Wonder Wheel (2017), which starred Kate Winslet as a bored waitress on Coney Island in the 1950s who has an affair with a younger man, a lifeguard studying to be a playwright (Justin Timberlake).
- Wonder Woman (American television series)
Wonder Woman: The Silver Age and television success: …character in the live action Wonder Woman. The statuesque former beauty queen so perfectly embodied the Amazon princess that, although the show ran for just three seasons, Carter would become the face of the character for a generation. Early scripts tended to be very faithful to the World War II-era…
- Wonder Woman (film by Jenkins [2017])
Wonder Woman: Post-Crisis Wonder Woman and film success: …for Patty Jenkins’s 2017 film Wonder Woman. Studio executives had long questioned whether Wonder Woman could generate enough interest for a major Hollywood release, but those concerns were demolished by the critical and audience response to Gal Gadot’s star-making portrayal as the Amazon princess. By far the best-received entry in…
- Wonder Woman (fictional character)
Wonder Woman, American comic book heroine created for DC Comics by psychologist William Moulton Marston (under the pseudonym Charles Moulton) and artist Harry G. Peter. Wonder Woman first appeared in a backup story in All Star Comics no. 8 (December 1941) before receiving fuller treatment in
- Wonder Woman 1984 (film by Jenkins [2020])
Wonder Woman: Post-Crisis Wonder Woman and film success: Jenkins and Gadot returned for Wonder Woman 1984 (2020), a visually stunning film that saw comic actress Kristen Wiig cast against type as Diana’s archnemesis, the Cheetah. The second entry in the Wonder Woman franchise met a lacklustre response from fans and critics, however, and its box office performance was…
- Wonder Years, The (American television series)
Television in the United States: Urban humour: …a few years earlier, including The Wonder Years (ABC, 1988–93), a comedy-drama that celebrated the minutiae of suburban life in the late 1960s and early ’70s, and thirtysomething, a drama that analyzed the psychic details of the lives of a group of young professionals. Seinfeld, however, was able to identify…
- Wonder, Little Stevie (American singer, composer, and musician)
Stevie Wonder is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, a child prodigy who developed into one of the most creative musical figures of the late 20th century. Blind from birth and raised in inner-city Detroit, he was a skilled musician by age eight. Renamed Little Stevie Wonder
- Wonder, Stevie (American singer, composer, and musician)
Stevie Wonder is an American singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, a child prodigy who developed into one of the most creative musical figures of the late 20th century. Blind from birth and raised in inner-city Detroit, he was a skilled musician by age eight. Renamed Little Stevie Wonder
- wonderboom (plant)
tree: Trees of special interest: The wonderboom (F. salicifolia) of Africa grows in a similar manner; a specimen at Pretoria has a spread of 50 metres (55 yards). Because of their unusual growth habits, some tropical ficuses are called strangler figs. Often they begin life high in a palm or some…
- Wonderful Adventures of Nils (work by Lagerlöf)
Selma Lagerlöf: …powerfully told historical tale; and Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige, 2 vol. (1906–07; The Wonderful Adventures of Nils and Further Adventures of Nils), a geography reader for children.
- Wonderful Farm, The (work by Aymé)
Marcel Aymé: …were published in English as The Wonderful Farm (1951).
- Wonderful Life (work by Gould)
Stephen Jay Gould: …Arrow, Time’s Cycle (1987), and Wonderful Life (1989), he traced the course and significance of various controversies in the history of evolutionary biology, intelligence testing, geology, and paleontology. From 1974 Gould regularly contributed essays to the periodical Natural History, and these were collected in several volumes, including Ever Since Darwin…
- Wonderful One-Hoss Shay, The (poem by Holmes)
The Wonderful One-Hoss Shay, poem by Oliver Wendell Holmes, published in his “Breakfast-Table” column in The Atlantic Monthly (September 1858). Often interpreted as a satire on the breakdown of Calvinism in America, the poem concerns a “one-hoss shay” (i.e., one-horse chaise) constructed logically
- Wonderful Town (musical by Bernstein, Comden and Green)
Betty Comden and Adolph Green: …wrote another musical with Bernstein, Wonderful Town (1953), which won them their first Tony Award; they won six others, for Hallelujah, Baby!, Applause (1970), On the Twentieth Century (1978), and The Will Rogers Follies (1991). They also wrote several film scripts, including that of Auntie Mame (1958) and Singin’ in…
- Wonderful Wizard of Oz, The (novel by Baum)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, children’s book written by L. Frank Baum and first published in 1900. A modern fairy tale with a distinctly American setting, a delightfully levelheaded and assertive heroine, and engaging fantasy characters, the story was enormously popular and became a classic of
- Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, The (film by Levin and Pal [1962])
The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, American drama and fantasy film, released in 1962, that fictionalized the lives of famed German storytellers the Brothers Grimm. The film combined live action with segments of animation and was nominated for four Academy Awards, winning for best costume
- Wonderful World, Beautiful People (album by Cliff)
Jimmy Cliff: …song “Waterfall”), and his album Wonderful World, Beautiful People (1970) was an international hit as well as the record that prompted Paul Simon to investigate reggae. As the star of The Harder They Come—he contributed to its sound track the classics “Many Rivers to Cross,” “Sitting in Limbo,” and the…
- Wonderful! Wonderful! (song by Edwards and Raleigh)
Johnny Mathis: …with the lushly orchestrated “Wonderful! Wonderful!” (1956). The dreamily romantic tunes “It’s Not for Me to Say” (1957) and “Chances Are” (1957) further highlighted his smooth and precisely controlled tenor. Mathis found additional success with the albums Johnny’s Greatest Hits (1958)—believed to be the first-ever compilation of an artist’s…
- Wonderful, Wonderful Times (novel by Jelinek)
Elfriede Jelinek: …the satiric Die Ausgesperrten (1980; Wonderful, Wonderful Times, 1990), Lust (1989; Lust, 1992), and Gier (2000; Greed, 2006). Her most notable plays included Was geschah, nachdem Nora ihren Mann verlassen hatte; oder, Stützen der Gesellschaften (1980; What Happened After Nora Left Her Husband; or, Pillars of Society, 1994), which she…
- Wondering how to invest in real estate? Four ways to get started
Strategies to own property.Real estate investing offers a range of ways to own an alternative asset (that is, an investment outside the traditional world of stocks and bonds). Whether it’s owning your own home, buying rental property, or investing in securities, the best way to invest in real
- Wonderland (film by Cox [2003])
Lisa Kudrow: Career and personal life: … (2002), and the crime drama Wonderland (2003). She also voiced the roles of Aphrodite in the animated TV series Hercules (1998–99) and Ava the Pacific western bear in the fantasy comedy film Dr. Doolittle 2 (2001).
- Wonderland (work by Oates)
American literature: New fictional modes: …later experimented with Surrealism in Wonderland (1971) and Gothic fantasy in Bellefleur (1980) before returning in works such as Marya (1986) to the bleak blue-collar world of her youth in upstate New York. Among her later works was Blonde: A Novel (2000), a fictional biography of Marilyn Monroe. While Mailer…
- Wonders of the Congo (film by Johnson [1931])
Osa Johnson: … (1928), Across the World (1930), Wonders of the Congo (1931), Congorilla (1932), Baboona (1935), and Borneo (1937), along with numerous short features. They also collaborated on several books: Cannibal-Land (1922), Camera Trails in Africa (1924), Lion (1929), Congorilla (1931), and Over African Jungles (1935). On her own Johnson wrote Jungle
- Wondersmith, The (novella by O’Brien)
Fitz-James O’Brien: …sense but sight; and “The Wondersmith,” in which robots are fashioned only to turn upon their creators. These three stories appeared in periodicals in 1858 and 1859.
- Wonderstruck (film by Haynes [2017])
Todd Haynes: Carol, Wonderstruck, Dark Waters, and The Velvet Underground: He followed with Wonderstruck (2017), which was based on the best-selling children’s book about two children living in different eras with a secret connection. Dark Waters, a fact-based legal thriller about a chemical company’s alleged pollution of a community, appeared in 2019. Two years later Haynes wrote and…
- Wonderwall Music (album by Harrison)
George Harrison: …work in 1968 with the soundtrack to the psychedelic film Wonderwall. Following the breakup of the Beatles in 1970, he continued to put out solo recordings—notably the highly successful triple album All Things Must Pass (1970), which included the memorable “My Sweet Lord.” Other popular songs included “Give Me Love…
- Wondjina (prehistoric people)
wandjina style: …have been painted by the Wondjinas, prehistoric inhabitants of the Kimberley region in northwest Australia, the only area where cave paintings in the wandjina style have been found. Among the Aborigines, each wandjina image is renovated, or repainted, by the oldest living member supposedly descended from its originator.
- wondjina style (painting)
wandjina style, type of depiction in Australian cave paintings of figures that represent mythological beings associated with the creation of the world. Called wandjina figures, the images are believed by modern Aborigines to have been painted by the Wondjinas, prehistoric inhabitants of the
- Wong Fei-hung (film by Tsui Hark [1991])
Jet Li: …1991 film Wong Fei-hung (Once Upon a Time in China), Li played his most famous character, the historical martial arts master Wong Fei-hung, who fought against injustice and foreign encroachment at the end of the Qing dynasty. Li became a top star in Hong Kong and played Wong in…
- Wong Kar-Wai (Chinese director)
Wong Kar-Wai is a Chinese film director noted for his atmospheric films about memory, longing, and the passage of time. Wong’s family emigrated from Shanghai to Hong Kong in 1963. For many Shanghainese, assimilation of Hong Kong’s different dialect and culture was difficult. Wong’s early
- Wong Liu Tsong (American actress)
Anna May Wong was an American actress who overcame discrimination and racism to become one of the first Asian Americans to have a successful film career in Hollywood. She appeared in more than 60 movies and also acted on television and on the stage. She was born Wong Liu Tsong in the Chinatown area
- Wong Tung Jim (American cinematographer)
James Wong Howe was one of the greatest cinematographers of the American film industry, known for his innovative techniques. Brought by his parents to the United States at the age of five, he lived in the states of Washington and Oregon until 1916, when he went to southern California. Howe worked
- Wong, Alexandra Dawn (American comedian, writer, and actress)
Ali Wong is a comedian, writer, and actress whose irreverent and incisive work explores themes of cultural identity, motherhood, and sexuality from a feminist perspective. In 2024 she won a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award for her explosive performance as entrepreneur Amy Lau in the rage-fueled
- Wong, Ali (American comedian, writer, and actress)
Ali Wong is a comedian, writer, and actress whose irreverent and incisive work explores themes of cultural identity, motherhood, and sexuality from a feminist perspective. In 2024 she won a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award for her explosive performance as entrepreneur Amy Lau in the rage-fueled
- Wong, Anna May (American actress)
Anna May Wong was an American actress who overcame discrimination and racism to become one of the first Asian Americans to have a successful film career in Hollywood. She appeared in more than 60 movies and also acted on television and on the stage. She was born Wong Liu Tsong in the Chinatown area
- Wong, Lawrence (prime minister of Singapore)
Lawrence Wong is the current and fourth prime minister of Singapore (2024–). An economist by training, he served in several government ministries before becoming deputy prime minister under Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. Wong was chosen by Lee to be his successor prior to Lee’s stepping down from
- wongar (Australian Aboriginal mythology)
the Dreaming, mythological period of time that had a beginning but no foreseeable end, during which the natural environment was shaped and humanized by the actions of mythic beings. Many of these beings took the form of human beings or of animals (“totemic”); some changed their forms. They were
- Wonggok ka moon (film by Wong Kar-Wai [1988])
Wong Kar-Wai: Wonggok ka moon (1988; As Tears Go By) was Wong’s first film as a director. A young man is torn between his love for his cousin and his friendship with his impetuous Triad “brother.” The film is Wong’s most conventional in terms of style and narrative but presents some…
- Wŏnhyo (Korean Buddhist priest)
Wŏnhyo was a Buddhist priest who is considered the greatest of the ancient Korean religious teachers. A renowned theoretician, Wŏnhyo was the first to systematize Korean Buddhism, bringing the various Buddhist doctrines into a unity that was sensible to both the philosophers and the common people.
- Wonhyo Daesa (Korean Buddhist priest)
Wŏnhyo was a Buddhist priest who is considered the greatest of the ancient Korean religious teachers. A renowned theoretician, Wŏnhyo was the first to systematize Korean Buddhism, bringing the various Buddhist doctrines into a unity that was sensible to both the philosophers and the common people.
- Wŏnhyo Taesa (Korean Buddhist priest)
Wŏnhyo was a Buddhist priest who is considered the greatest of the ancient Korean religious teachers. A renowned theoretician, Wŏnhyo was the first to systematize Korean Buddhism, bringing the various Buddhist doctrines into a unity that was sensible to both the philosophers and the common people.
- Woni (people)
Hani, an official nationality of China. The Hani live mainly on the high southwestern plateau of Yunnan province, China, specifically concentrated in the southwestern corner. There are also several thousands of Hani or related peoples in northern Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam and in eastern Myanmar
- Wŏnju (South Korea)
Wonju, city, Gangwon do (province), north-central South Korea. Historically, its location in the eroded basin of the Taebaek Mountains on the South Han River has been militarily strategic. After the Korean War (1950–53) it developed as a military base. Wonju, a transportation junction, is connected
- Wonju (South Korea)
Wonju, city, Gangwon do (province), north-central South Korea. Historically, its location in the eroded basin of the Taebaek Mountains on the South Han River has been militarily strategic. After the Korean War (1950–53) it developed as a military base. Wonju, a transportation junction, is connected
- Wonka (film by King [2023])
Timothée Chalamet: Dune and other movies from the 2020s: …Willy Wonka in the musical Wonka (2023).
- Wonkwang University (university, Iksan, South Korea)
Iksan: …are located there, as is Wonkwang University (1953). Pop. (2020) 285,312.
- Wŏnsan (North Korea)
Wŏnsan, city, capital of Kangwŏn do (province), southeastern North Korea. Situated on the coast of the East Sea (Sea of Japan), about 80 miles (130 km) east of P’yŏngyang, it is protected by two promontories and 20 islands in the Yŏnghŭng Bay and has the best natural harbour along the east coast of
- Wonthaggi (Victoria, Australia)
Wonthaggi, town, southern Victoria, Australia. It lies 5 miles (8 km) inland from the coast on Bass Strait. The explorer William Hovell discovered black coal deposits at nearby Cape Paterson in 1826, but early attempts at mining were unsuccessful. Coal deposits at Wonthaggi were known by the 1850s,
- Woo, John (Chinese director)
John Woo is a Chinese film director noted for action movies that combine copious stylized violence with lyrical melodramatic depictions of male bonding. Woo was born in China, though the exact date of his birth is uncertain. In 1950 Woo and his family immigrated to Hong Kong, where they lived in a
- wood (plant tissue)
wood, the principal strengthening and nutrient-conducting tissue of trees and other plants and one of the most abundant and versatile natural materials. Produced by many botanical species, including both gymnosperms and angiosperms, wood is available in various colours and grain patterns. It is
- wood (ball)
bowls: …a ball (known as a bowl) is rolled toward a smaller stationary ball, called a jack. The object is to roll one’s bowls so that they come to rest nearer to the jack than those of an opponent; this is sometimes achieved by knocking aside an opponent’s bowl or the…
- wood alcohol (chemical compound)
methanol (CH3OH), the simplest of a long series of organic compounds called alcohols, consisting of a methyl group (CH3) linked with a hydroxy group (OH). Methanol was formerly produced by the destructive distillation of wood. The modern method of preparing methanol is based on the direct
- wood anemone (plant)
anemone: The wood anemone of Europe, A. nemorosa, which bears white flowers, causes blistering of the skin and was formerly used as an ingredient in medicines. In North America, wood anemone refers to A. quinquefolia, a delicate plant with deeply cut leaves. Windflower, the English version of…
- wood bison (mammal)
bison: bison bison) and the wood bison (B. bison athabascae), though the differences between them are minor. The plains bison formerly inhabited most of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains and the Great Plains provinces of Canada. It greatly outnumbered the wood bison, which lived in northwestern Canada…
- wood borer (bivalve)
bivalve: Food and feeding: Shipworms are wood borers and are both protected and nourished by the wood they inhabit. They possess ctenidia and are capable of filtering food from the sea. When elongating the burrow, they digest the wood as well. In the Tridacnidae, symbiotic zooxanthellae (minute algal cells) are contained…
- Wood Buffalo (municipality, Alberta, Canada)
Fort McMurray: …form the specialized municipality of Wood Buffalo, which also includes the communities of Anzac, Conklin, Draper, Fort Chipewyan, Fort Fitzgerald, Fort MacKay, Gregoire Lake Estates, Janvier, Mariana Lake, and Saprae Creek Estates. Pop. (2006) mun., 52,643; (2011) 66,896.
- Wood Buffalo National Park (national park, Canada)
Wood Buffalo National Park, park in northern Alberta and southern Northwest Territories, Canada, between Athabasca and Great Slave lakes. It has an area of 17,300 sq mi (44,807 sq km) and was established in 1922 as a refuge to protect the few remaining bison herds in northern Canada. A vast region
- wood carving
lacquerwork: Chinese carved lacquer: The carved lacquer of China (diaoqi) is particularly noteworthy. In this the lacquer was built up in the method described above, but to a considerable thickness. When several colours were used, successive layers of each colour of uniform thickness were arranged in the order in which…
- Wood Demon (work by Chekhov)
Anton Chekhov: Literary maturity: His Wood Demon (1888–89) is a long-winded and ineptly facetious four-act play, which somehow, by a miracle of art, became converted—largely by cutting—into Dyadya Vanya (Uncle Vanya), one of his greatest stage masterpieces. The conversion—to a superb study of aimlessness in a rural manor house—took place…
- wood duck (bird)
wood duck, (Aix sponsa), small colourful North American perching duck (family Anatidae), a popular game bird. Once in danger of extinction from overhunting and habitat destruction, the species has been saved by diligent conservation efforts. Wood ducks nest in tree cavities up to 15 metres (50
- wood engraving (art)
wood engraving, a printmaking technique in which a print is made from a design incised on the transverse section, or end, of a hardwood block. The technique was developed in England in the last half of the 18th century, and its first master was the printmaker Thomas Bewick, whose illustrations for
- Wood Family (English pottery family)
Wood Family, celebrated English family of Staffordshire potters, a major force in the development of Staffordshire wares from peasant pottery to an organized industry. The family’s most prominent members were Ralph Wood (1715–72), the “miller of Burslem”; his brother Aaron (1717–85); and his son
- wood fern (fern genus)
shield fern, any of about 250 species of the fern genus Dryopteris, in the family Dryopteridaceae, with worldwide distribution. Shield ferns are medium-sized woodland plants with bright green, leathery leaves that are several times divided. They have numerous round spore clusters (sori) attached
- wood frog (amphibian)
wood frog, (Rana sylvatica), terrestrial frog (family Ranidae) of forests and woodlands. It is a cool-climate species that occurs from the northeastern quarter of the United States and throughout most of Canada to central and southern Alaska. The wood frog is tan to brown with a distinctly dark
- wood hoopoe (bird)
wood hoopoe, (family Phoeniculidae), any of eight species of tropical African birds included in two genera, Rhinopomastus and Phoeniculus, order Coraciiformes. They range in length from 22 to 38 cm (8.5 to 15 inches), and all are predominately greenish or purplish black, with long graduated tails
- wood horsetail (plant species)
horsetail: Wood horsetail (E. sylvaticum) grows in moist, cool woods and has many delicate branches that circle the shoots. Variegated horsetail (E. variegatum) is evergreen and has black markings on the sheaths. Common scouring rush (E. hyemale), occurring in moist woods and on riverbanks, reaches well…
- wood ibis (bird)
ciconiiform: …the Scopidae), typical storks and wood storks (Ciconiidae), ibis and spoonbills (Threskiornithidae), and, according to some authorities, flamingos (Phoenicopteridae).
- wood lemming (rodent)
lemming: The wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor) and steppe lemming (Lagurus lagurus) are the smallest, measuring 8 to 12 cm (3.1 to 4.7 inches) in body length and weighing 20 to 30 grams (0.7 to 1.0 ounce). The other species are larger, weighing 30 to 112 grams, with…
- wood lice (crustacean)
wood louse, either of two related terrestrial crustaceans, the pill bug (q.v.) and the sow bug
- wood lily (plant)
lily: Physical description: …bowl shape, as in the wood lily (L. philadelphicum) and goldband lily (L. auratum). The flowers of some species are quite fragrant, and they occur in a wide variety of colours. Plants of most species range in height from 30 to 120 cm (1 to 4 feet); plants of certain…
- Wood Line (art installation by Goldsworthy)
Andy Goldsworthy: Permanent artworks: …San Francisco, including Spire (2008), Wood Line (2010–11), Tree Fall (2013), and Earth Wall (2014). Spire, a towering sculpture made from locally felled tree trunks and surrounded by saplings, was damaged in a fire in 2020, but it remained standing. Goldsworthy also constructed Walking Wall (2019) at the Nelson-Atkins Museum…
- wood loosestrife (plant)
loosestrife: Yellow pimpernel, or wood loosestrife (L. nemorum), a low plant with a slender spreading stem and solitary yellow flowers, is common in England. Many species of Lysimachia are visited by bees for the oil contained in hairs on the flowers rather than for nectar or…
- wood louse (crustacean)
wood louse, either of two related terrestrial crustaceans, the pill bug (q.v.) and the sow bug
- wood mouse (rodent)
wood mouse, (genus Apodemus), any of about 20 species of small-bodied rodents found from northern Europe eastward to southern China and the Himalayas. Body size varies; different species weigh from 15 to 50 grams (0.5 to 1.8 ounces) and measure from 6 to 15 cm (2.4 to 5.9 inches) long excluding the
- Wood of Bath (English architect)
John Wood the Elder was an English architect and town planner who established the physical character of the resort city of Bath. Wood the Elder transformed Bath by adapting the town layout to a sort of Roman plan, emphasizing the processional aspect of social life during the period. Though some of
- wood oil (plant substance)
tung oil, pale-yellow, pungent drying oil obtained from the seeds of the tung tree. On long standing or on heating, tung oil polymerizes to a hard, waterproof gel that is highly resistant to acids and alkalies. It is used in quick-drying varnishes and paints, as a waterproofing agent, and in making
- wood oil tree (tree group)
varnish tree, any of various trees whose milky juice is used to make a varnish or lacquer. The term is applied particularly to an Asian tree (Toxicodendron vernicifluum), related to poison ivy, that is highly irritating to the skin. On being tapped, the tree exudes a thick, milky emulsion that was
- wood owl (bird)
wood owl, (genus Strix), any of approximately 20 species of birds of prey of the genus Strix, family Strigidae, characterized by a conspicuous facial disk but lacking ear tufts. Wood owls occur in woodlands and forests in the Americas, Europe, and Asia. The name wood owl is also applied to members
- wood paneling (interior design)
paneling, in architecture and design, decorative treatment of walls, ceilings, doors, and furniture consisting of a series of wide, thin sheets of wood, called panels, framed together by narrower, thicker strips of wood. The latter are called styles (the external vertical strips), muntins (the
- wood piddock (mollusk)
piddock: The wood piddock (Martesia striata), up to 2.5 centimetres long, commonly occurs in waterlogged timbers cast up on the beach and ranges from North Carolina to Brazil. M. pusilla and M. cuneiformis have similar habits and distribution. Smith’s martesia (M. smithi), which resembles a fat, gray…
- wood pigeon (bird)
wood pigeon, (species Columba palumbus), bird of the subfamily Columbinae (in the pigeon family, Columbidae), found from the forested areas of Europe, North Africa, and western Asia east to the mountains of Sikkim state in India. It is about 40 cm (16 inches) long, grayish with a white collar and
- wood pulp
wood: Pulp and paper: Wood is the main source of pulp and paper. Preliminary production steps are debarking and chipping. Pulping processes are of three principal types: mechanical, or grinding; chemical, or cooking with added chemicals; and semichemical, or a combination of heat or chemical pretreatment…
- wood quail (bird)
quail: Wood quail—large birds of the genus Odontophorus—are the only phasianids widely distributed in South America; they are forest dwellers.
- Wood River (Illinois, United States)
Wood River, city, Madison county, southwestern Illinois, U.S. Part of the St. Louis, Missouri, metropolitan area, it lies on the Mississippi River near the confluence of the Wood and Missouri rivers. It was from this site that Meriwether Lewis and William Clark embarked on their trip to the Pacific
- wood rot (plant)
rot: Types of rot: Wood rot destroys economically significant amounts of timber each year. It is caused by hundreds of fungi, including species of Daedalea, Fomes, Lenzites, Polyporus, Poria, and Stereum. Affected wood is often discoloured or stained, lightweight, soft, crumbly, or powdery. Damage usually occurs slowly, often over…
- wood sage (plant)
germander: …naturalized in North America is wood sage, or woodland germander (T. scorodonia), which bears yellow flowers. Bush germander (T. fruticans), a shrub growing to 1.5 metres (5 feet), has scattered pale blue to lilac flowers and lance-shaped leaves. It is native on hillsides of coastal Europe.
- wood screw (machine component)
simple machine: The screw: Wood screws are made in a wide variety of diameters and lengths; when using the larger sizes, pilot holes are drilled to avoid splitting the wood. Lag screws are large wood screws used to fasten heavy objects to wood. Heads are either square or hexagonal.
- wood silk (textile fibre)
rayon, artificial textile material composed of regenerated and purified cellulose derived from plant sources. Developed in the late 19th century as a substitute for silk, rayon was the first man-made fibre. Rayon is described as a regenerated fibre because the cellulose, obtained from soft woods or
- wood sorrel (plant)
wood sorrel, any of several flowering plants of the genus Oxalis (family Oxalidaceae). The common wood sorrel (O. acetosella) of Europe and parts of Asia is a small stemless plant with cloverlike three-parted leaves that arise from a creeping scaly rootstock. The bisexual flowers are borne singly
- wood sorrel order (plant order)
Oxalidales, the wood sorrel order of dicotyledonous flowering plants, containing 6 families, 58 genera, and 1,810 species. Members of Oxalidales include annuals, perennial herbs, lianas, shrubs, and trees of both temperate and tropical regions. Under the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group II (APG II)
- wood spirit (chemical compound)
methanol (CH3OH), the simplest of a long series of organic compounds called alcohols, consisting of a methyl group (CH3) linked with a hydroxy group (OH). Methanol was formerly produced by the destructive distillation of wood. The modern method of preparing methanol is based on the direct
- wood stork (bird)
ciconiiform: …the Scopidae), typical storks and wood storks (Ciconiidae), ibis and spoonbills (Threskiornithidae), and, according to some authorities, flamingos (Phoenicopteridae).
- wood swallow (bird genus)
woodswallow, (genus Artamus), any of about 16 species of songbirds constituting the family Artamidae (order Passeriformes). Woodswallows are found from eastern India, Southeast Asia, and the Philippines southward to Australia and Tasmania. They resemble swallows in wing shape and aerial feeding
- wood tar (chemical compound)
wood tar, liquid obtained as one of the products of the carbonization, or destructive distillation, of wood. There are two types: hardwood tars, derived from such woods as oak and beech; and resinous tars, derived from pine wood, particularly from resinous stumps and roots. Crude wood tar may be
- wood thrush (bird)
wood thrush, One of the 11 species of thrushes (in the genus Hylocichla, or Catharus) called nightingale thrushes because of their rich songs. H. mustelina is common in eastern U.S. broadleaf forests; it is 8 in. (20 cm) long and has drab, spotted plumage and a rusty-colored
- wood tick (arachnid)
Colorado tick fever: …Rocky Mountain wood tick (Dermacentor andersoni). The virus, known as the Colorado tick fever virus, is classified as a type of coltivirus of the family Reoviridae, a grouping of viruses that is characterized by the lack of a lipid envelope and the presence of two protein coats.