- Zoologischer Garten Basel (zoo, Basel, Switzerland)
Basel Zoological Garden, privately owned zoological garden in Basel, Switzerland, noted for its outstanding work in the breeding of the Indian rhinoceros and the pygmy hippopotamus. The zoo was founded in 1874 for the purpose of exhibiting local wildlife. (It opened with about 100 mammals and
- Zoologischer Garten der Stadt Frankfurt am Main (zoo, Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Frankfurt am Main City Zoological Garden, municipal zoological garden in Frankfurt am Main, Ger. It was founded in 1858 by the Frankfurt Zoological Society. Because the original site of the zoo was not large enough to allow for the expansion of the collection, in 1874 the zoo was relocated to its
- Zoologischer Garten Köln (zoo, Cologne, Germany)
AG Cologne Zoological Garden, one of the major zoological gardens in Germany. Opened in 1860, the zoo occupies 20 hectares (49 acres) along the Rhine River in Cologne. About 6,000 specimens of 650 species are exhibited on its attractively kept grounds. The zoo specializes in primates and has an
- Zoologischer Garten Leipzig (zoo, Leipzig, Germany)
Leipzig Zoological Garden, zoological garden in Leipzig, Germany, noted for its carnivore collection. The zoo was opened in 1878 and taken over by the city in 1920. Occupying a 22-hectare (54-acre) site, the zoo maintains about 5,000 specimens of approximately 600 species. With big cats as its main
- Zoologischer Garten und Aquarium Berlin (zoo, Berlin, Germany)
Berlin Zoological Garden and Aquarium, zoo and aquarium in Berlin, containing one of the world’s largest and most comprehensive animal collections. It is generally considered the oldest zoo in Germany, having been founded in 1841, when the Prussian King Frederick William IV presented his pheasantry
- Zoologischer Garten Zürich (zoo, Zürich, Switzerland)
Zürich Zoological Garden, privately owned zoological park partially funded by the city and canton of Zürich. Opened in 1929, the 10-hectare (25-acre) zoo exhibits nearly 2,100 specimens of more than 380 species. It is home to many ungulates and a breeding group of Humboldt penguins. Its specialties
- zoology
zoology, branch of biology that studies the members of the animal kingdom and animal life in general. It includes both the inquiry into individual animals and their constituent parts, even to the molecular level, and the inquiry into animal populations, entire faunas, and the relationships of
- Zoom (software)
Zoom, software for video communication over the Internet. The program, developed and sold by the American corporation Zoom Video Communications, Inc., is one of the most popular services of its kind. Zoom is distributed with a “freemium” license, meaning that its use is limited without a paid
- Zoom Black Magic Radio (American radio station)
pirate radio: From piracy to microbroadcasting: Dunn’s Zoom Black Magic Radio was the only station in the listening area to cater to Fresno’s African American community, and it served as the model for a burgeoning movement whose practitioners eschewed the “pirate” label, embracing instead the term “microbroadcaster.”
- zoom lens (optics)
motion-picture technology: Principal parts: …need for a variety of focal lengths (ranging from ultrawide angle to telephoto) to photograph scenes under the best conditions. To make changing focal lengths more convenient, the lenses have sometimes been mounted on a turret, so that one out of a set of three lenses may be quickly selected.…
- Zoom Meetings (software)
Zoom, software for video communication over the Internet. The program, developed and sold by the American corporation Zoom Video Communications, Inc., is one of the most popular services of its kind. Zoom is distributed with a “freemium” license, meaning that its use is limited without a paid
- Zoom, Billy (American musician)
X: …25, 1953, Decatur, Illinois), guitarist Billy Zoom (original name Ty Kindell; b. February 20, 1948, Savanna, Illinois), and drummer D.J. Bonebrake (b. December 8, 1955, North Hollywood, California). Later members included Dave Alvin (b. November 11, 1955, Los Angeles, California) and Tony Gilkyson.
- Zooman and the Sign (play by Fuller)
Charles Fuller: In Zooman and the Sign (1980) Fuller presented a father’s search for the killer of his daughter. A Soldier’s Play follows the investigation by a Black army captain of the murder of a Black soldier at a base in Louisiana. Fuller also wrote the screenplay of…
- Zoomastigophorea (organism)
zooflagellate, any flagellate protozoan that is traditionally of the protozoan class Zoomastigophorea (sometimes called Zooflagellata), although recent classifications of this group have questioned the taxonomic usefulness of the term because some zooflagellates have been found to have
- zoomers (demographic group)
Generation Z, term used to describe Americans born during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Some sources give the specific year range of 1997–2012, although the years spanned are sometimes contested or debated because generations and their zeitgeists are difficult to delineate. Generation Z follows
- zoomorphism (religion)
religious symbolism and iconography: Theriomorphic, or zoomorphic, motifs: …representation of the divine (theriomorphism, or zoomorphism) is characteristic of polytheism. It has been maintained in Hinduism, to some extent in Buddhism, and occasionally in Christianity. Besides the theriomorphic (animal-form) representations of the holy (e.g., the ancient Egyptian gods and animals that are symbols of the divine or the…
- Zoonomia; or, The Laws of Organic Life (book by Darwin)
Erasmus Darwin: Influence and later works: …historians celebrate Darwin for his Zoonomia (or The Laws of Organic Life; 1794–96), an ambitious two-volume work aiming to classify facts about animals, to set out laws describing organic life, and to catalog diseases with their treatments. Unlike some contemporary physicians, Darwin endorsed active intervention with drugs and mechanical apparatus;…
- zoonoses (pathology)
zoonotic disease, any of a group of diseases that can be transmitted to humans by nonhuman vertebrate animals, such as mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. A large number of domestic and wild animals are sources of zoonotic disease, and there are numerous means of transmission. Public
- zoonosis (pathology)
zoonotic disease, any of a group of diseases that can be transmitted to humans by nonhuman vertebrate animals, such as mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. A large number of domestic and wild animals are sources of zoonotic disease, and there are numerous means of transmission. Public
- zoonotic disease (pathology)
zoonotic disease, any of a group of diseases that can be transmitted to humans by nonhuman vertebrate animals, such as mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. A large number of domestic and wild animals are sources of zoonotic disease, and there are numerous means of transmission. Public
- Zoopagales (order of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Order Zoopagales Parasitic on amoebas, rotifers, nematodes, and other protozoa; asexual reproduction by conidia borne singly or in chains, not forcibly discharged; example genera include Cochlonema, Rhopalomyces, Piptocephalis, Sigmoideomyces, Syncephalis, and Zoopage. Subphylum
- Zoopagomycotina (subphylum of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Subphylum Zoopagomycotina (incertae sedis) Endoparasitic (lives in the body) or ectoparasitic (lives on the body) on nematodes, protozoa, and fungi; thallus branched or unbranched; asexual and sexual reproduction; contains 1 order. Order Zoopagales Parasitic on amoebas, rotifers,
- zoophilia (sexual behavior)
zoophilia, sexual attraction of a human toward a nonhuman animal, which may involve the experience of sexual fantasies about the animal or the pursuit of real sexual contact with it (i.e., bestiality). Sex between humans and animals is illegal in many countries. (See also human sexual behaviour:
- zooplankton
zooplankton, small floating or weakly swimming organisms that drift with water currents and, with phytoplankton, make up the planktonic food supply upon which almost all oceanic organisms are ultimately dependent. Many animals, from single-celled Radiolaria to the eggs or larvae of herrings, crabs,
- zoopraxiscope (motion-picture projector)
Eadweard Muybridge: …lectures were illustrated with a zoopraxiscope, a lantern he developed that projected images in rapid succession onto a screen from photographs printed on a rotating glass disc, producing the illusion of moving pictures. The zoopraxiscope display, an important predecessor of the modern cinema, was a sensation at the World’s Columbian…
- zoospore (reproductive cell)
spore: …aplanospores, whereas others produce motile zoospores, which lack true cell walls and bear one or more flagella. The flagella allow zoospores to swim to a favourable environment in which to develop, whereas monospores and aplanospores must rely on passive transport by water currents.
- zoot suit (clothing)
Zoot Suit Riots: …of whom wore outfits called zoot suits. The zoot suit consisted of a broad-shouldered drape jacket, balloon-leg trousers, and, sometimes, a flamboyant hat. Mexican and Mexican American youths who wore these outfits were called zoot-suiters. These individuals referred to themselves as pachucos, a name linked to the Mexican American generation’s…
- Zoot Suit Riots (American history)
Zoot Suit Riots, a series of conflicts that occurred in June 1943 in Los Angeles between U.S. servicemen and Mexican American youths, the latter of whom wore outfits called zoot suits. The zoot suit consisted of a broad-shouldered drape jacket, balloon-leg trousers, and, sometimes, a flamboyant
- zoot suiter (social group)
Zoot Suit Riots: …individuals referred to themselves as pachucos, a name linked to the Mexican American generation’s rebellion against both the Mexican and American cultures.
- Zoothera (bird)
ground thrush, any of about 37 species of thrushes of the genus Zoothera (family Turdidae), including birds sometimes placed in the genera Geokichla, Ixoreus, Oreocincla, and Ridgwayia and some that have been assigned to Turdus. All are more than 20 centimetres (8 inches) long and have pale
- Zootoca vivipara (reptile)
reptile: North temperate zone: The viviparous lizard (L. vivipara, or Z. vivipara) and the European viper (V. berus) are the most northerly distributed reptiles. A portion of each reptile’s geographic range occurs just north of the Arctic Circle, at least in Scandinavia. Other reptiles—the slowworm (Anguis fragilis), the sand lizard…
- Zootopia (film by Howard and Moore [2016])
Idris Elba: …water buffalo) Chief Bogo in Zootopia, as the villainous tiger Shere Khan in The Jungle Book, and as the sea lion Fluke in Finding Dory. His film credits from 2017 included the action-fantasy The Dark Tower, an adaptation of Stephen King’s popular book series; The Mountain Between Us, an adventure…
- zootoxin (poison)
poison: Animal poisons (zootoxins): Poisonous animals are widely distributed throughout the animal kingdom; the only major group that seems to be exempt is the birds.
- zooxanthella (microorganism)
zooxanthella, flagellate protozoan (or alga) with yellow or brown pigments contained in chromatophores that lives in other protozoa (foraminiferans and radiolarians) and in some invertebrates. In illuminated conditions, zooxanthellae use the carbon dioxide and waste materials of the host, supplying
- zooxanthellae (microorganism)
zooxanthella, flagellate protozoan (or alga) with yellow or brown pigments contained in chromatophores that lives in other protozoa (foraminiferans and radiolarians) and in some invertebrates. In illuminated conditions, zooxanthellae use the carbon dioxide and waste materials of the host, supplying
- Zophar (biblical figure)
Zophar, in the Book of Job (2:11, 11:1, 20:1, 42:9), one of the three comforters of Job, a biblical archetype of the good man whose misfortunes are undeserved. Like the other two comforters, Bildad and Eliphaz, Zophar emphasizes an old Hebrew concept—suffering is the inevitable lot of the evil man;
- Zopheridae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Zopheridae Few species, mostly in America. There are many different opinions among coleopterists concerning the relationships of the various groups of beetles, the groups that should be given family status, and the placement of families in superfamilies and suborders. Little information is available…
- Zóphiël: or, The Bride of Seven (work by Brooks)
Maria Gowen Brooks: …work on a verse romance, Zóphiël; or, The Bride of Seven, based on a tale in the apocryphal Book of Tobit. She published the first canto of the poem in Boston in 1825 under the name Mrs. Brooks and completed the work in 1829. In 1826 she began a correspondence…
- Zoppot (Poland)
Sopot, city and port, Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland. It lies on the Gulf of Gdańsk between Gdańsk (Danzig) and Gdynia. One of Poland’s largest and most popular seaside and health resorts, a role it has filled since the 16th century, Sopot is situated in an area of wooded hills.
- Zoque (people)
Mixe-Zoquean: …living in northeastern Oaxaca; the Zoque, primarily inhabiting northwestern Chiapas; and the Popoluca (not to be confused with the Popoloca), who live in eastern Veracruz and Oaxaca, about midway between the Mixe and Zoque. The languages of these people are closely related, and their cultures share a common origin.
- Zoquean languages
Mixe-Zoquean languages: …into two branches, or divisions—Zoquean and Mixean.
- Zor (town and historical site, Lebanon)
Tyre, town on the Mediterranean coast of southern Lebanon, located 12 miles (19 km) north of the modern border with Israel and 25 miles (40 km) south of Sidon (modern Ṣaydā). It was a major Phoenician seaport from about 2000 bce through the Roman period. Tyre, built on an island and on the
- Zorach, William (American sculptor)
William Zorach was a traditionalist sculptor of simple, figurative subjects who was a leading figure in the early 20th-century revival of direct carving, whereby the sculptor seeks an image directly from the material to be carved, relying on neither the inspiration of models nor the aid of
- Zoraptera (insect)
zorapteran, (order Zoraptera), any of a small group of about 30 species of insects found on every continent except Europe. These minute insects are less than 3 mm (18 inch) long and have chewing mouthparts and nine-segmented antennae. Most species are wingless and blind, although a few have two
- zorapteran (insect)
zorapteran, (order Zoraptera), any of a small group of about 30 species of insects found on every continent except Europe. These minute insects are less than 3 mm (18 inch) long and have chewing mouthparts and nine-segmented antennae. Most species are wingless and blind, although a few have two
- Zorba the Greek (novel by Kazantzakis)
Zorba the Greek, novel by Nikos Kazantzákis, published in Greek in 1946 as Víos kai politía tou Aléxi Zormpá. The unnamed narrator is a scholarly, introspective writer who opens a coal mine on the fertile island of Crete. He is gradually drawn out of his ascetic shell by an ebullient villager named
- Zorba the Greek (film by Cacoyannis [1964])
Anthony Quinn: …earthy, full-of-life title character in Zorba the Greek (1964), whom he inhabited so completely and comfortably that many of his later parts seemed also to be infused with that character’s spirit. He embraced his offscreen life with the same gusto, evidenced in part by the fact that his 13th child…
- zoril (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- zorilla (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- Zorilla striatus (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- Zorilla, Alberto (Argentine swimmer)
Andrew Charlton and Arne Borg: The Boy and the Sturgeon: …failed to notice that Argentina’s Alberto Zorilla had taken the lead with 50 metres to go. Zorilla, swimming in an outside lane, won the race in an Olympic record time of 5:01.6. Charlton took the silver, edging out Borg, who received the bronze.
- zorille (mammal)
zorille, (Ictonyx [sometimes Zorilla] striatus), African carnivore of the weasel family (Mustelidae), frequenting diverse habitats. It has a slender body, 29–39 centimetres (12–16 inches) long, and a bushy white tail, 21–31 cm long. Its fur is long and black, white striped on the back and white
- Zork
Will Crowther’s Adventure (c. 1975) was the prototype for text-based computer games organized as interactive stories, but in 1977 several students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) decided that they could write more sophisticated interactive fiction by abandoning FORTRAN, the
- Zork (electronic game)
Zork: Will Crowther’s Adventure (c. 1975) was the prototype for text-based computer games organized as interactive stories, but in 1977 several students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) decided that they could write more sophisticated interactive fiction by abandoning FORTRAN, the programming language used for…
- Zorn’s lemma (mathematics)
Zorn’s lemma, statement in the language of set theory, equivalent to the axiom of choice, that is often used to prove the existence of a mathematical object when it cannot be explicitly produced. In 1935 the German-born American mathematician Max Zorn proposed adding the maximum principle to the
- Zorn, Anders (Swedish painter and etcher)
Anders Zorn was a Swedish painter and etcher, internationally famed as one of the best genre and portrait painters in Europe at the end of the 19th century. Zorn studied at the Stockholm academy and then travelled extensively throughout Europe. After working in England, France, and the United
- Zorn, Anders Leonard (Swedish painter and etcher)
Anders Zorn was a Swedish painter and etcher, internationally famed as one of the best genre and portrait painters in Europe at the end of the 19th century. Zorn studied at the Stockholm academy and then travelled extensively throughout Europe. After working in England, France, and the United
- Zorn, Jim (American football player and coach)
Seattle Seahawks: …teams were led by quarterback Jim Zorn, running back Curt Warner, and wide receiver Steve Largent, who retired as the NFL’s all-time leading receiver and in 1995 was the first Seahawk inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In 1983 head coach Chuck Knox led the Seahawks to the…
- Zorn, John (American saxophonist and composer)
John Zorn is a U.S. saxophonist and composer. His music incorporates influences from the most diverse elements of music and culture: free jazz, klezmer music, punk rock, cartoon music, film scores, and contemporary classical music. His “game pieces,” such as Cobra (1984), involve rules—understood
- Zorn, Max (American mathematician)
Zorn’s lemma: …1935 the German-born American mathematician Max Zorn proposed adding the maximum principle to the standard axioms of set theory (see the Zermelo-Fraenkel axiomsZermelo-Fraenkel axioms.Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
- Zorndorf, Battle of (Russo-Prussian history)
Grigory Orlov: …officer and fought in the Battle of Zorndorf (1758) during the Seven Years’ War (1756–63). In 1759, after escorting a Prussian prisoner of war to St. Petersburg, he was introduced to the grand duke Peter and his wife, Catherine. Leading a riotous life in the capital, Orlov caught Catherine’s fancy,…
- Zoroaster (Iranian prophet)
Zarathushtra was an Iranian religious reformer and prophet, traditionally regarded as the founder of Zoroastrianism. A major figure in the history of world religions, Zarathushtra has been the object of much scholarly attention, in large part because of his apparent monotheism (his concept of one
- Zoroastrian calendar (religion)
calendar: Iran: …century bce, at least, used Zoroastrian month and day names in documents in Pahlavi (the Iranian language of Sāsānian Persia). The origin and history of the Zoroastrian calendar year of 12 months of 30 days, plus five days (that is, 365 days), remain unknown. It became official under the Sāsānian…
- Zoroastrianism (religion)
Zoroastrianism, ancient pre-Islamic religion of Iran that survives there in isolated areas and, more prosperously, in India, where the descendants of Zoroastrian Iranian (Persian) immigrants are known as Parsis, or Parsees. The Iranian prophet and religious reformer Zarathushtra (flourished before
- Zorobabel (governor of Judaea)
Zerubbabel was the governor of Judaea under whom the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple at Jerusalem took place. Of Davidic origin, Zerubbabel is thought to have originally been a Babylonian Jew who returned to Jerusalem at the head of a band of Jewish exiles and became governor of Judaea under the
- Zorreguieta Cerruti, Máxima (queen consort of the Netherlands)
Máxima is an Argentine-born Dutch queen consort of Willem-Alexander, king of the Netherlands from 2013. Máxima was the daughter of Jorge Horacio Zorreguieta, a former minister of agriculture under the Argentine military dictatorship of Jorge Videla, and María del Carmen Cerruti de Zorreguieta. She
- Zorrilla de San Martín, Juan (Uruguayan poet)
Juan Zorrilla de San Martín was a Uruguayan poet famous for a long historical verse epic, Tabaré (1886; final edition after several revisions, 1926), a poem in six cantos, based upon a legend of the love between a Spanish girl and an Indian boy. Zorrilla de San Martín was educated in various Jesuit
- Zorrilla y Moral, José (Spanish writer)
José Zorrilla y Moral was a poet and dramatist, the major figure of the nationalist wing of the Spanish Romantic movement. His work was enormously popular and is now regarded as quintessentially Spanish in style and tone. After studying law at Toledo and Valladolid, Zorilla y Moral left the
- Zorro (American television series)
Zorro: …television appearances included Walt Disney’s Zorro series (1957–59), starring Guy Williams as the masked hero, as well as a syndicated live-action show (1990–93) and numerous animated series.
- Zorro (fictional character)
Zorro, fictional character created in 1919 by writer Johnston McCulley. The masked, sword-wielding vigilante defends the poor and victimized against the forces of injustice, and his feats have been featured in virtually every form of media. Zorro, whose name in Spanish means “fox,” was likely based
- Zorut, Pierie (Italian poet)
Rhaetian dialects: …its most-notable poet was Pieri Zorut (1792–1867). The first written specimen of Friulian (apart from a doubtful 12th-century inscription) is a short text dating to approximately 1300, followed by numerous documents in prose, as well as some poems, up to the end of the 16th century, when a rich poetic…
- Zorved (group of artists)
Mikhail Vasilyevich Matyushin: …he drew up his manifesto Zorved (the name is a combination of the words zorkost, meaning acute vision, and vedaniye, meaning knowledge) and founded a group of the same name, made up of his numerous pupils. The result of many years of work by the Zorved group was Spravochnik po…
- Zorzi da Castelfranco (Italian painter)
Giorgione was an extremely influential Italian painter who was one of the initiators of a High Renaissance style in Venetian art. His qualities of mood and mystery were epitomized in The Tempest (c. 1505), an evocative pastoral scene, which was among the first of its genre in Venetian painting.
- Zorzor (Liberia)
Zorzor, town, northwestern Liberia, West Africa. It is situated along the road between Monrovia and Sierra Leone. A local trade centre for agricultural products (rice, cassava, pineapples, and palm oil and kernels) grown by the Kpelle and Loma peoples of the surrounding area, it is the site of an
- Zoser (king of Egypt)
Djoser, was the first king of the 3rd dynasty (c. 2592–c. 2566 bce) of ancient Egypt, who undertook the construction of the earliest important stone building in Egypt. His reign was marked by great technological innovation in the use of stone architecture. His minister, Imhotep, a talented
- Zoshchenko, Mikhail Mikhaylovich (Soviet author)
Mikhail Mikhaylovich Zoshchenko was a Soviet satirist whose short stories and sketches are among the best comic literature of the Soviet period. Zoshchenko studied law and then in 1915 joined the army. He served as an officer during World War I, was wounded and gassed, and was awarded four medals
- Zosimos of Panopolis (Egyptian alchemist)
alchemy: Hellenistic alchemy: …have regarded as authentic is Zosimos of Panopolis (Egypt), who lived near the end of the period. He is one of about 40 authors represented in a compendium of alchemical writings that was probably put together in Byzantium (Constantinople) in the 7th or 8th century ad and that exists in…
- Zosimus, Saint (pope)
Saint Zosimus ; feast day December 26) was the pope from March 417 to December 418. He was consecrated as Pope St. Innocent I’s successor on March 18, 417. His brief but turbulent pontificate was embroiled in conflicts involving Gaul, Africa, and Pelagianism, a heretical doctrine that minimized the
- zoster (pathology)
herpes zoster, acute viral infection affecting the skin and nerves, characterized by groups of small blisters appearing along certain nerve segments. The lesions are most often seen on the back and may be preceded by a dull ache in the affected site. Herpes zoster is caused by the same virus as
- zoster immune globulin (pathology)
chickenpox: Injections of zoster immune globulin (ZIG), a preparation made from the plasma of adults who have recently had herpes zoster, are sometimes given to prevent the development of chickenpox in exposed children. ZIG contains antibodies to varicella-zoster virus and provides temporary protection against the virus. ZIG administration…
- Zostera marina (plant)
eelgrass: Historically, common eelgrass (Zostera marina) was an important tidewater plant whose dried leaves were used for packing glass articles and for stuffing cushions.
- Zosteraceae (plant family)
eelgrass: …marine plants of the family Zosteraceae. Found in temperate and subtropical climates around the world, these species grow in intertidal and subtidal portions of coastal areas. They provide food and habitat for a wide range of marine organisms and are important as a protective intermediary habitat for young fish before…
- Zosteropidae (bird)
white-eye, any of the nearly 100 species of birds of the Old World family Zosteropidae (order Passeriformes). They are so much alike that about 60 of them are often lumped in a single genus, Zosterops. White-eyes occur chiefly from Africa across southern Asia to Australia and New Zealand in warm
- Zosterops (bird genus)
white-eye: …lumped in a single genus, Zosterops. White-eyes occur chiefly from Africa across southern Asia to Australia and New Zealand in warm regions.
- Zoṭṭ (people)
Basra: The uprisings continued: the Zoṭṭ, an Indian people, rose up in 820–835; the Zanj, African blacks brought into Mesopotamia for agricultural slave labour, rebelled about 869–883 (see Zanj rebellion). The Qarmatians, an extremist Muslim sect, invaded and devastated Basra in 923, and thereafter the city declined, overshadowed by the…
- Zotz! (film by Castle [1962])
William Castle: King of the Gimmick: Zotz! (1962) was one of Castle’s few disappointments during this creative burst. A middling Cold War comedy starring Tom Poston, it offered only a plastic coin to patrons as its promotional tie-in. Castle returned to the Cold War with 13 Frightened Girls!, whereas The Old…
- Zou Yan (Chinese philosopher)
Zou Yan was a Chinese cosmologist of the ancient state of Qi (in present-day Shandong) and leading exponent of the Yinyang school. The only account of his life is a brief one in the Shiji (“Record of the Historian”). To him is attributed the association of the Five Phases (wuxing) theory with the
- Zouaouah language
Berber languages: Tashelhait, Shilha), Tarifit, Kabyle, Tamazight, and Tamahaq. The family may also include extinct languages such as the Guanche languages of the Canary Islands, Old Libyan (Numidian), and Old Mauretanian, which are known from inscriptions but have not yet been studied thoroughly enough to make any affirmative generalizations about…
- Zouche, Richard (British jurist)
Richard Zouche was an English jurist, one of the founders of international law, who became regius professor of civil law at Oxford and later practiced successfully in London. Zouche was appointed a judge of the Court of Admiralty in 1641 and was twice returned to Parliament as a representative for
- Zouérat (Mauritania)
Zouérat, town located in north-central Mauritania. It is the site of iron-mining operations, which account for a sizable portion of Mauritania’s export earnings. It is connected by railway to the Atlantic port of Nouâdhibou. Pop. (2000)
- Zouérate (Mauritania)
Zouérat, town located in north-central Mauritania. It is the site of iron-mining operations, which account for a sizable portion of Mauritania’s export earnings. It is connected by railway to the Atlantic port of Nouâdhibou. Pop. (2000)
- Zoug (Switzerland)
Zug, capital of Zug canton, north central Switzerland, on the northeastern shore of Lake Zug (Zugersee), at the foot of the Zugerberg (3,409 ft [1,039 m]), just south of Zürich. First mentioned in 1242 as a possession of the counts of Kyburg, it was purchased by Rudolf IV of Habsburg (later Rudolf
- Zoug (canton, Switzerland)
Zug, smallest undivided canton of Switzerland, with an area of 92 sq mi (239 sq km), of which 12 sq mi are occupied by Lakes Zug and Ägeri. Bounded by the cantons of Lucerne and Aargau on the west, Zürich on the north, and Schwyz on the east and south, Zug lies on the hilly central Swiss Plateau,
- Zouîrât (Mauritania)
Zouérat, town located in north-central Mauritania. It is the site of iron-mining operations, which account for a sizable portion of Mauritania’s export earnings. It is connected by railway to the Atlantic port of Nouâdhibou. Pop. (2000)
- zouk (music)
zouk, popular dance music associated mainly with the Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique, as well as Saint Lucia, Dominica, and Haiti, all in the French Antilles (French West Indies). The music blends a variety of Caribbean, African, and North American music styles. It is characterized
- Zoya (poem by Aliger)
Margarita Iosifovna Aliger: “Zoya” (1942), a narrative poem about a martyred Soviet female partisan, won the State Prize of the U.S.S.R. in 1943.
- Zoyara, Punta dar (Libya)
Zuwārah, Mediterranean port, northwestern Libya. First mentioned in a Catalan sailing manual (1375) as Punta dar Zoyara, it later served as the western outpost of Italian-controlled Libya (1912–43), being the terminus of the now-defunct railway from Tripoli 65 mi (105 km) east. Its artificial
- Zoysia (plant)
zoysiagrass, (genus Zoysia), genus of creeping grasses of the family Poaceae, comprising four or five perennial species. Zoysiagrasses are native to southeastern Asia and New Zealand and are common along coastal grasslands. They are excellent cover for flat sandy open areas and are widely used as
- zoysia grass (plant)
zoysiagrass, (genus Zoysia), genus of creeping grasses of the family Poaceae, comprising four or five perennial species. Zoysiagrasses are native to southeastern Asia and New Zealand and are common along coastal grasslands. They are excellent cover for flat sandy open areas and are widely used as
- Zoysia japonica (plant)
zoysiagrass: Japanese, or Korean, lawngrass (Z. japonica), Manila grass (Z. matrella), and Mascarene grass (Z. tenuifolia) were introduced into North America as turf and lawn grasses and tolerate a variety of growing conditions. The leaves are fine-bladed in both the Manila and Mascarene grasses.